Complementary And Alternative Medicines May Hinder Diabetes Management
Main Category: DiabetesAlso Included In: Complementary Medicine / Alternative Medicine; Nursing / Midwifery
Article Date: 09 Jul 2007 - 5:00 PDT
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People with diabetes are risking their health by not discussing their use of complementary and alternative therapies with the health professionals managing their conventional treatment.
A review of the international health literature has shown nutritional supplements and herbal medicines are the most commonly used complementary and alternative therapies in diabetes.
Annie Chang, a PhD candidate in Griffith's School of Nursing, said while some products may have benefits for patients, they can also have side effects in their own right or interact with conventional medications.
"Fenugreek for example, used as a supplement, may affect blood sugar levels but patients are already on other blood sugar lowering medications as well."
While the prevalence of use varies widely between different countries (17-72%), her review suggests nearly half of people living with diabetes supplement their conventional medicines with some form of alternative therapy.
Women, over 65-year-olds, those who had been living with diabetes for longer, and people interested in self management of their condition were the most likely to use alternative therapies.
"People will tell their alternative practitioners that they are using Western medicines but the vast majority will not discuss their alternative therapies with a doctor or other healthcare professional," she said.
Ms Chang, who has also surveyed more than 300 diabetics in Taiwan, said people feared their doctor would not be interested in discussing alternative medicines or that they might 'get into trouble' for taking them.
"The evidence is that patients are using these products and may even reduce their conventional medicine doses and modify the timing of doses so they aren't taking both together."
"While it might be impossible for Western medicine to learn all about complementary and alternative therapies, healthcare professionals do need to be included in discussions about them so we can document their use and be aware of any potential problems for our patients."
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The review was published in the Journal of Advanced Nursing 2007; 58(4) 307-319.
National Diabetes Week is 8-14 July.
Source: Mardi Chapman
Research Australia
Visit our diabetes section for the latest news on this subject.
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (1)
Modern Medicine Inteferes With Nature - Not Vice Versa!
posted by Tony Isaacs on 9 Jul 2007 at 10:33 amWhat a misleading title! It is modern medicine that interferes with nature when it comes to treating most chronic conditions. Mainstream western medicine excels at treating broken parts and physical trauma, but the approach of treating the body as a collection of parts fails miserably when it comes to treating illness and disease.
No wonder - for generations we and our doctors have been taught that the way to treat illness and disease is to prescribe approved medications made by the trillion dollar world pharmaceutical company who also happens to be the largest source of funding by far for medical education.
Fully 95% of the over 15,000 FDA approved medications have side effects, many of which are quite serious and a great number of which lead to still more drugs in a never ending cycle so that by the time the average US male reaches the age of 65 he takes a combination of 15 prescribed and over the counter medications daily - and it all began with one or two conditions that could have been treated naturally. It is a great model for profit for an industry whose only marketplace is our bodies, but a horrible one for humanity.
For those who still believe that man's medicines and system of a lifetime of manage illness instead of true health care and prevention is better than nature's, I ask this simple question: When exactly did God become a quack?
Tony Isaacs
author of Cancer's Natural Enemy
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