Transcript Document

Exercising choice in health treatment
Improving Access to Complementary and
Alternative Medicine (CAM) in Europe
A joint presentation by the
European Council for Classical Homeopathy
and the European Shiatsu Federation
for the first EU Open Health Forum 17 May 2004
What is Complementary and Alternative
Medicine (CAM)?
• A diverse range of autonomous health-care practices
used both for health support and prevention and for
care in illness.
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WHOLE PERSON - WHOLE SYSTEMS
COMPLEMENTARY – ALTERNATIVE
Acupuncture
Chiropractic/Osteopathy
Herbal Medicine(Phytotherapy)Aromatherapy
Homeopathy/Flower Remedies/Shiatsu
Reflexology/Massage
Culture specific approaches:
– Traditional Chinese Medicine, Ayurveda, Unani
How widespread is CAM?
• Use of CAM has grown and continues to grow at a
significant rate across Europe year after year.
• Around 40% EU citizens use or have used CAM,
notably women and those with high levels of
education. CAM is experiencing rapid growth in
EU.
• This means CAM is an issue for 150 - 200 million
EU citizens and can be of particular interest for
individuals with chronic conditions and
psychosomatic disorders.
Benefits of CAM for citizens
• Individuals choose CAM because they are seeking a
different philosophical view which perceives health in a
holistic way and connects the physical, mental, emotional
and spiritual aspects of their lives and benefits them at
all those levels.
• There is much reported evidence of a range of health
benefits from CAM treatment even though research in this
area is very poorly funded.
• Citizens are actively involved in improving their health.
They take more responsibility for their own health and
reduce on the burden health services. This has the potential
to reduce the need for costly, conventional interventions.
Who provides CAM - how is it regulated?
• CAM is provided by
– practitioners who have trained wholly in the CAM
disciplines
– conventional health care professionals - doctors, nurses,
physiotherapists - who have done postgraduate training
• CAM regulation varies from country to country
• The variation is between the extremes of
– certain therapies being legally restricted to doctors only
• (e.g. homeopathy in France, Austria)
– a common law situation where anyone can practise any
„therapy“ (e.g.Netherlands, United Kingdom, Ireland)
Current trends in regulation
• Moves towards recognition and regulation
– Belgium, Netherlands, Portugal
• Legislative moves to positively recognise and regulate
acupuncture homeopathy, chiropractic, osteopathy.
– United Kingdom
• Statutory regulation of the professions of osteopathy
and chiropractic achieved with acupuncture and herbal
medicine soon to follow.
– Austria
• Recent recognition of shiatsu as a profession.
• Moves towards restriction
– Bulgaria, Italy
• Legislative proposals to limit homeopathy to doctors
only.
Why is the regulation of CAM an issue
of equity?
Significant limits to patient choice and access:
Availability:
Accessibility:
Quality:
Financial :
- lack of qualified or recognised practitioners
- restriction of practice to doctors only
- restriction of products and medicines
- lack of information about skills and education
- lack of minimum standards, ethical guidelines
- mostly private provision
Patients accessing the benefits of CAM in their home country
cannot necessarily access them in other Member States.
What is the EU position on CAM?
Practice and delivery
No official EU position on CAM particularly because
healthcare services remain a national responsibility. (Art 152
EU Treaty of Amsterdam).
This means no recognition of professional qualifications or
agreed criteria for competence, skills or education for CAM.
Products
Herbal and homeopathic medicines together with food
supplements are now regulated by EU Directives .
European Parliament Resolution
(1997)
Called on the Commission to:
• carry out studies into the safety, efficacy, & use
• launch a process of recognising CAM
• encourage the development of research
programs
• create a directive on food supplements
A Directive on food supplements is the only concrete
response from the Commission and Council so far.
What could the EU do for CAM?
• Implement the European Parliament Resolution !
• Address the legalisation of CAM
– positively encourage national governments to legislate in a way
which respects the diverse philosophical and theoretical bases of
different CAM or NCH disciplines.
– analyse the models of regulation that promote freedom of
responsible practice, eg the Irish consultative model which seeks
to both protect the rights of citizens to safe treatment and to
support the right to practice of practitioners through regulation of
training. Other excellent examples include recommendations and
guidelines from the Council of Europe (1999) and WHO (2002).
– promote the effective legal right of the professions to practice
as access is entirely dependent on this.
– implement a specific research budget line for CAM.
The EU should focus on maintaining
choice and quality in health for all
– CAM can contribute to better health status and quality of
life by empowering citizens to have more responsibility
for their health and control over their lives.
– There should be a variety of professional training
available and recognised which respects the different
CAM approaches.
– CAM disciplines should not be forced to operate under the
control of conventional medical thinking.
– The EU has a clear role in ensuring a harmonised
environment for CAM and ensuring that all EU citizens
have the right and opportunity for choice in health
treatments.
The way forward for the EU –
Integrated Healthcare
Conventional and non-conventional approaches to
healthcare and those that practise them working together
in an integrated approach offer a wider range of options
for the greater benefit of patients.
The recommendations of the Council of Europe and
WHO both offer good guidance on a constructive way
forward for the EU and all individual Member States of
Europe.