Guest guest Posted March 3, 2010 Report Share Posted March 3, 2010 An interesting article from Health Sciences Institute - www.hsibaltimore.com. (If you haven't signed the petition against the McCain bill, then you should do so at once! http://www.healthfreedomusa.org/?page_id=184) deb Dear Reader, You'll never guess what complementary and alternative medicine is. Mainstream. Seriously. A new " state-of-the-art paper " from Mayo Clinic researchers drops this amazing little stat from a 2002 review: " The total number of visits to complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) providers far exceeds those to primary physicians. " FAR exceeds? Absolutely. In 1997, the number of CAM office visits exceeded primary physician office visits by 243 million! And that trend was on an upward swing. Yeah, I'd say that qualifies as a major prevailing trend (which is how Webster's defines " mainstream " ). So does the Mayo team stand back and give respect where respect is due? Please. Do you even have to ask? ----------------------------------------------------------- Products to avoid ----------------------------------------------------------- The purpose of the Mayo paper is to highlight potential adverse reactions when cardiovascular patients combine herbal treatments with drug treatments. So far, I'm with them all the way. Millions of patients are combining CAM treatments with drugs, so the more that patients and doctors know about interactions the better. But the Mayo team isn't content with just performing a service and giving the medical field a useful tool. No. They jam anti-CAM editorial content throughout their paper. In fact, they drag out virtually every old warhorse argument against CAM †" the therapies aren't properly tested in clinical trials, supplements aren't regulated strictly enough, consumers assume " natural " herbs are completely free of side effects, and blah, blah, blah. And the bias is glaring. For instance, here's the title of Table 1: " Herbal Products to Avoid in Patients With Cardiovascular Diseases. " And why avoid these herbal products? Because they interfere with cardio drugs. According to the table, cardio patients should avoid green tea because it decreases the effects of warfarin (a blood- thinning drug). HEY, Mayo! Don't forget who's mainstream here! Do you drink green tea for the antioxidants or the anticancer agents? Then maybe you should avoid warfarin use. Or let's say you've had success improving circulation with ginkgo biloba. Well, bleeding risk is higher when that herb is taken with warfarin or aspirin, so those drugs probably aren't right for you. In a New York Times article about the Mayo paper, one of the authors singles out garlic, noting that patients are very surprised that garlic can potentially increase risk of bleeding. Which is hilarious because warfarin increases the same risk! The subtle-as-a-brick message of the paper is clear: Trust drugs, not herbs, not CAM. But that tired old message doesn't fly anymore. Time for respect. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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