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Directly studying human healing could help to create a unifying focus in medicine
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
All therapeutic avenues meet at life's innate
healing or destructive processes. So direct study of human healing
might serve as a unifying focus, bridging disparate worlds of care
a
truly integrated medicine. In recent decades orthodox medicine's
successful focus on specific disease interventions has meant relative
neglect of self healing and holism, and from this shadow complementary medicine has emerged, with its counterpointing biases. The gap between
them is, however, narrowing with the emerging view, backed by the study
of placebo and psychoneuroimmunology,1 that to ignore
whole person factors is unscientific and less successful.
Almost 20 years ago young doctors' interest in complementary
medicine surfaced,2 presaging major changes in Western
medicine that seemed unimaginable at the time. For example, acupuncture is now used in most chronic pain services,3 and about 20%
of Scottish general practitioners have basic training in
homoeopathy.4 But is integration just bolting on the
scientifically proved bits of
What can you learn from this BMJ paper? Read Leanne Tite's Paper+