ADVANCEDBROWSE SUBJECTS
alive Academy
Alive Forum
Event Calendar
Health Retailer Search
Alive Awards
Alive Web Exclusives
Alive Australia


APEX Awards 2008

Find a store
Subscribe to our Free Newsletter!

Enlarge Font Printer Version Email It to a Friend
Growing Doses of Acceptance for Complementary Medicine
by author Michelle Hancock

Jill Franklin’s story is a tribute to the power of human spirit. It also exemplifies the state of complementary and alternative medicine in Canada.

In 1990 the then 48-year-old mother and author was struck by a car while walking in Vancouver and thrown five car lengths. She awoke in the hospital to a brain injury, multiple shattered bones, and soft tissue injuries.

Padding provided by her backpack was what saved her life.

Six months in a wheelchair was only the beginning. When everything her doctors and specialists recommended didn’t provide the expected relief, Jill tried craniosacral therapy, prolotherapy, acupuncture, massage, and energy work.

At last, her body began to heal. The pain began to recede. She started sleeping better. During the day, however, Jill battled with the provincial insurance corporation to recognize the role complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) treatments played in her recovery.

Jill’s legal fight lasted seven years, but eventually insurance was ordered to pay for everything.

Health Care in Transition

Who wants to bet we’ll see more Jill-like stories in the media, cases of people turning not just to CAM but also defending its use? One-fifth of Canadian adults visited an alternative medical practitioner in 2003—up from 15 percent a decade earlier, according to Statistics Canada. Chiropractic was most popular (11 percent), followed by massage therapy (8 percent), acupuncture (2 percent), and homeopathy or naturopathy (2 percent).

Interest in alternative therapies doesn’t show signs of slowing and has sent a strong message to medical gatekeepers. There’s a new patient consciousness in town.

A 1998 survey found 10 out of 16 Canadian medical schools taught about CAM in their curriculum, but only two instructed students about alternative therapies. The same year, 84 of 125 American medical schools offered stand-alone courses on various holistic therapies. Clearly, educational institutions have seen a trend of the future. Western medicine is under increasing challenge, resulting in intense changes to North American health care.

Viable Alternatives

Meanwhile, consumers know what we want. Had Jill Franklin stuck only to accepted treatments, she might still be off work, unable to sit for more than 20 seconds at a time due to pain. Instead, she gradually returned to a physically active life and wrote Auto Accident Survivor’s Guide for British Columbia (Stone Mountain Books, 2005), a must-read for navigating the medical-legal-insurance system.

Jill attributes her healing to a blend of things. Her inner strength pulled her through. A physiotherapist taught her to walk again, and a simple bean taped to an acupuncture point on her inner wrist reduced pain, as she puts it, “better than all the medication in the world.”

What is . . . ?

Acupuncture: The insertion of fine, sterile needles into specific points on the body as identified by Chinese medical theory, which promotes energy “chi” flow.

Carniosacral therapy: A subtle type of body work that integrates energy and touch and corrects imbalances of the craniosacral system, which includes the head, spinal cord, and sacrum.

Prolotherapy: The injection of sugar and anesthetic into ligaments or tendons to encourage blood and nutrient flow, which stimulates healing

Michelle Hancock is especially interested in health and environmental issues. She can be reached through editorial@alive.com.

Source: alive #285, July 2006

Back to top

See Related Content
A New Breed of Doctors
"While going to university, [medical doctors] are somehow taught to close their minds." So said Vancouver talkshow host Croft Woodruff in a recent interview.
Victory For Medical Choices
Charges against Dr Hulda Regehr Clark were recently dismissed, as happy supporters prepared to continue the battle. Attorney Steve Dillon's office gave notice that the judge granted the defence Motion to Dismiss. Clark was charged with practicing medicine without a license in Indiana.
Doctors Under Fire
Canadian doctors are being harasse.
Transfusions
Blood has become one of the most scrutinized fluids of our time. Canada's tainted blood scandal left thousands of people infected with hepatitis C and shook public confidence in the Canadian Red Cross. Yet there is more information threatening to rock the medical establishment and causing people to demand safer alternatives..
Beware Nursing Home Nutrition
Hospitals and nursing home dieticians don't seem to have the recipe for good nutrition. Caregivers don't know how much of anything patients are really consuming.
Dr. Krop Loses, Environmental Medicine Wins
Dr. Krop's case has brought about a revolution in the highercourt of public opinion, which demands safe medicine and a return tounpolluted planetary life-support systems.The 13-year trial of Dr. Jozef Krop may be over, but its impact on thefuture of environmental medicine in Canada will be lasting.
Taxes That Make Sense
Every time there's a national election, candidates make promises about tax cuts. We hear endless dialogue in the media about the inadequacies of our universal health-care program and the out-of-control costs of funding that system.
Backward Medicine
"The doctor of the future will give no medication, but will interest his patients in the care of the human frame, diet and in the cause and prevention of disease. Thomas A.
Lifesaver or Billion-Dollar Industry?
Coronary artery bypass surgery took centre stage in 2004 when former US President Bill Clinton underwent emergency bypass surgery.
First Steps Toward a Healthier Future
If you've ever suffered a health problem or been close to someone who has, you know how improving nutrition can improve health. Knowing what foods to eat is just as important as knowing why we need to eat them.
A Question of Ethics or Ethical Questions?
You may have heard some fairly wild claims made by proponents of natural products. Even wilder claims, however, seem to be coming from the pharmaceutical industry. To find out more, you might want to start by asking your physician, but medical doctors usually have little or no training in natural remedies.
Consumer Confidence -- at a Cost
Consumers can expect to pay more for natural health products in the coming years. But at least they'll know what they're getting. New Health Canada regulations will affect everything from manufacturing and distributing to licensing and labelling.

Back to top