The truth about alternative medicine
You’ve probably heard the saying, โItโs important to have an open mind, but not so open that your brains fall out.โ We asked doctors and researchers from across the countryโincluding those who use or at least approve of complementary methodsโto share alternative medicine experiences that frustrated, saddened, or simply astounded them. On the flip side, these are theย alternative medicine therapies doctors actually recommend.
Any remedy can be overused
โI had a patient with migraines who didnโt want to take drugsโshe wanted to deal with them by arching her back. There actually is a yoga treatment that involves arching your back to help certain kinds of headaches, but not migraines. The worse the migraines got, the more this woman arched her back. She kept doing this until her back hurt as much as her head, and she agreed to take the medication.โ โLoren Fishman, MD, doctor of physical medicine and rehabilitation in New York Cityย ย
Herbal products are not free
โI once saw a woman come to the pharmacy counter with a bunch of herbal products while also picking up a prescription. She complained to the pharmacy tech that her co-pay had increased to $35 for her medicineโa drug that probably cost $800 million and 12 years to show it was safe and effective. At the same time, she was dumping $60 or $70 on herbs that had never been tested for effectiveness or safety.โโDavid Kroll, PhD, a cancer researcher in Durham, North Carolina
You may be risking your life
โBack when I was a resident, I assisted in operating on a man who was orange. Literally. He had a large bleeding rectal cancer that he tried to treat for a year using a regimen that involved megadoses of carrot juice, and it turned his skin orange. He not only eliminated any chance of saving his rectum and sparing himself a colostomy bag, but he also endangered his life because the tumor was a lot larger than when he first saw the doctor.โ โDavid Gorski, MD, a surgeon at the Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute.ย Watch out for these trusted home remedies that will only make you worse.
Piggy-backing alternatives can have major side effects
โA patient of mine was having hot flashes and feeling absolutely lousy. She didnโt want to take medication, so she went to a health food store and emptied the shelves of everything that mentioned menopause. Whatever she took did stop her hot flashes, but the remedies clearly contained estrogen because one day she came into my office with significant vaginal bleeding, and her blood estrogen level was sky-high.โ โMary Jane Minkin, MD, clinical professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Yale University School of Medicine.ย Make sure you’re not making these common medication mistakes.
The treatment may not really be “natural”
โPatients ask my opinion all the time regarding colon cleansing. Thereโs nothing normal or natural about it. The bacteria in your colon are important for your healthโsending a tsunami down on them is unnatural. When my patients tell me theyโve had a coffee enema, Iโm not sure what to say. โWould you like cream with that?โโ โPatricia Raymond, MD, gastroenterologist in Virginia Beach, Virginia
Modern medicine is there to protect you
โI once had a 12-year-old girl come into the emergency room with paralysis in one of her legs. We eventually diagnosed her with polioโthe only patient with polio Iโve ever seen. The family had chosen not to immunize her for any of the vaccine-preventable diseases. The father was so tearful and angry. And all I could think was, You turned your back on the very thing that could have saved your daughter from this.โ โDavid Kimberlin, MD, pediatric infectious disease specialist at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.ย Here are some more myths about vaccines that it’s time to stop believing now.
Don’t use untested remedies on children
โFor ear pain, some parents will insert a hollow cone or ear candle into their childโs ear and light it. The idea is that it creates a vacuum that removes debris and wax and relieves pressure. First of all, it doesnโt work. If the child has an ear infection, it can rupture his eardrum. You can also burn his ear or his skin. Iโm in favor of alternative medicine, but this is one thing thatโs outrageous.โ โShaili Singh, MD, a pediatrician at Childrenโs Hospital at Scott & White in Temple, Texas
If an alternative therapy sounds too good to be true…
โA 72-year-old patient needed heart surgery because a valve in his heart didnโt open fully. A friend of his had read on the Internet that strawberries can reverse it. He started buying huge bins and eating them for every meal. What he ended up with was a lot of diarrhea. Then, because of the valve problem, he passed out while driving (fortunately, no one was hurt). He finally let me do the surgery.โ โJacob DeLaRosa, MD, chairman of cardiothoracic surgery at St. Michaelโs Medical Center in Newark, New Jersey.ย Make sure that, if you try an alternative treatment, it’s on the list of natural remedies that are proven to work.
Alternative medicine can harm
โOver the years, a number of my patients have had strokes after chiropractic neck manipulation. It can cause something called vertebral artery dissection, where the main artery leading to the back of the brain actually splits. Now I tell patients: If you want to see a chiropractor, fine, but never let him touch your neck.โ โPeter Lipson, MD, an internist in Southfield, Michigan.ย Next, learn about some more mistakes doctors really wish you’d stop making.
- Loren Fishman, MD, doctor of physical medicine and rehabilitation in New York City
- David Kroll, PhD, a cancer researcher in Durham, North Carolina
- David Gorski, MD, a surgeon at the Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institut
- Mary Jane Minkin, MD, clinical professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Yale University School of Medicine
- Patricia Raymond, MD, gastroenterologist in Virginia Beach, Virginia
- David Kimberlin, MD, pediatric infectious disease specialist at the University of Alabama at Birmingham
- Shaili Singh, MD, a pediatrician at Childrenโs Hospital at Scott & White in Temple, Texas
- Jacob DeLaRosa, MD, chairman of cardiothoracic surgery at St. Michaelโs Medical Center in Newark, New Jersey
- Peter Lipson, MD, an internist in Southfield, Michigan