What
Is Holistic Health?
By Debra Greene, Ph.D.
In
1993 the American medical profession got a wake up call. This
resulted from publication of research in the New England Journal
of Medicine that indicated about $10 billion was spent each
year out of pocket on alternative treatments. At that time, 1
in 3 people was routinely seeing an alternative practitioner,
which meant visits to alternative healers outnumbered visits to
conventional doctors. As these figures continue to rise, the medical
community has responded accordingly.
Now,
over 50 medical schools supplement their conventional curriculum
with homeopathy, acupuncture, meditation, and prayer. And a panel
convened by the National Institutes of Health has recommended
that all medical and nursing students be exposed to alternative
theories and techniques. With iatrogenesis (unintended physician
induced complications) being the third leading cause of death
in the US, this change is coming none too soon. But what is alternative
medicine and how different is it?
The
term “complementary and alternative medicine (CAM)” is used to
describe a growing number of practices that are gaining legitimacy
due to their healing capacities. Since the terms “alternative”
and “complementary” can sound demeaning, as if to suggest there
is “real” medicine and then something less, other terms include
“integrative medicine” or “holistic health care.” For this article,
I will be using the term “holistic health” because I believe it
more accurately reflects the underlying principles of the approach.
Since many articles have been devoted to the valuable contributions
of Western medicine, or allopathy, as it is sometimes called,
I will be focusing this article mostly on the contributions of
holistic health.
The
first contribution of holistic health is that subtle energy (the
animating principle, vital force, etheric body, or mana,
as the Hawaiians call it) is a key component in healing. The presence
of this and other energies in correct proportions is understood
to be essential to health. Healing systems in indigenous cultures
have long embraced the importance of subtle energies. Chinese
medicine and ayurveda (the Hindu science of life) are the two
most prominent examples. Many holistic health practitioners, such
as acupuncturists, kinesiologists, Reiki practitioners, homeopaths,
and naturopaths, work directly with the body’s subtle energies
to restore health and balance.
This
is in contrast to allopathy which historically denies the existence
of subtle energies, focusing exclusively on the physical, material
aspects of the body. Considering that much of allopathy was developed
through dissecting cadavers, it is understandable that the presence
of vital energy was overlooked.
A
second contribution is that holistic health values the subjective
experience of the whole person. Holistic health practitioners
are interested in the personal experience of their clients and
clients are seen as experts on their own health. The most valuable
information regarding treatment comes from inside the person.
Practitioners are interested in the “internal conditions” of a
person, as well as their “external symptoms.” The health of the
whole person--physical, energetic, emotional, psychological, social,
environmental, spiritual--is considered when devising a treatment.
Allopathy,
in contrast, is concerned mostly with objective measure and pathology.
The ailment is the main focus and the part of the body in which
the ailment is located is of primary importance. Thus, the medical
profession promotes specialization which has a compartmentalizing
effect (i.e., cardiology focuses on the heart, ophthalmology focuses
on the eyes, podiatry focuses on the feet, etc.). The body is
examined from an external, objective perspective. Tests are run,
medicines prescribed, and surgeries done with the most valuable
information regarding treatment coming from medical professionals
who are expected to be experts on other people’s health.
A
third contribution is that holistic health honors the uniqueness
of each individual, realizing there are many factors that affect
health and many ways to heal. Because holistic health modalities
are responsive to the unique needs of each individual, treatments
vary from person to person, despite similar symptoms. From the
perspective of holistic health, other approaches—including allopathy--are
valued and often encouraged.
Allopathy,
on the other hand, advocates classifying symptoms into disease
categories and devising uniform treatments. Patients who display
similar symptoms are given the same treatment. Further, a treatment
is deemed successful to the extent that it applies to the most
symptoms and the most people. Rather than embracing other approaches,
allopathy is seen as the best, and often the only, way to treat
an illness. .
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