One hundred years of rigorous scientific research hasn’t dented the faith of adherents of homeopathy. The complementary therapy is still centred on the notion that water has a therapeutic “memory” and…
Treasurer Wayne Swan delivering the Budget on Tuesday.
AAP
It’s good news indeed that the Federal Budget is providing the chief medical officer with a million dollars to review what works and what doesn’t in the world of “natural” medicine. Professor Chris Baggoley…
Traditional Chinese medicines the authors genetically audited using new DNA sequencing technology.
M.Bunce
There are polarising views on the subject of complementary and alternative medicines (CAM). This website has recently published numerous article about the efficacy and regulation of CAM, the placebo effect…
Despite recent attempts to retain traditional healing practices in China, modern medicine is supplanting traditional medicine there.
Jean-François Chénier
Most of traditional healing practices are based on intuitive principles of diseases involving the imbalance of elemental qualities.
For the ancient Greeks and Romans, whose systems of traditional healing…
The answer is not more rigid insistence on the primacy of biomedicine, in spite of its great contribution to saving lives.
CALI.org
More heat than light is being generated by the resurgence of the debate on orthodox evidence-based medicine versus the so-called pseudo-science of alternative therapies.
Unfortunately the voices of medical…
Treatments should be based on how well they make people feel rather than how scientific or traditional the medicine is.
By Wikidudeman
Homeopathy is a combination of tradition, art and a science that has been used for centuries. Does it really matter if its effect is placebo if it makes people feel better and regain good health?
And…
The NHMRC's draft statement on homeopathy is too narrow.
Flirkc/kh1234567890
The ethics of homeopathy was once again thrust into the spotlight yesterday after a leaked draft of the National Health and Medical Research Council’s statement on homeopathy revealed the agency was considering…
Appeals to popularity and ancient traditions are insufficient to establish vocational courses.
Michael Flick
While drizzling treacle on your porridge or spreading it on your toast, you might consider the time when the calorie-laden condiment was an antidote for poison. Of course, these days the crushed vipers…
Gawler claims to have cured himself of advanced cancer by a series of unorthodox treatments including herbal remedies, meditation, coffee enemas and diets.
Nick Olejniczak
It’s not often that a scientific article in a learned medical journal becomes front page news but that was the case recently when a paper I co-authored with Dr Ian Haines of Melbourne’s Cabrini Hospital…
Linking research and teaching, universities are best placed to teach evidence-based CAM.
Tulane Publications
Most readers would know of the current debate about universities teaching complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). A core question not being addressed in this debate is what other institution is better…
Science writer Simon Singh and Observer journalist Nick Cohen, at the Royal Courts of Justice, 23rd February 2010.
Robert Sharp/English PEN
Marcello Costa is a co-founder of “Friends of Science in Medicine”, an organisation established to campaign against university health-care courses that are not adequately supported by scientific evidence…
All health-care providers should give patients evidence-based information – this includes chiropractors.
Planetc
Chiropractic has copped some criticism this week, with a group of prominent Australian doctors and scientists urging Central Queensland University to reverse its decision to offer a chiropractic degree…
Vitamins, minerals and herbal therapies should live up to the claims on their packaging.
Peter Sunna
Two out of three Australians use complementary medicines to boost their nutrition, alleviate various symptoms and improve their overall health and well-being. There are around 10,000 products to choose…
Diet pill manufacturers take advantage of consumers' desire to look and feel better.
Flickr/jypsygen
Welcome to part two of The science behind weight loss, a new Conversation series in which we separate the myths about dieting from the realities of exercise and nutrition.
Here, Michael Vagg, Clinical…
It’s even possible to get relief from symptoms when knowingly taking a placebo.
Flickr/JLA Kliche
If you took a pill that had been prescribed to treat your illness and it alleviated your symptoms, that means the medicine worked – right?
What if you took a complementary medicine from a health food…
Complementary medicines need tighter regulation.
Mickey Liaw
If a manufacturer claimed its product was “clinically proven” and could relieve your symptoms of bloating and fatigue, would you believe it?
What about if you were chronically or terminally ill and had…
The placebo effect may be making people feel better but it should never be substituted for real medicine.
vitasamb2001/FreeDigitalPhotos.net
Homeopathy’s got a bit of a run in the media in recent months and the stories are by no means positive.
It all started in April when the medical press highlighted the National Health and Research Council…
Patients achieve real outcomes with homeopathic therapy – we more research to work out why.
Flickr/Missy the universe
It seems the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) is likely to follow the lead of the UK and denounce homeopathy as an ineffective and unethical therapy that shouldn’t attract scarce government…
The lack of a strong evidence base is not unique to complementary medicines.
Jenny O'Donnell/Wikimedia Commons
Read the argument against the use of complementary medicines.
Over half of Australians use complementary therapies, at a cost of about $AUD1.8 billion a year, to either prevent or treat health problems…
Naturopathic teachers, practitioners and companies should ensure that better evidence becomes available.
b dd b/Flickr
Use of complementary medicine (CAM) is widespread but often condemned by medical practitioners as being baseless or quackery. But some practices that fall under the umbrella of CAM do have a basis in evidence…
Are we treating normal sadness as a clinical disorder?
Gatis Gribusts
It’s normal to feel down in the dumps from time to time, so drawing a line between low moods and mental illness is understandably fraught.
But are health professionals treating normal sadness as a clinical…
Cancer patients need to think twice before adding vitamins to their treatment.
shannonkringen/flickr
Previously unthinkable questions about vitamin use by cancer patients are being asked following a series of recent clinical studies.
Is it time for cancer patients’ love affair with vitamins to end? Might…