Books

Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 89

The state and place of alternative medicine
Another ‘feat’ accomplished by the medical establishment has been to conceal from the public the fact that alternative meth- ods of treatment do exist, and that such methods are effective in many cases.
In this, of course, the patients themselves have played a major part. These patients, once cured by some alternative form of med- ical treatment, do not dare to go back to the doctors who made them suffer, sometimes for many years, and tell them straight out that they should have been informed by them and much ear- lier. The patients do not dare to challenge the doctors.
Patients are afraid that one day they may need the attentions of their ‘official’ doctor, and so do not want to insult him. With this cunning approach, they fail to confront the doctor, and so do not help the spread of the right information.
Each patient acts like every one of us, thinking of nothing else but his or her own narrow best interests. In spite of all this, alter- native systems of medical treatment are flourishing, both in Eu- rope and in North America.
When I speak about alternatives, I mean only homeopathy, acu- puncture, osteopathy, chiropractic and naturopathy. These ther- apeutic systems present great possibilities, on the condition, of course, that they are properly applied. Here too, as elsewhere, there is scope for makeshift practice and exploitation.
By using alternative medicine as leverage, the state could apply pressure on the medical authorities, reducing their power and si- multaneously giving back to these traditional, alternative forms of medicine, their proper meaning and status.
A most dangerous game is however being played at this very moment within the European circles of conventional medicine, (except in Great Britain, Germany and Holland, where alterna- tive methods of treatment have already been recognized and are freely practiced). This game consists of an attempt on the doc- tors’ part to monopolize all alternative methods of treatment, even though these were not a part of their official studies, in the medical schools.