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It's
Crucial To Talk to Your
Doctor About Alternative Meds
The popularity of complementary and alternative medicine is on
the rise, with more than one-third of U.S. adults using at least
one these treatments, according to a recent report by the Institute
of Medicine.
And if you're like most proponents of these treatments, you
probably don't mention them to your primary-care physician. You
may think it's not important or you might just forget. Or, you
might think your doctor won't approve.
But it's crucial to tell your doctor, says Dr. Robert Bonakdar,
a family physician at the Scripps Center for Integrative Medicine,
in La Jolla, Calif., who directs pain management and blends conventional
and alternative approaches.
"Everything a patient is using is important for the doctor to
know," he says. "Full disclosure enables full care."
Another physician with a special interest in integrative medicine
agrees. "The best thing patients can do is be honest with what
they are taking," says Dr. Janine Blackman, medical director of
The Center for Integrative Medicine at the University of Maryland,
Baltimore and an assistant professor of family medicine.
Complementary and alternative medicine describes a wide group
of medical practices and products, according to the National
Institutes of Health's National Center for Complementary
and Alternative Medicine. Complementary describes techniques used
in conjunction with conventional medicine; alternative describes
techniques that can be used in place of it.
Among the options are homeopathic medicine, chiropractic, dietary
supplements, aromatherapy, and massage therapy, among many others.
So, how best to approach your doctor? First, understand that
your doctor may not have a lot of background or knowledge about
an alternative or complementary approach, Bonakdar says. Few doctors,
especially older ones, studied these treatments in medical school.
"Bring it up in an open manner," he suggests, by saying something
like: "This is something I am interested in, what do you think?"
Physicians should be open to discussion, at least, he says. "The
patients should expect the doctor to be open and non-judgmental
in the discussion of complementary treatments," he said. "They
should hear you out."
"They should be able to educate you from their standpoint based
on whether they think it is safe, appropriate and effective,"
he adds. As a patient, you should expect your physician, if he
or she is unfamiliar with the treatment you are interested in,
to offer to check to see if there is any evidence that it works,
Bonakdar says.
In recent years, Blackman adds, more physicians have become open
to the concept of alternative medicine or complementary approaches.
But a recent survey, published in the Archives of Internal
Medicine, found that 84 percent of the 302 physicians questioned
thought they needed to know more about complementary and alternative
medicine to address patient questions and concerns adequately.
Even so, nearly half had recommended an alternative or complementary
treatment to a patient.
One way to facilitate the discussion about alternative or complementary
treatments is to bring as much information as you can to the doctor
visit. If you're interested in supplements, for instance, take
the bottle so the doctor can see the exact dose and formula, plus
the manufacturer.
And patients must understand there are dangers to mixing some
complementary and conventional treatments, Blackman says. Certain
dietary supplements, for instance, can affect the dosing of blood-thinning
medications, thinning the blood to adverse levels, she says.
If your doctor isn't comfortable with an alternative or complementary
approach that you feel strongly about, you have options, Blackman
maintains. Either find a new physician or continue seeing your
doctor, alerting him or her about your decision to use the complementary
or alternative approach. Then, you can consult someone else knowledgeable
about the alternative therapy, such as a pharmacist.
Reference
Source 101
September
19, 2005
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