What is Functional Medicine?
Complementary and Alternative Medicine Facts
Complementary
and Alternative Medicine Facts
More
than 70% to 90% of physicians consider CAM therapies, such as diet and
exercise, behavioral medicine, counseling and psychotherapy, and
hypnotherapy, to be legitimate medical practices.1
Approximately
80% of medical students and 70% of family physicians are interested in
receiving training in multiple areas of CAM therapies.1-3
In any
given year, 69% of Americans use at least one type of CAM therapy.4
Due to
high market demand, at least 67% of health insurers and HMOs, such as Blue
Cross, Kaiser Permanente, Mutual of Omaha, Prudential, California Pacific,
Catholic HealthCare West, HealthNet, and Oxford Health Plans, cover CAM
therapies.5,6
·Chiropractic,
acupuncture, homeopathy, herbal therapies, and mind-body techniques, among
other CAM therapies, are offered at 64% of U.S. medical schools.7
Approximately
57% of physicians have referred patients to CAM professionals.8
It has
been shown that 56% of Americans believe their health plans should cover
CAM therapies.4
Estimates
place the size and value of the CAM market at $24 billion, a figure
projected to increase at a rate of 15% per year.9
The
National Institutes of Health (NIH) currently invests about $40 million
per year in CAM-related research.10
Based
on the popularity and growth of CAM therapies in the U.S., the American
Medical Association (AMA) ranked alternative medicine among the top 3
subjects (out of 86) for mainstream medical journals to address in the
coming years.11 In response, the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), a highly
renowned medical journal, identified alternative medicine as the 7th
(out of 73) most important topic for future publication.12
Chiropractors
are licensed in all 50 states, and 12 states require that health plans
include chiropractic benefits.13
There
are nearly 40,000 doctors of osteopathic medicine (D.O.) throughout the
country.14
Acupuncturists
are licensed in 34 states.15
There
are currently 21 schools in the U.S. that offer certification in homeopathic
medicine.16
Naturopathic
professionals are licensed in 12 states.17
References
Berman BM, Singh BK,
Lao L, et al. Physicians’ attitudes toward complementary or alternative
medicine: a regional survey. J Am
Board Fam Pract 1995;8(5):361-66.
Halliday J, Taylor M,
Jenkins A, et al. Medical students and complementary medicine. Comp Ther Med 1993;1:32-33.
Furnham A, Hanna D,
Vincent CA. Medical students’ attitudes to complementary medical
therapies. Comp Ther Med
1995;3:212-19.
Kessler W, Goodkind M.
(1998, September 23). Americans mingle complementary techniques with
traditional medicine. Stanford
Online Report. Retrieved from
http://www.stanford.edu/dept/news/report/news/september23/altsurvey923.html
Pelletier KR, Marie A,
Krasner M, et al. Current trends in the integration and reimbursement of
complementary and alternative medicine by managed care, insurance
carriers, and hospital providers: 1998 update and cohort analysis. Am J Health Promot
1999;14(2):125-33.
The Landmark Report II on HMOs and alternate
care: 1999 nationwide HMO study of alternative care. (2000). Retrieved
March 18, 2002, from http://landmarkhealthcare.com/99tlrll.htm
Wetzel MS, Eisenberg
DM, Kaptchuk TJ. Courses involving complementary and alternative medicine
at U.S. medical schools. JAMA
1998;280(9):784-87.
Blumberg DL, Grant WD,
Hendricks SR, et al. The physician and unconventional medicine. Altern Ther Health Med
1995;1(3);31-35.
Rauber C. Open to
Alternatives. Mod Healthc 1998;28(36):50-57.
Jonas WB. Researching
alternative medicine. Nat Med
1997;3(8):824-27.
Fontanarosa PB,
Lundberg GD. Complementary, alternative, unconventional, and integrative
medicine: call for papers for the annual coordinated theme issues of the AMA
journals. JAMA
1997:(278):2111-12.
Lundberg GD, Paul M,
Fritz H. A comparison of the
opinions of recognized experts and ordinary readers as to what topic a
general medical journal should address. Presented at the International
Congress on Biomedical Peer Review and Global Communications; September
20, 1997; Prague, Czech Republic.