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CommieGIR
Aug 22, 2006

The blue glow is a feature, not a bug


Pillbug
Ch...ch....che....chemicals!

I hate the alternative medicine movement. Between obvious bias ('They said something I like, so they must be experts in their field a'la Food Babe') and woo filled quackery, its a nightmare.

Not to mention their tie ins with the Anti-Vaccine movement and Anti-GMO movement and their pseudoscience poo poo fest.

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CommieGIR
Aug 22, 2006

The blue glow is a feature, not a bug


Pillbug

Talmonis posted:

Cousin: "The thing you've got to realize is that the water remembers."
Me :stare:



Clever girl....

CommieGIR
Aug 22, 2006

The blue glow is a feature, not a bug


Pillbug

snorch posted:

There's a lot of what I feel is misplaced vitriol and hostility in this thread, especially towards the patients who believe in this sort of stuff. What a lot of people seem to be missing is that these are usually people who have had some very unfortunate experiences with mainstream medicine, and will go through a lot of mental gymnastics to let themselves believe that the "alternative" treatments are ultimately the right path. Combine this with the human tendency to group themselves and others into movement and countermovement, and suddenly you have people singing the praises of Bleeblop Root Extract and harboring belief in a global conspiracy of doctors to keep 'em coming back by loving their poo poo up.

Picture someone who has been through pain and malpractice in sickly lit clinics that smell of peroxide and death, who goes in to the doctor telling them their prescription isn't helping, only to have them rubberstamp a script for double the dosage and send them out the door, who feels scared and alone, uncertain of what is going on with their body because the best a doctor can give them is a "well your results look fine" and a smirk that oozes feigned pity.

So this person decides they're fed up, and as a last-ditch attempt to be healthy they decide to visit the Alternative Medicine Yuppie Witch Doctor that Sheila from Work was telling them about. The practice is lovely, with lots of plants, mellow lighting, with a faint hint of lavender and cardamom in the air, and maybe even some soothing music in the waiting room. Having waited just five minutes with their rear end resting on the generously stuffed cushion of a hand-carved wooden chair, they are called in to the Healing Room, where the Healer Person asks detailed questions about them, their condition, eating habits, pets, love life, all that stuff. Then they are asked to strip down to their undergarments (the room is well above stiff-nipple temperature) and lay on the Healing Table. The Healing Session probably then consists of some firm but overall pleasant touching, some "do you feel like that when i go like this?" questioning (the answer is always "uh-huh"), maybe some light small talk in between, undoubtedly touching on the horror stories of medicine past. The patient leaves the practice 65 bucks lighter and having had an almost entirely positive experience.

Stories similar to this are commonplace across the globe, and usually lead to some degree of belief in the core methods being applied. I really find it hard to fault people for rejecting rigorously proven medicine in favor of excellent bedside manner. The unfortunate reality is that lots of people are put off by the cold clinical vibes and lovely attitudes they experience any time they have to visit the doctor, leaving with a bad taste in their mouth, and doubting that what they received was adequate care.

A lot of people forget that the care experience is about more than just the direct treatment of an illness; bedside manner, a welcoming atmosphere, transparency, and adequate face time with doctors and nurses are all factors affecting not only the mental wellbeing of a patient, but also the outcome of their treatment. These are things that "alternative" medicine often does better than the mainstream, and that's something that needs to be acknowledged.


Water memory is pretty much certainly bullshit, but stuff like chi, chakras, "energy", whatever are IMO only partially so. As far as I can tell, they are for the most part words used to describe concepts built around highly subjective perceptions of one's own body that have otherwise not effectively been put into words. That highly subjective nature, combined with the immense potential for miscommunication and misunderstanding is the reason these things are such hairy topics to discuss. Some people would like to believe that the "energy" they perceive exists very directly in the physical realm and can be influenced by magnets or crystals or needles or whatever, and from what I have seen, this is where much of the superstition and bullshit arises from (looking at you, Reiki). From what I have experienced though, I think most of the stuff described can be thought of as neurological abstractions of complex interactions between various parts of the nervous system, and to some extent things like yoga and meditation can have a pronounced effect on these phenomena. Given that, I think it is absolutely worth taking a good scientific look into the nature of these perceptions. Bits and pieces of some of these so-called alternative medicine concepts do occasionally manage to creep into mainstream treatment (meditation, fecal transplants, some herbal medicines), so while it's very important to view these things critically, it's also a lovely idea to write it all off wholesale without at least being inquisitive and picking the ideas apart looking for the core of their benefits.

Nobody is hostile to the patients for seeking this.

We're hostile to the practitioners.

It doesn't matter if they have better bedside manner or offer a glimmer of forlorn hope to these patients, or if they believe in their practices themselves: Its hoccum. Its woo. Its bullshit. And in the end, it usually does more harm than any good it can produce.

Fecal transplants stood up to science and were found worthy, testing held up their hypothesis. But that does not suddenly validate other woo filled pseudoscience.

You are trying too hard to equate the overall nice experience of visiting an alternative medicine practitioner to a successful treament. That is a very bad fallacy.

CommieGIR
Aug 22, 2006

The blue glow is a feature, not a bug


Pillbug
The problem is too that for every harmless homeopath, you have at least ten that do real harm. Go talk to an oncologist and ask them about patients that spend valuable and critical periods of their newly diagnosed disease trying all manner of quackery only to end up coming in when the disease has progressed to a point yhat all the oncologist can do is sigh and tell them just how much longer they have to live.

CommieGIR
Aug 22, 2006

The blue glow is a feature, not a bug


Pillbug
http://www.quackwatch.org/01QuackeryRelatedTopics/Victims/craven.html

quote:

Lucille consulted a physician in another city, a physiatrist, with whom she had an acquaintance. This physician urged her to obtain a second opinion, which she did. The second opinion was the same, but Lucille was determined to obtain nontraditional treatment. She prevailed upon her physician acquaintance to find an individual to provide such a treatment. Together they visited a naturopath who claimed to cure cancer. However, at their meeting he requested an advance payment in full of many thousands of dollars as well as agreements signed by all family members excusing him from any liability.

Lucille determined to find another person to treat her illness. She began to read books with titles like "The Cure for All Cancers" and "The Cancer Encyclopedia." One such book was by a chiropractor in a nearby state. Lucille sought treatment at his clinic. After their first meeting, she believed he could cure her cancer. She began to visit his clinic on a regular basis, although it was almost 150 miles away. She wrote him frequently to keep him updated with the progress of her disease. During her visits, he extracted blood and examined it in a dark-field microscope, showing her the field of view. At some point, he recommended that she use 714X, an injectable medicine promoted by a Canadian doctor. So she sent for it and began giving it to herself.

Meanwhile she continued to consult her physician acquaintance who examined her periodically, sold her homeopathic remedies, and provided blood irradiation services (a technique of extracting blood into a quartz vessel illuminated by ultraviolet light).

She continued to conceal both her disease and the true purpose of her homeopathic treatment from all in her family. She described her behavior as a search for a healthy lifestyle. I witnessed a gradual buildup of dozens of homeopathic remedies and the conversion of our family to organic-only food; and finally I discovered her self-injection treatments. She knew I disapproved strongly of these and of her visits to the chiropractor. I began to print and leave around articles which I found at the CDC website on the dangers of nonlicensed medicine. In hindsight, this was far too little, too late. However, being married for 33 years to this woman who was wonderful in other ways made me too tolerant.

Eventually her untreated cancer broke through to the surface of her breast. Her physician acquaintance explained that the cauliflower-like nodules were "carbuncles" caused by an excess of lymph. Her self-treatment became even more extreme and she purchased a device with two headlights on wands at a cost of many thousands of dollars. The instructions with these show a diagram of the human lymphatic system and they were intended to "promote lymphatic flow."

By this time, two years had passed since the initial diagnosis. The chiropractor stated that he couldn't help her any more and suggested she go to Germany to be treated there. Lucille discovered through a casual remark by his staff that his other patients were receiving chemotherapy. Lucille felt misled by him because he had caused her to believe that chemotherapy was harmful and not desirable.

The growing tumor had metastasized and Lucille's left arm developed extreme lymphedema (swelling caused by blockage of drainage of the lymphatic system). This was not concealable, and I began to question her. Eventually she disclosed her condition and within a few days I convinced her to see another physician both of us had worked with and whom she also trusted. He arranged for immediate admission to his hospital and for the case to be taken over by an excellent oncologist. We obtained her cooperation to this 'conventional' treatment. Her oncologist did not criticize her homeopathic, naturopathic health providers even as he gave us a prognosis of months. She was released from the hospital on a fearsome regimen of chemotherapy. A surgeon consultant and radiation therapist consultant found her untreatable; and she died approximately 4 months later -- a few days short of her 55th birthday.


http://www.ncahf.org/nl/1990/7-8.html#atikian

quote:

The Victim

Dead from malnutrition and pneumonia is Lorie Atikian. Eight months before her death on September 25, 1987, Lorie was a perfectly healthy baby. When she died she was nearly bald, covered with deep red rashes, and so emaciated that the paramedics thought they were being tricked by being given a doll to treat.

The Parents

Lorie's parents Sonia, 38, and Khochadour, 54, are emigres from Lebanon and Syria. In addition to Lorie, the couple has two teenaged children. Like many people these days the Atikian's were concerned about modern food additives, pesticide residues, and drugs. Their cultural background may have made them a bit more vulnerable, but like most people they held positive attitudes toward "natural" food and medicine. Sonia became enamored with Gerhard Hanswille, an "herbologist."

The "Herbologist"

Gerhard Hanswille, 55, says that he learned herbology in Germany through self-study and books (Germany has a tradition of folk medicine that includes a great deal of Medieval herbalism). In 1972, Hanswille obtained a mail order doctoral degree in naturopathy from "Bernadean University" (BU) located at that time in Las Vegas, Nevada. BU, which was never approved or accredited to offer any courses, was closed down by the Nevada Commission on Postsecondary Education in 1976. It then moved to California where it operated for several years before eventually becoming "authorized" under the State's liberal rules (Aronson, 1983). California has tried to close BU but has been blocked by its claim to being a religious school of the Church of Universology (Emshwiller, 1987).

Hanswille owns two "House of Herbs" stores, writes and gives seminars at which he expounds his theories, which include making wax and clay effigies sealed with drops of blood and sperm (notions founded in Monism and Vitalism which are the basis of most primitive folk medicine). Hanswille's book describes how to heal diabetes, epilepsy, TB, tumors and paralysis by "touchless massage." Hanswille likens the technique to dowsing for water, something that "not everyone can do." Sonia paid $450 to take Hanswille's course.

The Promise

Hanswille's compelling vision of natural health made a convert of Sonia. When she became pregnant with Lorie in 1985 Hanswille convinced her to remain "pure" for the sake of the child. She testified that Hanswille promised to make Lorie a super baby. "That baby is going to be very different. Its going to develop without chemicals. Its going to be strong and pure...it going to be very special." Hanswille convinced Sonia that vaccinations would "poison" her child, and that ultrasound examination would damage an unborn baby's brain. He had Sonia tell her pediatrician that she would not be bringing Lorie in any more because the family was moving to California. Hanswille was described as ". . .like a doctor. . .surrounded by medicine and books. . . sure of what he was saying. He always had an answer."

The Regimen

Hanswille advocated an organic, vegetarian diet. He sold the Atikians a special juicer for $400 alleging that their own juicer "burned the nutrition" out of fruits. Among the special products the Atikians purchased from Hanswille were a bottle of baby oil that cost $16, a bar of soap costing $7.40, and a 3 kg box of laundry detergent that cost $35.99.

When Lorie became ill she was treated with royal jelly, "cell salts" (homeopathy), and an herbal concoction brewed by Hanswille. He also treated Lorie with an electromagnetic "vitalizing" machine that "stimulates the blood" and has attachments such as an electrified comb that "livens up the hair." Sonia Atikian testified that they became very concerned about Lorie's condition but that Hanswille assured them that it was normal for clumps of her baby's hair to fall out and not to worry if Lorie didn't gain weight. Hanswille told Sonia that taking Lorie to a hospital would be like "holding a loaded gun to Lorie's head and pulling the trigger."

The Legal Charges

The Atikians were charged with failing to provide the necessities of life for their baby daughter (child neglect). Up until now Hanswille has not been charged with anything. He has angrily complained that he feels like "the accused" but denies that he did anything wrong. He says that he "cannot tell people what to do," that it is up to the parents to make decisions for their children. The judge instructed the jury that it was all right for them to "vent your spleen" over the activities of Hanswille "and his ilk," but neither he nor herbalism were on trial in the death of little Lorie.

The Verdict

On June 12 the Atikians were found guilty of child neglect. Sentencing is scheduled for July 6.

Lets talk about the 'non-harm' of the 'friendly Homeopaths'

CommieGIR
Aug 22, 2006

The blue glow is a feature, not a bug


Pillbug

Tim Raines IRL posted:

I think there's a big difference between using alternative therapies as a first-line defense against serious conditions like cancer, and coming to them after exhausting all the conventional treatments for more ambiguous problems like chronic anxiety or fibromyalgia. I don't know anyone who's gotten better from cancer through juice fasts; I know several people who feel that their psychological problems or fibro is managed better with diet/lifestyle changes, trigger point massage, dry needling, etc than it is with SSRIs/benzodiazepines or tramadol.

You are missing the point though: A lot of the people that provide these treatments tend to push their treatments as solutions to more threatening and dangerous medical maladies, and that is why homeopathy is kind of an issue.

As in such a big issues that crunchy moms kill their infants because they took the advice of their guru or chiropractor as far as lifestyle and diet changes.

CommieGIR
Aug 22, 2006

The blue glow is a feature, not a bug


Pillbug

Tim Raines IRL posted:

I see that as reason to investigate everything on a case-by-case basis (and deal sternly with anyone who's so far out of line that it's legally actionable). Likewise it's increasingly easy to find anecdotes online of people who feel they were severely damaged after being inappropriately given strong psych drugs for very ordinary run-of-the-mill life stresses. Does the mere existence of some number of psychiatrists who push undocumented poly-drug cocktails on people inappropriately mean that the entire field is an issue?

Unfortunately, the very people you praise made this impossible to do by making them impossible to regulate.

The entire field is an issue. Homeopathy has been well studied. It doesn't work. No amount of special pleading is going to change that.

CommieGIR fucked around with this message at 21:22 on Oct 28, 2014

CommieGIR
Aug 22, 2006

The blue glow is a feature, not a bug


Pillbug

"Tim Raines IRL" posted:


Placebos work and are very safe; why shouldn't their sale and advocacy be just as allowable as things which are active and potentially much more dangerous?

Because they are not selling placebos, at least as far as they are concerned and the patients are concerned. They are selling 'miracle cures' and 'treatments'

I'm just going to point you back up to the 'What Harm Could It Cause' website linked above.

Botton line? A lot of harm

CommieGIR fucked around with this message at 03:28 on Oct 29, 2014

CommieGIR
Aug 22, 2006

The blue glow is a feature, not a bug


Pillbug

This is called 'special pleading'

Outside of affects on actual pain, the needling is more than likely not treating the underlying cause.

Might as well just taken pain killers.

Its still scientifically bunk.

CommieGIR
Aug 22, 2006

The blue glow is a feature, not a bug


Pillbug

Dancer posted:

To be fair, you can't actually know that for a fact. The first study for instance, also refers to increased range of motion (which just pain-killers won't do). Given the nature of needling, it's just impossible to properly blind patients, and thus impossible to separate placebo from genuine effect. You're stabbing something in the body, it's not that inconceivable that it may have an actual effect.

While not inconceivable that it might have some effect, there is nothing also confirming its having any effect outside of relieving the pain, and the pain was what hampered the issue to begin with.

Don't get me wrong, if it works, great, but we NEED to demand further study before it start prescribing it as a medicinal treatment.

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CommieGIR
Aug 22, 2006

The blue glow is a feature, not a bug


Pillbug

Tim Raines IRL posted:

do you take this same view about every single drug that lands on the market with lots of "pharmacokinetics unknown, more study needed" buzz around it? If not, why the double standard?

Do you know how much study it takes to get a treatment/drug on the market? The standards for blind studies vs. a placebo is really high.

Either way, you are trying to make arguments about Homeopathic medicine that are very much grounded in anecdotal evidence and not actual study.

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