| Integrative Medicine and Integrated Health Care Round-up #42: April 2011 | |
Summary: Obama appoints U Arizona IM fellow Sharon Van Horn to key prevention panel ... Brian Berman, MD and Jane Guiltinan, ND to join NCCAM Advisory Council ... Weeks' powerpoint on 2010 policy and cost developments available via Integrative Healthcare Symposium ... Aetna-Duke-Kraftsow in major yoga trial on effectiveness and cost ... Asheville, North Carolina suggesting integrative medicine for economic development ... Daniel Redwood, DC offers additional resources on cost benefits of integrative practices ... Sierra Tucson, Ted and Dr. Roberta Mann Foundation back new International Network on Integrative Mental Health ... $250,000 Dr. Rogers' Prize announces applications, September 23, 2011 set for awards dinner ... Data on the remarkable 2010 contributions of the Wake Forest integrative medicine program ... "Integration theme" presented as reason for record turnout at conference of chiropractor educators and researchers ... Bonnie Horrigan offers exceptional resource on IM fellowships in Explore ... Tai Sophia offers new nutrition MS program ... Congresswoman Carolyn Pingee (D-ME) sponsors bill to for Medicaid coverage of Certified Professional Midwives ... American Chiropractic Association priorities on health reform ... Public visibility work of the American Association of Naturopathic Physicians ... Suzanne Somers' Dateline appearance shows rift between alternative cancer treatment doctors Gonzalez/Bryzynski and interviewed integrative medicine leaders ... Reiki effectiveness in health condition published ... American Botanical Council and American Herbal Products Association announce 2011 awards ... Seattle Business honors Bastyr community medicine program led by Melissa McCarty, ND ... Richard Brassard, DC selected to head Association of Chiropractic Colleges ... Integrative medical doctor Shay Pintov, MD leads Israeli delegation to help in Japan ... In Memoriam: Michele Eustache
Integrative Medicine and Integrated Health Care Round-up #42: April 2011
Summary: Obama appoints U Arizona IM fellow Sharon Van Horn to key prevention panel ...
Brian Berman, MD and Jane Guiltinan, ND to join NCCAM Advisory Council
... Weeks' powerpoint on 2010 policy and cost developments available via
Integrative Healthcare Symposium ... Aetna-Duke-Kraftsow in major yoga
trial on effectiveness and cost ... Asheville, North Carolina suggesting
integrative medicine for economic development ... Daniel Redwood, DC
offers additional resources on cost benefits of integrative practices
... Sierra Tucson, Ted and Dr. Roberta Mann Foundation back new International Network on Integrative Mental
Health ... $250,000 Dr. Rogers' Prize announces
applications, September 23, 2011 set for awards dinner ... Data on the
remarkable 2010 contributions of the Wake Forest integrative medicine program
... "Integration theme" presented as reason for record turnout at
conference of chiropractor educators and researchers ... Bonnie Horrigan
offers exceptional resource on IM fellowships in Explore ... Tai
Sophia offers new nutrition MS program ... Congresswoman Carolyn Pingee
(D-ME) sponsors bill to for Medicaid coverage of Certified Professional Midwives ...
American Chiropractic Association priorities on health reform ... Public
visibility work of the American Association of Naturopathic Physicians
... Suzanne Somers' Dateline appearance shows rift between alternative cancer treatment
doctors Gonzalez/Bryzynski and interviewed integrative medicine leaders ... Reiki
effectiveness in health condition published ... American Botanical
Council and American Herbal Products Association announce 2011 awards
... Seattle Business honors Bastyr community medicine program led
by Melissa McCarty, ND ... Richard Brassard, DC selected to head
Association of Chiropractic Colleges ... Integrative medical doctor Shay
Pintov, MD leads Israeli delegation to help in Japan ... In Memoriam:
Michele Eustache
Send your stories to
[email protected]
for inclusion in a future Integrator.
Policy
Van Horn: Arizona fellow in key appointment
U Arizona Fellow Sharon Van Horn, MD, MPH appointed to federal prevention Advisory Group
Oversight: The initial Integrator coverage of appointments to the federal Advisory Group on Prevention, Health Promotion, and Integrative and Public Health Council neglected
to mention that a second integrative health professional was appointed: Sharon
Van Horn, MD, MPH, clinical pediatrician who completed a Fellowship in Integrative Medicine at the
University of Arizona. Van Horn reportedly has a longstanding interest in the
prevention of childhood and adolescent health and behavioral problems.
She was a pediatrician at Chapel
Hill Pediatrics and has served as an Adjunct Faculty in the Department
of Pediatrics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Van Horn joins
Charlotte Kerr, RSM, LAc, MPH, as one of two appointees known to be associated with the integrative health
fields. Half of the Advisory Group members have yet to be appointed.
Comment: Good to see this additional present among the 13 named thus far. It is frustrating, as Integrator columnist Taylor Walsh reports here,
that the national prevention effort that this Advisory Group is to
advise continues to roll forward without the full panel of advisers in
place.
Brian Berman, MD
New NCCAM Advisory Council Members: Jane Guiltinan, ND and Brian Berman, MD
Sources in the field share that two new members coming on to the National Advisory Council for Complementary and Alternative Medicine this year will be Brian Berman, MD and Jane Guiltinan, ND. Berman, founder of the Center for Integrative Medicine
at the University of Maryland has
received more funding from NIH NCCAM than any other researcher. The co-founder of The
Institute for Integrative Health, Berman is among the integrative MD
leaders with the most significant clinical experience in integrative
practice. His clinical strengths include acupuncture, mind-body medicine
and homeopathy. The founding chair of the Consortium of Academic Health
Centers for Integrative Medicine was honored with the $100,000 Bravewell Leadership Award in 2005.
Jan Guiltinan, ND
A February 2011 note from the American Association of Naturopathic Physicians (AANP) shared that Guiltinan
is expected to take her NACCAM position later this year. She will effectively replace Tim
Birdsall, ND, the one ND presently on NACCAM. Guiltinan, dean of naturopathic medicine at Bastyr University, is principally known as a clinician and educator. A trustee since 1998 at Harborview
Medical Center, Guiltinan heads up the Naturopathic Physicians Research Education
Project, an NCCAM-funded Bastyr grant related to
evidence based education. She has held many significant roles for her profession,
including president of the AANP.
Symposium offer policy resource
Weeks' powerpoint highlighting 2010 integrative practice policy and costs is available via Integrative Healthcare Symposium
"The Year in Review for the Policy and Business of the Integrative
Practice Community," a 41-slide presentation I presented on March 5, 2011 is
available at this link via the Integrative Healthcare Symposium (IHS). The presentation was part of the well-attended, annual conference
in New York City. Most of the slide content was previously reported in past
Integrators and will be familiar to close readers. If you have trouble accessing, please let me know and I can send a PDF. Hope this
might be useful to some of you. The next IHS conference is February 9-11,
2012.
Cost and Economics
Asheville: Looking to IM for economic development
Economic development officials in Asheville, North Carolina explore integrative medicine as a growth opportunity
The March 19, 2011 feature is headlined: "Asheville thrives as regional hub for integrative medicine." The
surrounding county is reportedly home to 32% of the state's licensed
acupuncturists and nearly a half of its licensed massage therapists. The area
also includes 30% of the state's naturopathic physicians and 60% of the
American Herbalist Guild members in the state. The article notes that the Institute for
Emerging Issues at N.C. State University recently urged that Western
North Carolina consider investing in integrative medicine "to generate
high-quality jobs." The topic of integrative medicine was recently one of 11
breakout sessions at the Institute's 26th annual forum. David Brown,
executive director of the Asheville Hub Alliance, an economic
development group, notes that "the area has a high
concentration
of Western and alternative medical providers and the health industry is
one of the few areas that has grown during the recession." He adds: "If
you put all these things together, you conclude that Asheville could
have a competitive advantage in advancing integrative health."
Comment: The nation's most well-developed model for this approach to economic development, and medical tourism, is the Hawai'i Consortium for Integrative Healthcare. The Consortium was the brainchild of Integrator adviser Ira Zunin, MD, MPH, MBA. Take a look at the stakeholder mix on the Consortium's board.
Duke IM: Research leadership in Aetna study
Expanded Aetna yoga trial with Duke Integrative Medicine, Kraftsow to examine cost-savings related to stress
"The positive results seen in these studies offer evidence that
mind-body approaches to health improvement are an effective and targeted
solution for employers who want to lower the costs associated with
stress and help their employees achieve better overall health." The speaker is Kyra Bobinet, MD, MPH,
medical director of Health and Wellness
Innovation at Aetna, and clinical director of an expanded Aetna study
based on two pilots. The studies were developed in collaboration with Duke Integrative Medicine and American Viniyoga Institute (AVI).
Kraftsow: Yoga leader in Aetna study
A Businesswire release from Aetna shared that early results from randomized controlled pilot
studies found significant reductions
in stress as compared to the control group. In addition, Aetna's review of medical
claims' data showed a positive correlation between costs and stress levels. Among
the Aetna study volunteers, those reporting the highest level of stress
had nearly $2,000 more medical costs annually than those
reporting the lowest level of stress.
The findings, according to the release, "suggest potential health care costs
savings could be realized by reducing stress." Ruth Wolever, PhD, director of research at the Duke IM program is principal investigator on the study. AVI founder Gary Kraftsow, MA, E-RYT 500 is consulting on the project.
Comment: The Aetna move recalls Mind Matters, Money Matters, the breakthrough article written by Kaiser physician David S. Sobel, MD, MPH over
a decade ago. Sobel concluded: "Mind/body medicine
is not something separate or peripheral to the main
tasks of medical care but should be an integral part of evidence-based,
cost-effective, quality health care." The still slow uptake is likely
linked to system discomforts with new players, approachs and patterns of
behavior. Credit Aetna for its published commitment.
Dan Redwood, DC: Two additional recent resources show cost savings from "CAM"
The Integrator column entitled The Big Money in Integrative Medicine, based in part on a review of cost-related findings from 2010, stimulated educator-writer Dan Redwood, DC to suggest two additional recent resources.
- $2000 for chiropractic versus $20,000 for microdiskectomy
A comparison between
chiropractic and microdiskectomy (low back surgery) found that 60% of those randomized to chiropractic care were able to both avoid
surgery and achieve long-term outcomes equal to those who underwent the
surgery. Chiropractic care cost roughly $2,000 versus approximately $20,000 for the surgery. The lead author is a chiropractor. The other authors include 3 neurosurgeons. Redwood's review of the research article is the second piece here. The research citation is McMorland G, Suter E, Casha S, du Plessis SJ, Hurlbert RJ.
Manipulation or microdiskectomy for sciatica? A prospective randomized
clinical study. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. Oct 2010;33(8):576-584.
Redwood: Two additional cost resources
$2.75-billion to $3-billion in annual savings in the U.S.?
A follow-up article in Employee Benefits News by Gerald Clum, DC extrapolates from these findings: "In the U.S., at least 200,000
microdiskectomies are performed annually at a direct cost of $5 billion, or
$25,000 per procedure. Avoiding 60 percent of these surgeries would mean a
reduction savings of $3 billion annually. In the Canadian study, patients
receiving chiropractic care averaged 21 visits during their course of care. If
a cost of $100 per patient visit is assumed for the care provided by the
chiropractor, then the total cost per patient would be $2,100, yielding per
patient savings of $22,900, or $2.75 billion dollars annually.The conclusion: $2.75 billion of savings each year if patients used chiropractic treatment first.
Comment: If researchers for a
pharmaceutical company or a medical device company had this level of
comparative evidence to support the comparative effectiveness of a new approach or
product, what do you suppose the response would be? Heck, the benefits are merely positive clinical outcomes plus signifcant cost-savings. The question this begs is whether integrative practitioners should continue using their breathing and meditation
skills to manage their outrage. The lack of significant, proactive response to such results is
the context in which to understand that flavor of the recent commentary by Lou Sportelli, DC and Jim Winterstein, DC posted here.
Organizations
Dodds: Part of organizing team for integrative mental health group
International Network on Integrative Mental Health in formation; Sierra Tucson sponsors 4-day planning retreat
Integrative mental health now has a new, international organization to
network interested parties: the 501C3 International Network
on Integrative Mental Health (INIMH). The group's formation followed
the sold out conference on the topic in March 2010 hosted by the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine (ACIM). According to a note to the Integrator from one of the lead organizers Sally Dodds, PhD, the Ted and Dr. Roberta Mann Foundation
"gave a
generous gift for integrative mental health and INIMH was formed." Says Dodds: "Our main
purposes are to advance clinical, research, and professional education
in IMH
both in the US and internationally." The organization's website is
expected to go "live" in the next couple of weeks. The next step for the
founders is an April 14-16 working retreat hosted by James Duffy, MD and Sierra Tucson (ST), an addiction treatment center situated adjacent to the Miraval Resort. The objectives of the retreat:
Labyrinth at Sierra Tucson, sponsor of working meeting
Network and collaborate among thought leaders and change agents in
IMH.
- Learn about the IMH model at ST and obtain feedback from INIMH
members on optimizing the model.
- Discuss differences between a conceptual model of Integrative Psychiatry
and Integrative Mental Health (IMH) and the strengths and limits of each.
- Develop a plan and a working group to develop a white paper on IMH
as a separate discipline.
- Develop a plan and a working group to develop curricula/training
projects in IMH, including an interdisciplinary fellowship in Integrative Mental
Health at Sierra Tucson.
- Develop a plan and a working group to develop an agenda on IMH
research priorities.
- Develop a plan and a working group to establish model best
practice IMH clinical guidelines (for 3 major disorders).
- Introduce and demonstrate INIMH website.
- Develop a strategy for broadening international representation
within INIMH
.
On a related note, the March 2011 Integrator Round-up noted the formation of a sub-group on Integrative Mental Health in the Consortium of Academic Health Centers for Integrative Medicine.
Dodds and Ron Glick, MD took the lead in developing understanding of
the value of this work at the Consortium's Fall 2010 meeting.
Comment: This is excellent, important
and obviously needed work. How many clients of a mental health providers have
never been urged to go for a walk? Or swing their arms a bit? Eat well? Take appropriate micronutrients? I look forward to
continuing to follow the organization's work. (Thanks to Patricia
Herman, ND, PhD, for linking me to this development.)
Major Canadian IM award
Dr. Rogers' $250,000 Prize calls for nominations, sets September 23rd for awards dinner
The call for nominations for the 2011 Dr. Rogers Prize for Excellence in Complementary
and Alternative Medicine has been published. The $250,000 Prize will be awarded Friday,
September 23rd, 2011 at a gala dinner in Vancouver, British Columbia. The prize, previously awarded in 2007 and in 2009, is named after pioneering integrative medical doctor Roger Rogers, MD.
The
day-long celebration includes a Colloquium that is "still in the
planning stages but is expected to focus on how
integrative medicine is actually practiced in Canada, exploring the
successes
of a number of integrative clinics from across Canada."
The nomination
deadline for the 2011 competition is May 31, 2011. For those who
submitted in the past, the process is simplified. Submissions
from 2009 can be accessed online for revision and resubmission. The same
esteemed, international set of jurors will decide on the prize winners: James Gordon, George Lewith, Joe Pizzorno, Mary Ann Richardson and
Simon Sutcliffe. Also new
on the Dr. Rogers Prize site is a gallery with photos from the 2007 and 2009 events. The prize is funded through the Lotte and John Hecht Memorial Foundation.
Academic Medicine
Kemper: Wake Forest IM leader
Highlights: 2010 Report from the Wake Forest Center for Integrative Medicine
The March 2, 2011 newsletter
for the Wake Forest-Baptist Health Center for Integrative Medicine
offers a quantitative look at the production of the Center based on
grants and projects under way in 2010. The CIM is led by Kathy Kemper, MD, MPH
holder of the Caryl J Guth Chair for Integrative Medicine. Ed Shaw, MD
is program director for research. A full PDF,
available through the newsletter link above, describes these in detail.
Area of activity
|
|
Total |
Total research grants
|
|
112
|
Total research grant funding
|
|
$30,428,527* |
Peer-reviewed publications
|
|
128
(150 faculty involved)
|
Website visits
|
|
28,000 |
Presentations |
|
139 |
Participants at presentations
|
|
17,000 |
Media interviews, articles
|
|
110 |
Other funding support
|
|
$342,000 |
Most surprising award
|
|
"Supporting Pillar
of the Police Department" |
* Grant may have been received earlier but work underway during 2010.
Comment: Quite simply, remarkable.
Integration theme key to conference's record turnout
Integration theme propels record turnout for conference of chiropractic educators and researchers
"Outstanding speakers and this year's theme, integration, propelled us forward to our largest turnout ever for an Association of Chiropractic Colleges-Research Agenda (ACC-RAC) Conference." So reports David O'Bryon,
executive director of the ACC. A total of 463 participants attended. O'Bryon adds that the conference "was a huge success due to the
timeliness of and interest in the topics covered. Integrated healthcare is the future and
full of opportunities for chiropractic."
The release from ACC notes that the formal theme was "Integration:
Chiropractic Education and Practice in Integrative Healthcare." One piece of integration was a closing keynote presentation provided by
Stephen C. Shannon, DO, MPH,
president of the American Association of Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine. Shannon addressed "The Future of Integrative Healthcare: Benefits and Obstacles of
Integration."
O'Bryon: ACC executive
Comment: I had an opportunity
to participate in this meeting by helping lead a workshop on practical
integration. I shared soem perspectives on the emerging environment that
I later converted into 8 Major Trends Promoting Integration of Integrative Practices and Complementary and Alternative Healthcare Disciplines. In
the midst of the ACC-RAC, I began a conversation with a chiropractic
clinician with 4 decades of scars from poor relationships with medical
doctors. He sees no future in investing in integration, except perhaps
among the natural healthcare disciplines. Given the poor inclusion of
chiropractic doctors even in most integrative medical settings, it's no
surprise that the purple-ing of the DC-MD bruises is still visible. The
slow mainstream response to the evidence on cost and care noted above
is yet more fanning of the ire. Good
for the ACC to both chose this topic, and then turn out for it in such
numbers.
Horrigan: Excellent resource on IM residencies and fellowships
Explore publisher Horrigan provides resource on integrative MD residencies
The March 2011 issue of Explore includes an article by publisher Bonnie Horrigan entitled
Integrative Medicine Fellowships and Residencies Transforming the Healthcare Landscape.
The web-available resource includes information on 4 national programs
(e.g. University of Arizona Fellowship, Bravewell) and 12 regional
programs (Connecticut, New York, Maine, Michigan, Texas, California,
Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin and elsewhere). The report offers a short
description of each, names core faculty and provides a link.
Comment: This is
an excellent resource for not only prospective fellows but also for
interested observers of this field. While Horrigan's title claim that the residencies are
"transforming the healthcare landscape" may yet be an aspirational
reach, certainly this report signifies integrative medicine's growing
entrenchment in medical education. Horrigan's article is a fine, useful piece of work. (Thanks to Taylor Walsh for pointing me to this information.)
Branching into new nutrition MS program
Tai Sophia offers Nutrition and Integrative Health Masters; link with James Gordon's "Food as Medicine"
Fall 2011 will be the first class of a new Master of Science in Nutrition and Integrative Health program at the Tai Sophia Institute. The
former single purpose acupuncture
program has been expanding its offerings over the past decade. The
following are the published "program highlights" of the 47 hour course.
The course is structured so that working professionals can take it via
weekends over 2 years.
- Taught from a holistic and integrative perspective
- Prepares graduates for a variety of nutrition and wellness
careers
- Prepares graduates to sit for the Certified Nutrition
Specialist (CNS) exam
- Features custom-designed science courses and core
competencies in nutrition assessment and treatment strategies
- Includes whole foods cooking as part of academic curriculum
- Addresses sustainability and the relationships between our
food choices, our agricultural and food processing practices, and the
environment
- Integrates students into the broader health and
wellness learning community at Tai Sophia Institute.
The curriculum is posted here.
One interesting feature is a relationship with the Center for Mind-Body Medicine
(CMBM) founded by James Gordon, MD. According to an April 6, 2011
e-letter to the CMBM the new course "is very special to us and to Food As Medicine (FAM) graduates." The reason: "Our own Kathie
Swift, MS, RD, our brilliant FAM Curriculum Designer, was one of the visionary
leaders in the field who informed the creation of this curriculum." FAM graduates can receive
advanced standing in this degree program.
Professions
Pingee: Lead sponsor for homebirth option
Certified Professional Midwives introduce Access
to Certified Professional Midwives Act of 2011(HR 1054)
On March 17, 2011 the MAMA Campaign (Midwives and Mothers in Action) for homebirth-oriented midwives sent notice that it is "thrilled to announce that Congresswoman Chellie Pingree (D-ME) has
introduced HR
1054, the Access to Certified Professional Midwives Act of 2011 in the U.S.
House of Representatives." HR 1054 would require Medicaid coverage of Certified Professional Midwives (CPMs) who are licensed in the state in which they practice. Said Pingree: "I believe it's important that women are able to have the birth experience they
want, regardless of where they live and how much money they make. That is why
it's important that women with Medicaid coverage have the same access to high
quality, safe, and cost-effective services." Pingee's co-sponsors are Jim McDermott, MD (D-WA) and Gwen Moore (D-WI).
Comment: The MAMA Campaign had a
success it's first jump into the Beltway in 2009-2010 when CPMs were
included in Section 2301 of the healthcare overhaul bill as covered
providers in free-standing birth centers. The group has good evidence of
cost-effectiveness. Alignment of interest note: I'm a donor to the campaign due to powerful, transformative homebirth experiences in the birth of each of my children.
American Chiropractic Association priorities under PPACA
A March 24, 2011 e-newsletter to members from the American
Chiropractic Association (ACA) notes that the organization's federal
priorities relative to the Obama healthcare overhaul are "to ensure the
full applicability of Section 2706 (Provider Non-Discrimination)
to insurance plans (including
ERISA and state exchange plans) as the primary mechanism through which
doctors of chiropractic can provide services in the newly regulated environment
created by PPACA." In addition, the ACA is seeking "to ensure no language is adopted at the federal level
relative to 'essential benefits' that would specifically exclude the services
provided by, or the participation of, chiropractors."
The AANP's pitch: Getting out the word on naturopathic medicine
For the small naturopathic medical
profession, public relations is a particular need. With just
4000-5000 licensed NDs in the United States, and licensing in just 16
states, few members of the public know what NDs are, or how to find one. A recent
membership push from the American Association of Naturopathic Physicians
presented naturopathic doctors across the nation with the
organization's bragsheet for what it has accomplished in the public relations area.
These extracts offer a sense of both reach, and strategy.
Action Area
|
|
Outcomes
|
Consumers reached via web,
blog and twitter
|
|
350,000
|
Consumers searched the AANP site
to locate an ND near them
|
|
300,000 |
Organizations in which AANP leadership
has taken a board/advisory role
|
|
-Coalition for Patients Rights
-National Foundation
of Women's Legislators
-Integrative Healthcare Symposium
|
Congressional activity
|
|
Organized annual 3-day "DC-FLI"
lobby days
|
Media outreach
|
|
-Organized cadre of ND spokespeople
-Engaged firm to help place ND
-Developed ND "rapid response team"
-Developed ND in the News resource
|
Comment: As a sometimes executive director involved in growing organizations, and currently presently involved as such,
bragsheets are necessary communication tools in building a membership
and soliciting support. The high level of consumer use of the website is
particularly interesting, as
are the organization choices for alliances. It has always stumped me
that the organization did not join the Integrated Healthcare Policy Consortium
(IHPC), which has worked successfully on many issues of value to its
members. My colleague Michael Cronin, ND shares that an affirmative
decision was recently made, though the IHPC website does not yet show
it.
Media
Somers: Promoting alternative cancer on Dateline
Cancer wars on Dateline: Follow-up from Clay, Gonzalez, Bryzynski
Lobbyist, former NIH Office of Alternative Medicine staffer and sometimes Integrator contributor Beth Clay sends a note
that Dateline NBC recently ran a controversial segment with Suzanne Somers on her book on alternative cancer treatments. Sommers book is
KnockOut: Interviews with Doctors Who Are Curing Cancer. Key subjects of the book and Dateline segment were alternative cancer doctors Nicholas Gonzalez, MD and Stanislaw Bryzynski, MD. Barrie
Cassileth,
PhD, who leads the integrative cancer program at Memorial
Sloan Kettering
and Andrew Weil, MD, founder of the Arizona Center for Integrative
Medicine were each quoted as quite skeptical about the value of the
treatments of Bryzynski and Gonzalez. Following the show, Somers posted
lengthy responses to the show from Gonzalez, from Bryzynski and from Clay.
While Bryzynski felt the overall interviews with the alternative cancer
doctors were "not too bad," he and Gonzalez and Clay particularly laid into
the appropriateness of Cassileth and Weil as experts. The Integrator previously covered some aspects of this long-running dispute in this Round-up.
Gonzalez: Offers thorough, measured response
Comment: Commenting on the
therapeutic substance of this battle is well beyond my skill set.
However, I do have some background in journalism. This includes working
knowledge of how one focuses a story, chooses to include and decides to
leave out. This has left me as something of a radical in
questioning the journalistic "objectivity" of any participant in this
sport. The multiple biases produced through genes, home, culture and
environment layer so densely over the imagined balance point to the
point of utter obscurity. The Dateline story
and these posts are especially interesting because they focus not only
on the macro-cancer wars between mainstream and alternative treatments.
We also see here a rather ugly micro-battle between individuals
associated
with "alternative" and others with "integrative" approaches. My
(biased) read:
Gonzalez and Bryzynski aren't getting a fair shake.
Comment on the comment: A working postulate: Battles and bias
are most feverish when a) parties are defensive; and b) there is a good
deal of cash at stake. Cancer fits both categories. Big money. Big
challenges. Everyone talks about how much the other makes, and focuses
on the worst of the other's results. Thus the vehemence.
Miscellaneous
Conference Reports: ACHM, I-Mosaic, Integrative Practice Symposium
The Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine reports that its May 9-11, 2011 Nutrition & Health
conference in San Francisco is sold out at 740 paid attendees and over 900 total. The next iteration will be
April 15-18, 2012 in Boston ... The I-MOSAIC conference led by 4
integrative MD/DO organization is reportedly drawing some 800 to their
first conference, in Minnesota ... The Integrative Healthcare Symposium
held in New York City March 4-6, 2011 drew 1180 paid attendees plus
half-again as many additional souls present as speakers or exhibitors.
(I am pleased to be affiliated with this meeting and organization, an Integrator sponsor.)
Miles: Pushing awareness of Reiki research
Milestone: Reiki's first appearance in mainstream journal
Reiki maven and connector Pamela Miles shares a milestone for her field: "Our Yale cardiac Reiki study published in
the Journal of the American College of Cardiology is the first
Reiki study in a conventional medical journal." Miles is one of the
co-authors of the study, led by early Yale integrative medicine
organizer Rachel Friedman, entitled Effects of Reiki on Autonomic Activity Early After Acute Coronary Syndrome. (Rachel S.C. Friedman, Matthew M. Burg, Pamela Miles, Forrester Lee, and Rachel Lampert J. Am. Coll. Cardiol. 2010;56;995-996.) According to Miles' synopsis at her Reiki in Medicine site, researchers found that "patients who received a 20-minute Reiki treatment within three days
after suffering a heart attack showed improved mood and heart rate
variability (HRV)."
Comment: Two significant questions.
First, with something as subtle as Reiki, is it appropriate to measure
an achievement as a "milestone"? Second, what will be most excruciating
for the anti-IM/CAM bloggers: the report above on the expansion of
integrative MD fellowships, or this published account that a Reiki
practitioner holding his/her hands a few inches above a person's body can
elicit a clinically meaningful response?
Awards
Rom: Award from American Botanical Council
American Botanical Council and American Herbal Products Association announce awardees
The American Botanical Council and the American Herbal Products
Association each announced their annual awards at the major industry
gathering at EXPO West in Anaheim in March. This release from ABC offers more details on the following 3 awards:
- ABC James A. Duke Excellence in Botanical Literature
Award was presented to Aviva Romm, MD, for her new book Botanical Medicine for Women's Health.
- The ABC Norman R.
Farnsworth Excellence in Botanical Research Award was presented to Professor A.
Douglas Kinghorn, PhD, of Ohio State University.
- The ABC Varro E.
Tyler Commercial Investment in Phytomedicinal Research Award was presented to
New Chapter Inc., a producer of a unique line of dietary supplements.
In this AHPA release, the honoring of the following individuals was announced:
- The AHPA Herbal Hero Award, which
recognizes individuals who make outstanding contributions to AHPA
committees or initiatives, was awarded to Edward J. Fletcher, chief
operating officer of Strategic Sourcing, Inc.
- The AHPA Herbal Industry Leader Award, which recognizes
companies that set an example of outstanding business practices or
organizations that work to move the industry forward above and beyond
normal business practices, was awarded to NOW Foods, based in
Bloomingdale, Ill.
- The AHPA Herbal Insight Award, which
recognizes individuals or non-commercial organizations that have a
significant impact on furthering knowledge and understanding of
botanicals and their uses, was presented to the members of the Expert
Advisory Council for the revision to AHPA's Botanical Safety Handbook.
- Special Award: The 2011 AHPA Visionary Award, which recognized unwavering, persistent dedication in the advancement
of all-natural stevia, goes to James A. May, CEO of Wisdom Natural
Brands of Gilbert, Ariz.
In addition, the Natural Products Association gave one of its 4 Herbal
Champion Awards to Frank Lampe, director of communications for AHPA.
Lampe, a long-time writer and communications executive, is a founder
of the LOHAS concept.
McCarty: Community ND care program awarded
Bastyr's University community services to the underserved honored by business magazine
Seattle Business Magazine has named Bastyr University's
Naturopathic External Site Program as a runner-up in the 2011 Leaders in
HealthCare competition. Bastyr's recognition was in the category of Outstanding Achievement in Community
Outreach. The magazine's brief on the Bastyr program follows:
"The largest university for
natural health arts and sciences in the country, Bastyr University offers free
or low-cost naturopathic care to underserved populations in King County through
its 15-year-old external site program. Students in advanced naturopathic
medicine and acupuncture and Oriental medicine treat patients at 12 locations,
including a downtown homeless shelter, a rural community center in Carnation
and the Country Doctor Clinic for low-income patients on Seattle's Capitol
Hill. The program reached 3,567 patients in 2009.
In a note to the community, Bastyr's dean of naturopathic medicine, Jane Guiltinan, ND particularly honored Melissa McCarty, ND, program director and Gary Garcia, MD, MHA, the university's director of graduate and community medicine.
Comment: A useful data point would
be the total number of underserved people who are annually served via schools and programs
to clinically educate licensed "CAM" practitioners. A survey
with which I was involved via the National Education Dialogue
(2005-never published) found a very high percentage of schools had such
programs. Bastyr's was in good company as a runner-up: the other operation similarly noted is the internationally-recognized Airlift Northwest.
People
Brassard: Taking helm at ACC
Brassard chosen as incoming president for the Association of Chiropractic Colleges
Richard G. Brassard,
DC, president of Texas
Chiropractic College,
was elected as incoming president of the Association of Chiropractic Colleges. Brassard,
the son of a chiropractor, is a past president of the American
Chiropractic Association and has held many leadership positions in his
field over the past 40 years. Brassard succeeds Frank Nicchi, DC, MS,
president of New York Chiropractic College. Nicchi's term was marked by a
focus on, and advances in, integration. (See article on ACC-RAC conference under Academics, above.) Mark Zeigler, DC, president of
the multidisciplinary Northwestern Health
Sciences University,
will serve as ACC's vice president.
Israeli integrative medicine doctor, Shay Pintov, leads team to Japan
Georgetown integrative medicine leader Adi Haramati, PhD reports that Shay Pintov, MD, "one of the pioneers
of Integrative Medicine in Israel" is serving as the ambassador of an Israel Defence Forces medical mission
to Japan. Pintov spent time in Japan after his medical training to learn
traditional Japanese Medicine and is bringing that knowledge together with his
integrative medicine/pediatrics expertise.
Eustache: Huge loss
In Memoriam: Michelle Eustache
There was a huge loss to the naturopathic medical profession and, from all accounts,
to healing, when 3rd year Bastyr University ND student Michelle Eustache
drowned off the
island of Ometepe, Nicaragua, March 25, 2011. Eustache, a second generation Haitian immigrant, was part of a
student Brigade participating in a service learning program to delivery clinical and public health services through Natural
Doctors International. NDI director Tabatha Parker, ND, told the Integrator that Eustache was
"just a natural leader, involved in everything, just a horrible loss." One example of Eustache's work is this article on a
Bastyr program posted here in which Eustache was a principal. A memory of Eustache is here.
Comment: The loss is all the worse in that the integrative practice fields tend to have relative few non-Asian people of color involved. Eustache had all the marks of a person who would have opened a network of relationships into new communities. The sadness is that much deeper.
Send your comments to
[email protected]
for inclusion in a future Your Comments Forum.
Resumes are useful in employment decisions. I provide this background so that you may understand what informs the work which you may employ in your own. I have been involved as an organizer-writer in the emerging fields......more | |
|
|
Popular & Related Products
Popular & Featured Events
Dimensions of Wellness
|
|