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Homeopathy,
Economics, and Government
By Linda Johnston, MD,
DHt
The history of the
regulation of alternative medical therapies,
particularly Homeopathy, is extremely
interesting and sheds a great deal of light
on the current regulatory environment. In
this short review of that history, it can be
seen that the current attempts at regulation
have roots as far back as 200 years ago.
The early 1800's was a
time of great transition in medicine. Whereas
the standard, allopathic form of treatment
was dominant at the turn of that century,
that was not to last. The two most popular
alternatives to the orthodox practice were
herbal medicine and Homeopathy.
By the time Homeopathy
was introduced to America in 1825, herbal
medicine was already well established.
Equally well established was the allopathic
doctors' animosity towards any competition.
The rise of Homeopathy particularly coincided
with a dramatic decline in the prestige of
allopathic medicine and its methods. There
was a general and pervasive disdain and
mistrust of allopathic medicine. One author
concluded that "to many people the interests
of the medical profession as a whole were
opposed to the best interests of society."
Within 15 years of being
introduced to America, Homeopathy was
offering serious competition to allopathic
medicine and by 1860, Homeopathy was
flourishing with many doctors available in
every state. The biggest asset to the spread
of Homeopathy was the home prescriber, or
unlicensed lay practitioner. America of the
1800's was predominantly rural and most areas
had no physician close at hand.
Mothers treating their
children's problems easily and inexpensively
caused the news of Homeopathy to spread like
a brush fire throughout the mid-west and
eastern seaboard. While political battles and
turf wars raged between the doctors, many
people successfully treated typhoid, cholera,
measles, mumps, tuberculosis, smallpox and
other diseases with their Homeopathic
remedies and without doctors.
Even the press of the
day were favorable to Homeopathy and its
articles often reflected the general public's
contempt for allopathic medicine. One such
article condemned "the rigidly
anti-innovative attitude which the Old School
doctors have so consistently maintained for
centuries" and recommended that there be free
and open competition between the two systems,
"where the public will act as umpires,
deciding after a careful perusal of the
undertakers bills on either side."
As a consequence,
extreme hatred and economic jealousy was
aroused in the allopaths. These economic
concerns were well documented. One review
wrote of Homeopathy, "quackery .... by fraud
and deception, too frequently triumphs and
grows rich, where wiser and better men
scarcely escape starvation." In 1846, The New
York Journal of Medicine stated, "quackery
occasions a large pecuniary loss to us."
The public was quite
willing to pay high fees for Homeopathy, much
to the consternation of the economically
struggling allopaths. Most Homeopaths had
higher incomes than their allopathic
counterparts, having busy, thriving practices
in the same areas where allopaths couldn't
earn enough to live. The annual income for an
allopath in 1871 averaged $1000, whereas a
Homeopath's averaged $4000.
The allopaths blamed the
public for the situation, contemptuously
regarding them as ignorant, undiscriminating
and easily deceived, clearly needing to be
protected from their own perverse ignorance.
It never occurred to the allopathic doctors
that the public, rather than being ignorant
of orthodox medicine, were very familiar with
it and consequently didn't like it.
If you think doctors
have outgrown this attitude from 1800, I will
refer you to the recent article in the
prestigious allopathic journal The New
England Journal of Medicine. After reviewing
the habits of a large cohort of patients, it
was concluded that one third of Americans use
some method of non-conventional medical
treatment and pay more out of their own
pocket to do so than the combined money spent
on all primary care allopathic office visits.
As a result of this
startling finding, the authors did not
suggest further investigation as to why such
a large number of patients prefer
non-traditional treatment, nor was it
suggested that these treatments must have
something valuable to offer. Instead, in a
move reminiscent of attitudes over 150 years
old, the authors advised that doctors inquire
if their patients are using some form of
non-conventional therapy so that they can
better bring these errant patients back to
conventional treatment.
The brunt of the blame
for declining allopathic fortunes was laid at
the door of the Homeopaths. The allopaths had
concern about the growing competition from
Homeopathy, stated as "quackery in the
profession." They felt the apparently
declining standards of medical education was
the cause of physicians converting to
Homeopathy and these ideas were the prime
motives in the founding of the American
Medical Association in 1847.
It is interesting to
note that the professional organization for
Homeopathy equivalent to the AMA, the
American Institute of Homeopathy, was founded
earlier in 1844, making it the oldest
professional medical organization.
Many efforts were used
to advance the allopaths by discrediting,
restricting and abolishing the Homeopaths.
Typical were the laws passed in the early
1800's to prevent any practitioners of
medicine other than the allopaths from being
able to go to court to collect non-payment of
fees. In every case, these and other similar
laws were unenforceable and extremely
unpopular with the citizenry. All were
repealed within a few years.
Undaunted, the
allopathic doctors then turned to their own
medical societies rather than the legislative
process to carry out their desire for
effective restriction of Homeopathy.
Allopaths granted themselves the right to
restrict society membership, which was
tantamount to licensing powers. Fines were
levied against anyone practicing medicine
without such a society membership. They had
successfully usurped the power to control who
could practice. Eventually even these fines
were also rescinded due to unpopularity with
the citizens.
Pennsylvania and New
York were the first states to forbid
membership in the society by medical doctors
who practiced Homeopathy. State medical
society membership and representation in the
AMA required that these societies purge
themselves of any member Homeopaths.
After 1847, all state
societies did this, except Massachusetts. In
addition, professional exchange, consultation
and even conversation between allopaths and
Homeopaths were banned. This ban on
interaction between the two groups is a
striking example of how a private
organization, the AMA, could completely flout
the public will, and take punitive action for
something that was totally legal.
All this speaks of the
restraint of trade. All professions have used
laws, licensing, legislation, unions and
guilds to protect their own economic
interests. Not surprisingly, the suppression
of Homeopathy, then and continuing to this
very day, is seeped with the same motives.
None of the efforts at
abolishing Homeopathy, including state
society expulsion, were particularly
effective until the turn of this century.
Then, it wasn't legislation or licensing that
was responsible for the decline of
Homeopathy. The infusion of large amounts of
money from Carnegie and Rockefeller to the
cause of allopathic medicine was instrumental
in tipping the scales in its favor. It is
ironic that Rockefeller, a beneficiary of
Homeopathic treatment himself, should fund
its demise. The final shove out the door of
popularity was the discovery of antibiotics
and the dawning of the age of chemical
therapeutics.
By the middle of this
century, Homeopathy was all but eliminated.
The thousands of practitioners had vanished,
the hundred or so medical schools had closed
and the vast majority of the general
population had never even heard of
Homeopathy.
The reemergence of
Homeopathy started in the early 1970's as
disillusionment with the pharmaceutical
approach of medical therapeutics began to
surface. Natural foods, exercise, natural
living, concern about pollution and chemical
toxins in our bodies and the environment
began to take center stage. In addition to
which, the sterling reputation of
technological and pharmacological medicine
for invincible prowess and superiority was
becoming more and more tarnished. Just as
occurred 150 years ago, the public had
experienced the side effects, personal cost
and problems of allopathic medicine and was
voting with their feet.
Now Homeopathy becomes
more and more popular each and every year. In
the 5 years between 1985 and 1990, the sale
of Homeopathic products increased 1000%. Now
when I tell the person seated next to me on
the plane that I am a doctor who practices
Homeopathy, he doesn't mistake that for
making house calls.
The vast majority of
people prescribing and administering
Homeopathy today are in the group of
non-licensed lay practitioners. There are
thousands of such practitioners and their
numbers continue to grow. This small army
undoubtedly has an impact on the allopathic
medical revenues and public attitudes. Laws
and legislation do not now and never have
curbed the growth in the ranks of this
category of practitioner.
Historically, Homeopathy
has always had a large number of non-medical
unlicensed people practicing. In the 1800s
America's rural culture and lack of clear
laws about who could and could not practice
medicine created a permissive environment for
these non-licensed practitioners. Today, the
situation is quite different. Although strong
in number, they are all practicing illegally
and are at risk for legal problems.
As the twentieth century
progressed there has been increasing
legislative control of the practice of
medicine, both at the state and federal
level. State medical societies have been
replaced by official government sanctioned
state licensing bodies. Although Homeopathy
is no longer proscribed by name, review of
individual state laws governing the practice
of medicine shows that 20 out of 50 states
have a clause which distinctly applies to any
doctor wishing to practice Homeopathy.
These laws, called the
Standard of Practice provisions, declare that
each physician must practice up to the
standard of care of his community, as the
other doctors in the state practice. Although
these provisions are promoted as a way of
keeping incompetent doctors from practicing,
they also are extremely effective in keeping
any doctor from practicing differently from
the majority. The first doctor in a state to
advocate nutrition, exercise, grief
counseling, Homeopathy or any other cutting
edge idea is, by law, proscripted from doing
so. The lone innovator or Homeopath is at
risk.
George Guess, a licensed
medical doctor practicing Homeopathy in the
state of North Carolina discovered this the
hard way. The Medical Board of North Carolina
took away his medical license in 1985 because
he practiced Homeopathy which was not
consistent with the standard of care of the
medical community. How could it be; he was
the only Homeopath in the state. The battle
was long and bloody.
Over the 8 years in and
out of courts, including the state supreme
court and spending in excessive of $150,000,
it was concluded that Dr. Guess was a
knowledgeable doctor, had not harmed anyone,
had the support of his patients and was
generally a credit to his profession except,
he was not doing what all the other doctors
were doing - allopathic medicine. When the
favorable decision of the state superior
court exonerating Dr. Guess was overturned on
appeal, the ACLU agreed to sponsor his case
before the US Federal Court.
The highest court
refused to hear the case, necessitating Dr.
Guess to leave his home and move to another
state to practice. While he was gone, North
Carolina legislature passed a law allowing
for the practice of alternative medicine by
doctors. Although the price for this was the
devastation and upheaval of Dr. Guess's life
and career, at least now one more state had a
definite law protecting Homeopaths.
Although few Homeopaths
have had or will have the ordeal that Dr.
Guess faced, the law provides that they
could. The biggest protections now for
licensed medical doctors wanting to practice
Homeopathy is the public sentiment so
favorably disposed to Homeopathy. The verdict
in the court of public opinion is definitely
not so predisposed to the persecution of
alternative therapies as it once was.
Today, the legal
standing of Homeopathy and Homeopaths is in
limbo. Whereas in all but a few states, the
restrictive laws are still on the books yet
Homeopathy is thriving and riding high on a
tidal wave of popular support. There is
definitely an economic impact of all this
popularity, yet much of it cannot be measured
because the majority of Homeopaths are
illegal practitioners whose work is not
counted in statistics.
Efforts at restricting
the practice of Homeopathy today, as in the
last century, have proven almost completely
ineffective. People want Homeopathy and for
that reason alone, it is here to stay and so
is its impact on the economics of medicine.
Lew Rockwell. com October 3,
2002
Source
This article describes
how alternative medicine has had a profound
influence in health care in the US.
In 1924, a survey was
done in Philadelphia that showed that
one-third of all patients seen in private
practice had been seen by alternative medical
healers. Another survey, also completed in
1924, by one of the organizations I formerly
belonged to, the Illinois Medical Society,
found that in my hometown (Chicago) nearly
90% of people had "dabbled" in alternative
medicine.
The article provides a
fascinating glimpse of the history of
orthodox or traditional medicine in the US.
To begin with, only 200
years ago, there were only 200
graduates of US Medical Schools and another
300 or so immigrants with European diplomas;
botanical healers and midwives provided the
rest of medical care.
Even 200 years ago there
was incredible disagreement between the
traditional and natural models.
Samuel Hahnemann
(1755-1842) the founder of homeopathy claimed
that the traditional medical doctors of his
time (he coined the term "allopath")
practiced a "non-healing art which shortened
the lives of ten times as many human beings
as the most destructive wars and rendered
many millions of patients more diseased and
wretched than they were originally."
This is absolutely
amazing, as over 200 years later things have
not changed a bit! Last year doctors were
documented to be the
third leading cause of death in the US.
In 1847 the AMA was
founded as a barrier to orthodoxy and the
natural healers. Interestingly, until
relatively recently, it was unethical for any
AMA member to associate with any of these
natural healers.
I am ashamed to say that
I was a "card carrying" member of the AMA for
7 years, as one of their benefits was the
ability to purchase an excellent malpractice
policy. But I saw the light about ten years
ago and dropped out.
It is interesting to
note that even by 1900, over 12% of the
licensed physicians were alternative medical
doctors which at the time were classified as
homeopaths or eclectic physicians.
It is quite clear the
numbers would be much higher if one included
unlicensed therapists, such as magnetic
healers, chiropractors, faith healers,
midwives and osteopaths.
I am an osteopath, but
100 years ago DOs were not recognized as
licensed physicians. Back then, they were
unlicensed but they were far closer to being
true physicians, as they would not rely on
drugs and surgery as their primary tools to
treat disease.
Now that they are
licensed, DOs generally are far closer to
traditional physicians than natural medical
healers. You can read more of the fascinating
history of osteopathic medicine in the recent
New England Journal of Medicine
review of DOs.
The historical data
makes it quite clear that alternative or
natural medicine has been a powerful and
persistent presence in the US for a very long
time.
The article also points
out, as has become increasingly clear to any
observer of the acceptance of natural
medicine in contemporary America, that
substantial portions of the traditional
medical system have begun to seek
reconciliation with alternative medicine.
Managed care, insurance
carriers, hospital providers, major academic
medical centers and individual physicians are
increasingly receptive to developing new
integrative models of health care that would
have been unthinkable only a short time ago.
My
Vision and Passion
It is my current and
vision and passion to facilitate this
process. I have already started with the
establishment of this web site, which is on
target to be the number one health site in
the Internet in the next six months.
The increasing volume of
people coming to the site will have access to
an ever-expanding knowledge base of natural
therapies that they can access to facilitate
their own healing. I hope to introduce a
truly innovative forum later this year that
will collect and capture the wisdom of the
brightest medical minds on the planet and
allow you to use this information for your
benefit.
This site will also
establish the most comprehensive database of
natural medicine physicians in the country.
This will allow individuals to add and rate
physicians for the type of treatments they
provide and the satisfaction they have had
with their treatments. Individuals will then
be able to use the computerized database to
find the best clinicians closest to their own
home.
This is a desperately
needed tool, as frequently individuals will
need individualized expert guidance from
someone close to their home.
This service will allow
the good clinicians to stand out like lights
in the darkness where people can seek out
their expert guidance to resolve their health
care problems.
I hope to have this
project completed in the next year. Once
done, it will start an inevitable progression
of people who will exit the care of
traditional physicians, who never understood
how to practice medicine and teach patients
how to resolve their illness with natural
therapies.
Once traditional
physicians reception rooms are nearly empty
they will have powerful economic incentives
to understand the foundational causes of
disease so they can actually go back to
school and learn the basic tools that will be
required to maximize their incredible
investment of their previous outstanding
medical education so they can serve as a true
physician and help their patients resolve
their illness at the deepest level.
Related
Articles:
Natural Medicine's History
and Future in the US
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