ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE IN AUSTRALIA
The
first students to study alternative medicine at university level in
Australia began their four-year, full-time course at the University of
Technology, Sydney, in early 1994. Their course covered, among other
therapies, acupuncture. The theory they learnt is based on the traditional
Chinese explanation of this ancient healing art: that it can regulate the
flow of ‘Qi’ or energy through pathways in the body. This course reflects
how far some alternative therapies have come in their struggle for
acceptance by the medical establishment.
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Australia has been unusual in
the Western world in having a very conservative attitude to natural or
alternative therapies, according to Dr Paul Laver, a lecturer in Public
Health at the University of Sydney. ‘We’ve had a tradition of doctors being
fairly powerful and I guess they are pretty loath to allow any pretenders
to their position to come into it.’ In many other industrialized countries,
orthodox and alternative medicines have worked ‘hand in glove’ for years.
In Europe, only orthodox doctors can prescribe herbal medicine. In Germany,
plant remedies account for 10% of the national turnover of pharmaceutical.
Americans made more visits to alternative therapist than to orthodox
doctors in 1990, and each year they spend about $US 12 billion on the
therapies that have not been scientifically tested.
Disenchantment with orthodox
medicine has seen the popularity of alternative therapies in Australia
climb steadily during the past 20 years. In a 1983 national health survey,
1.9% of people said they had contacted a chiropractor, naturopath,
osteopath, acupuncturist or herbalist in the two weeks prior to the survey.
By 1990, this figure had risen to 2.6% of the population. The 550,000
consultations with alternative therapists reported in the 1990 survey
represented about an eighth of the total number of consultations with
medically qualified personnel covered by the survey, according to Dr Laver
and colleagues writing in the Australian Journal of Public Health in 1993.
‘A better educated and less accepting public has become disillusion with
the experts in general and increasingly skeptical about science and
empirically based knowledge,’ they said. ‘The high standing of
professionals, including doctors, has been eroded as a consequence.’
Rather than resisting or
criticizing this trend, increasing numbers of Australian doctors,
particularly younger ones, are forming group practices with alternative
therapists or taking courses themselves, particularly in acupuncture and
herbalism. Part of the incentive was financial, Dr Laver said. ‘The bottom
line is that most general practitioners are business people. If they see
potential clientele going elsewhere, they might want to be able to offer a
similar service.’
In 1993, Dr Laver and his
colleagues published a survey of 289 Sydney people who attended eight
alternative therapists’ practices in Sydney. These practices offered a wide
range of alternative therapies from 25 therapists. Those surveyed had
experience chronic illnesses, for which orthodox medicine had been able to
provide little relief. They commented that they liked the holistic approach
of their alternative therapists and the friendly, concerned and detailed
attention they had received. The cold, impersonal manner of orthodox
doctors featured in the survey. An increasing exodus from their clinics,
coupled with this and a number of other relevant surveys carried out in
Australia, all pointing to orthodox doctors’ inadequacies, have led
mainstream doctors themselves to begin to admit they could learn from the
personal style of alternative therapists. Dr Patrick Store, President of
the Royal College of General Practitioners, concurs that orthodox doctors
could learn a lot about besides manner and advising patients on
preventative health from alternative therapists.
According to the Australian
Journal of Public Health, 18% of patients visiting alternative therapists
do so because they suffer from musculo-skeletal complaints; 12% suffer from
digestive problems, which is only 1% more than those suffering from
emotional problems. Those suffering from respiratory complaints represent
7% of their patients, and candida sufferers represent an equal percentage.
Headache sufferers and those complaining of general ill health represent 6%
and 5% of patients respectively, and a further 4% see therapists for
general health maintenance.
The survey suggested that
complementary medicine is probably a better term than alternative medicine.
Alternative medicine appears to be an adjunct, sought in times of
disenchantment when conventional medicine seems not to offer the answer.
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