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progressoid

(50,747 posts)
Tue Sep 8, 2015, 06:05 AM Sep 2015

Well this is kind of depressing.





Behind the dubious medical claims of Dr. Mehmet Oz and Deepak Chopra is a decades-long strategy to promote alternative medicine to the American public. Twenty-three years ago, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) began to investigate a wide variety of unconventional medical practices from around the world. Five-and-a-half billion dollars later, the NIH has found no cures for disease. But it has succeeded in bringing every kind of quackery—from faith healing to homeopathy—out of the shadows and into the heart of the American medical establishment.

The National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH), a part of the NIH, is largely the brainchild of a single person. In the 1980s, Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) was convinced that bee pollen extract cured his hay fever. As the chairman of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee overseeing NIH funding, Harkin set aside $2 million to establish the NCCIH's forerunner, the Office of Alternative Medicine (OAM). Senator Harkin did not respond to multiple requests to participate in this story.

The OAM's stated mission was to investigate the medical value of alternative therapies. Despite its minuscule budget, its mandate was massive. Almost any kind of unusual therapy could be considered "alternative", spanning dozens of widely differing cultural traditions and historical eras. Everything from homeopathic remedies for arthritis to acupuncture for back pain to remote prayer for HIV/AIDS to coffee enemas for fighting cancer was in its purview.

...

http://reason.com/reasontv/2015/09/04/alternative-medicine-racket#comment




Harkin was my Senator. I didn't know he went off the woo end.
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Well this is kind of depressing. (Original Post) progressoid Sep 2015 OP
Alternative medicine ought to be evaluated. Maybe I'm missing something here. Warren Stupidity Sep 2015 #1
Sure, they should be tested. progressoid Sep 2015 #3
Harkin?? bvf Sep 2015 #2
Yeah, I had no idea. n/t progressoid Sep 2015 #4
 

Warren Stupidity

(48,181 posts)
1. Alternative medicine ought to be evaluated. Maybe I'm missing something here.
Tue Sep 8, 2015, 07:11 AM
Sep 2015

If the funding is going to putting alternative medical treatments through the same evidence based evaluations that standard treatments have to go through, that would be the right thing to do.

progressoid

(50,747 posts)
3. Sure, they should be tested.
Tue Sep 8, 2015, 10:12 AM
Sep 2015

It was just sad to watch Harkin's disappointment that the testing was disproving the efficacy of these alternative methods. (@ 12:40 in the video). And that there is an allowance in the ACA for their use.

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