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Alternative
Therapies Gain
Favor for Kids' Cancers
Excerpt
By
Amanda Gardner, HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews) -- Three
out of four children with cancer are going beyond their doctor-ordered
conventional treatment and using such alternative therapies as
herbs, spiritual healing and the like, says a new study.
"We were surprised the number was this high, but we were
also glad that no one was substituting alternative for traditional
therapies," says Marian L. Neuhouser, lead author of the
study and senior staff scientist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center in Seattle.
Previous studies have shown that about 40 percent of adults
use alternative therapies for a variety of reasons, but no studies
in the United States had looked at the use of alternative medicine
for children with cancer.
The study, published in a recent issue of Preventive Medicine,
examined children who were cancer patients in western Washington
state.
"The news here is that we should be paying attention to
what our patients are doing," says Dr. Jeffrey M. Lipton,
professor of pediatrics at Albert Einstein College of Medicine
in New York City and chief of pediatric hematology, oncology and
stem cell transplantation at Schneider Children's Hospital in
New Hyde Park, N.Y. "Whether it's 75 percent or 25 percent,
it's still fairly substantial," he notes.
The researchers conducted telephone interviews with the parents
of 75 children who were 18 or younger. All had been told between
February 1997 and December 1998 that their child had invasive
cancer. Most of the parents said they had started alternative
therapies after learning their child had cancer.
Herbs turned out to be the most popular alternative therapy,
used by almost 35 percent of the parents interviewed. Twenty-one
percent had consulted an alternative provider (a massage therapist,
naturopathic physician or Native American healer, for example);
more than 29 percent said they used vitamin supplements; 11 percent
used mental or spiritual therapies, and one parent reported using
magnets.
One of the most interesting findings: Most of the parents said
they were satisfied with their conventional doctor, and about
90 percent said they had turned to alternative providers and mental
therapies to cope with the symptoms of the cancer or the side
effects of conventional treatment, not to supplant that treatment.
The few parents who were dissatisfied with their regular doctor,
however, were nine times more likely to seek alternative therapies
than parents who were satisfied, the survey showed.
Sixty to 90 percent of parents were satisfied with the alternative
treatment as well, reporting that it had done their child some
good.
Sometimes, however, alternative therapies can backfire, Lipton
says.
"Every once in a while, you hear that one of these accepted
herbal medicines turns out to be a lot more toxic than we anticipated,
and we do have concerns about antioxidants in people who get radiation
therapy," he says.
Radiation kills malignant cells by generating oxygen-free radicals.
Although free radicals are generally considered to be "bad,"
in this case, they are performing a good service. Antioxidants,
like vitamins C and E, may also reduce how well chemotherapy works.
For these reasons and others, it's critical to keep your regular
doctor apprised of any other therapies you may be considering
for your child, Lipton and Neuhouser both stress.
In the study, most parents did tell their regular doctors. In
fact, one-quarter said their regular doctor had actually referred
them to an alternative provider.
"Communication is a very important issue regardless of
what type of alternative treatments are being used," says
Neuhouser. "There are potential reactions, and sometimes
physicians can be quite helpful in making referrals. In some states,
services can be covered by health insurance if the physician makes
a referral. That's a real reason to let the physician know."
There's another reason as well: You may have found something
that works.
"You may be surprised, something may actually work,"
says Lipton. "Until we're curing 100 percent of kids 100
percent of the time with zero side effects, we'd be really foolish
not to look at these things."
What To Do
If you're in the market for information, the
National Cancer Institute and the
National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine
have materials on a variety of cancer therapies.
And here's
a great resource page on alternative medicine from the University
of Pittsburgh.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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