Walk into the local health food shop or pick up today's paper and the chances are that you'll see adverts for acupuncture and herbal medicine, hypnotists and homeopaths. Some doctors and scientists mourn the lost lustre of mainstream medicine and complain about a new breed of 'irrational' consumer. But what exactly is 'alternative' medicine? Is the astonishing popularity of alternative and multicultural medicine really such a recent development? And, given the success story of modern biomedical science, why are alternative and traditional treatments now so fashionable? Has the impersonal chill of high-tech medicine driven consumers into the arms of charismatic quacks? Or is it the cost of western medicine that makes its competitors look ...
Modern medicine has reached a point where the patient is not treated as a biopsychosocial-spiritual ...
alternativemedicine ” has been used to describe awide array of treatments, health practices, and pra...
Commentators such as Goldacre, Dawkins, and Singh and Ernst are worried that the rise in complementa...
Walk into the local health food shop or pick up today's paper and the chances are that you'll see ad...
Walk into the local health food shop or pick up today's paper and the chances are that you'll see ad...
“Western Medicine,” as we know it today, consists of heavy pharmaceuticals and extreme surgical proc...
Fairly widespread disillusionment in medicine since the 1950s (when many wonder drugs proved themsel...
Alternative medicine is recognized as medical products and practices that do not belong to the stand...
The increasing popularity of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) in the West raises profoun...
<div><p>Proponents of controversial Complementary and Alternative Medicines, such as homeopathy, arg...
Proponents of controversial Complementary and Alternative Medicines, such as homeopathy, argue that ...
MANY HEALTHCARE PROVIDERS often dismiss the concept of alternative medicine without a full understan...
Proponents of controversial Complementary and Alternative Medicines, such as homeopathy, argue that ...
Alternative medicine has a major presence and persuasive attraction in the industrialized western wo...
The realization that at least 25 % to 50 % of adults in industrialized nations, including the United...
Modern medicine has reached a point where the patient is not treated as a biopsychosocial-spiritual ...
alternativemedicine ” has been used to describe awide array of treatments, health practices, and pra...
Commentators such as Goldacre, Dawkins, and Singh and Ernst are worried that the rise in complementa...
Walk into the local health food shop or pick up today's paper and the chances are that you'll see ad...
Walk into the local health food shop or pick up today's paper and the chances are that you'll see ad...
“Western Medicine,” as we know it today, consists of heavy pharmaceuticals and extreme surgical proc...
Fairly widespread disillusionment in medicine since the 1950s (when many wonder drugs proved themsel...
Alternative medicine is recognized as medical products and practices that do not belong to the stand...
The increasing popularity of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) in the West raises profoun...
<div><p>Proponents of controversial Complementary and Alternative Medicines, such as homeopathy, arg...
Proponents of controversial Complementary and Alternative Medicines, such as homeopathy, argue that ...
MANY HEALTHCARE PROVIDERS often dismiss the concept of alternative medicine without a full understan...
Proponents of controversial Complementary and Alternative Medicines, such as homeopathy, argue that ...
Alternative medicine has a major presence and persuasive attraction in the industrialized western wo...
The realization that at least 25 % to 50 % of adults in industrialized nations, including the United...
Modern medicine has reached a point where the patient is not treated as a biopsychosocial-spiritual ...
alternativemedicine ” has been used to describe awide array of treatments, health practices, and pra...
Commentators such as Goldacre, Dawkins, and Singh and Ernst are worried that the rise in complementa...