To Teach or Not to Teach: The Role of Alternative Medicine in Philippine Medical

To Teach or Not to Teach: The Role of Alternative Medicine in Philippine Medical

 The trend away from traditional or allopathic medicine is borne by the following statistics and facts:

1. It has been estimated that the US public spent between $36 and $47 B on CAM therapies.

2. There are now states with naturopathic licensing laws and licensure of Naturopathic physicians is expanding into new states.

3. Legitimacy and significance of CAM has been recognized by public and private authorities, i.e. In the US, the NIH’s Office of Alternative Medicine was created by an act of Congress, and in the Philippines, the TAMA law created the Philippine Institute of Traditional and Alternative Health Care (PITAHC)

4. One out of every two baby boomers uses non-conventional therapies. Boomers seem to facor safe and noninvasive alternative treatments.]

5. 42.1 % of Americans surveyed used therapies outside of mainstream medicine like acupuncture, chiropractics and homeopathy. This figure is up by almost 25% from a survey done seven years before.

6. The Instittute for Alternative Futures predicts that be 2010 at least 66% of Americans will be using one or more approaches now considered alternative or complementary.

7. In the Philippines, more than 80 % of the population in rural areas depend on alternative or complementary forms of medical treatment.

8. The increasing cost of drugs and medical care, the side effects from pharmaceuticals and the desire of patients to be actively involved with medical decision making are reasons for increasing trend of CAM use.

9. Recent WHO statistics show the following:

a. In China, traditional medicine accounts for around 40% of all health

b. In Chile 71% of the population, and in Colombia 40% of the population, have used such medicine.

c. In India, 65% of the populations in rural areas use traditional medicine to help meet their primary health care needs.

d. In developed countries, traditional, complementary and alternative medicines are becoming more popular. For example, the percentage of the population that has used such medicines at least once is 48% in Australia, 31% in Belgium, 70% in Canada, 49% in France and 42% in the United States of America.

e. Traditional medicine has also been used in the treatment and care of such life-threatening illnesses as malaria and AIDS. In Ghana, Mali, Nigeria and Zambia, herbal medicines are the first line treatment for more than 60% of children with high fever. Studies in Africa and North America have shown that up to 75% of people living with HIV/AIDS use traditional medicine alone or in combination with other medicines for various symptoms or conditions

 

These reasons and the overwhelming increase in recent years of health care consumer visits to alternative medicine practitioners have forced the question: Should complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) be included in conventional medical school curricula? In America, medical schools are responding with a small but growing number of courses that address healing methods historically dismissed as incompatible with the scientific rigors of Western medicine. In the Philippines, certain institutions such as the University of the East, Ateneo and De La Salle University are looking to offer or are now offering complementary or integrative medical courses. But although many medical educators agree that CAM can no longer be absent from their curricula, there is heated debate over how CAM modalities should be presented to the future physician work force.

 

Should CAM topics be taught as stand-alone electives or part of required courses in a longitudinal program (such as that offered by the University of Wisconsin). In the Philippines, all courses are being given as electives and there is yet no longitudinal four year degree course leading to a Doctor of Naturopathy or Master of Oriental Medicine as in China or Korea. Some suggestions that policy makers should include when they write the final implementing rules and regulations:

 

1. Teachings of alternative medicine should be held to the same standards of safety and efficacy as conventional medicine. The elements of conventional medicine taught in medical schools are evidence-based and consistent with scientific knowledge about the workings of the human body. Many elements of alternative medicine are not well supported by scientific evidence. Some are scientifically implausible and contradict what we know about how the body works. Rather than encouraging these healing modalities, we should encourage critical thinking about them. Thus students should be taught to carefully examine scientific evidence evaluating the claims of proponents of alternative medicine. There should be critical readings combined with presentations from guest speakers who practice CAM methods.

2. The courses should be a comprehensive model of medicine that is patient-centered, that emphasizes the centrality of the doctor-patient relationship, and that incorporates all healing methods for which there is reasonable evidence, whether they’re from the conventional or alternative side. Integrative medicine has much larger goals than just looking at CAM modalities.

3. The teachings and training should include critical analysis of research findings on alternative medical methods.

4. Students alternative medicine must be taught and trained in integrative treatment plans in concert with a panel of health care practitioners who represent a comprehensive cross-section of conventional and alternative specialties from pharmacology to Chinese medicine. Treatment plans are then implemented and patient outcomes monitored to ensure that the treatment is scientific and evidence based.

Although currently marginalized , CAM is clearly beginning to permeate the Philippine curricula from which it has been historically excluded and it is probably just a matter of time before it is included as part of standard teachings in medical schools. Now is the time for educators to do the necessary work and ensure quality programs for a better medical work force in the country.

Watch the video related to medical schools

A school girl recieves a vaccine and villagers benifit from a comprehensive health team flown into Rupunau from Lethem and Sand Creek by Remote Area Medical.

Help answer the question about medical schools

What medical schools offer combined undergraduate and medical school programs that last 6 years instead of 8?
I'd like to become a physician, and according to me research, there are medical school programs that last 6 years (in comparison w/ 4 year undergrad and 4 year med) that accept students who've completed high school. Which schools are these??

About Author

Dr. Ray Ricardo is a retired physician. He is currently chairman and president of Totalmed Corporation http://www.totalmedsubic.com, a health delivery company and International College of Integrative Medicine, a teaching and training institution for complementary medicine. He is also president of Antioxidants Inc. http://antioxidantsinc.com, a health products marketing company.

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9 Responses to “To Teach or Not to Teach: The Role of Alternative Medicine in Philippine Medical”

  1. Simone says:

    Considering where you at Johns Hopkins pre med and medical school is top in the country. With the lowering of standards in all medical programs due to a trough in medical school applicants, a solid science pre med program at any solid University would work with a good GPA, core courses, and of course an excellent MCAT score. Throw some good activities, and organizational memeberships and you should be alright.

  2. Jnny says:

    I've posted the web page that lists all of the US med schools that offered the Combined Degree program for a BS/MD. There are other schools that offer the Combined Degree program if you intend to pursue a PhD/MD.

    The main web site is the Association of American Medical Colleges (www.aamc.org). The site has a tremendous amount of information for the potential med student.

  3. Pre-Med Student says:

    The majority of schools still send you a letter advising you to call to schedule your interview. Some may have begun using email, though.

  4. b2bMarch says:

    This not the place to ask these questions!!! but you better find out !!!

  5. Lauren says:

    Med schools care about all of your classes, not just the premed prereqs.

    When you apply to med school (via AMCAS run by the AAMC) two GPAs are calculated and given to med schools: your science GPA and your overall GPA. Med schools definitely consider both GPAs when considering applicants–usually when you hear GPA requirements or averages being tossed around it's the cumulative GPA. Not only does this GPA include all of the classes you take in college (be they a science, a prereq, an elective, or a gen ed) but they include any college-level course you've ever taken….so if you took any college classes when you were a high school student, those count too.

    All that said, one or two Bs isn't the end of the world…but a pattern of them (and more than one or two) will be a big deal because it plummets your GPA (and in the med school admissions game, a 3.4 starts to be considered low).

    If that doesn't make sense to you, just think–not only are schools looking to see if you have the background and ability to handle the science in med school but they're looking to see if you have the ability to handle the volume, time-intensity, and demands of med school…if you can only do well in 1-2 courses at the expense of your other courses, it's not a good sign.

  6. Audrina says:

    There aren't any "schools". What you are looking for are RESIDENCY positions. Most major hospitals have at least a few spots for anesthesia, but I am afraid that I do not know of a complete list. This will be supplied to you via residency application services, as well as your medical school.

  7. caaf87 says:

    G'day,

    Unfortunately you did not mention the area of study that you intend to do for your graduate course. To find out the course that you are taking and where it is offered, I suggest you to go to IDP Education Australia website (www.idp.edu.au). IDP is an organisation that gives information to international students who wants to continue their study in Australia. The information abt tuition fee and requirement will be available from the universities' website. Once decided on the uni, fill in the application form and send it together with certified copy of your academic qualification. The process will take abt 2-3weeks, depending on the time of the year.

    Hope this helps. Good luck for your study and welcome to Australia :)

  8. hockeyX16 says:

    Johns Hopkins is probably the best
    go to a nice, smallish school for undergraduate degree in biology (pre med) and start working towards all the things you need to do for graduate school when you are a sophomore.

  9. SweetLuv says:

    medical schools view those degrees as totally acceptable, as long as you have the required pre-requisites. You'll have to have biology, chemistry, organic, physics, etc. These are absolutely required, so you'll have to do a post-bac if you don't have them after your interdisciplinary degree. If you have them and have a good MCAT score, they are considered just as good. There are plenty of people in my school who have philosophy, religion, even dance degrees. So as long as you have the required classes (plus you will want to have some research experience, etc to show you are interested in medicine) then you will be in fine shape.

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