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INSIDE
Health Matters
on the Point
By Virginia Lester,RN, MSN, ARNP
Complementary Medicine Interaction with Conventional Prescriptions
“Alternative” or “complementary” medicine
consists of any approach to improving a health problem that is
not routinely used or taught to conventional practitioners of
Western medicine. Included in this type of therapy are herbs,
acupuncture, chiropractic, and massage, among others.
I want to
focus on the area of herbs, dietary supplements and nutraceuticals. In the
past few years, there has been an explosion of information
regarding complementary and alternative medicines. Market sales
of herbs in the U.S. were estimated to be more than $14 billion
in 2000. Approximately 80 percent of the population of the
world use herbs for medicinal purposes.
The proliferation
of herbs available to the public has spawned many scientific
studies in an effort to determine their safety and therapeutic
usefulness. Some of the information has come from well designed,
controlled research studies, while other information may be
derived from animal, laboratory data or small, single-site
human trials that may or may not be controlled. While all of
this new information has been developed and readily available,
the traditional practitioners have been encouraging patient
to be more responsible for their health care.
Patients
are urged to become educated in many areas of therapy and choose
what fits their personal needs best. Sales of herbs has largely
been driven by public interest in the use of “natural” products
thought to be safer and less expensive than traditional
pharmaceuticals.
Undeniably,
alternative medicines are here to stay. It is estimated that
between 33 percent to 50 percent of patients who seek traditional
care are also using alternative medicine remedies. Unfortunately,
in a recent study published in the New England Journal of Medicine,
more than 72 percent of patients fail to disclose this information
to their primary care provider. There are many reasons given
for withholding this information but the serious and dangerous
consequences for not providing this information cannot be denied.
Adverse
reactions between medications and herbs can result increased
or decreased levels of absorption of a prescribed medication
and cause serious consequences. For that matter combining herbs
carries a potential risk. As with traditional medications,
herbs may require close monitoring to detect adverse reactions
and interactions.
The bottom
line is that herbs are not bad; it is the withholding of information
from your primary care provider or combining them with other
medications without supervision and monitoring that is dangerous.
Ask your provider for information regarding any new drug or
product you introduce either on your own or prescribed. Question
the potential side effects. If you have any doubts, information
can be obtained by calling the office of Alternative Medicine
and the National Institutes of Health (888/644-6226).
Don’t forget the diabetes education forum
that will be held April 16, 2005, 10 a.m. until noon at the community
center.
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