Originally published October 3 2005
Patients push for greater access to alternative and complementary medicines
by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, NaturalNews Editor
General practitioners are under pressure from the Patient's Association to provide their patients with alternative medicine options, though the British Medical Association recommends greater regulation of alternative practitioners before any comprehensive adjustments are made to the current medical system.
The Patients Association has called for all GPs to provide patients with the choice of using complementary medicine where it had been proven to work.
Provision is patchy currently with well under a half of family doctors providing some sort of access to alternative providers.
But doctor representatives warned there needed to be better regulation.
A fifth of adults in the UK are estimated to have used some form of complementary medicine from acupuncture and herbal medicine to homeopathy.
But many paid for it at private clinics.
Britons spend �130m a year on alternative therapies, but that is expected to rise to �200m over the next four years.
Some GPs employ their own complementary medicine practitioners, or have expertise themselves, while some primary care trusts have contracts with providers which local family doctors can refer patients to.
But Simon Williams, director of policy at the Patients Association, said it must become more widespread.
The call comes as Prince Charles Foundation for Integrated Health has launched a scheme to sign up 150 "associate" GP members to promote complementary medicine.
Dr Michael Dixon, chairman of GPs' body NHS Alliance and trustee for the foundation, said: "GPs are beginning to become more open to alternative medicines, but it is still a postcode lottery at the moment.
"Not every alternative medicine out there has a proven track record, but I think we can be pretty comfortable about the mainstream."
He said these included things such as homeopathy, herbalism and acupuncture."
But the British Medical Association said while access should be more "equitable", there needed to be better regulation.
"There are some unscrupulous practitioners out there, and very few therapies are regulated, so it is clear more needs to be done.
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