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Related Experiment Videos

Why alternative medicine cannot be evidence-based.

M R Tonelli1, T C Callahan

  • 1Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington, USA. tonelli@u.washington.edu

Academic Medicine : Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges
|December 12, 2001
PubMed
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Evidence-based medicine (EBM) demands rigorous trials for complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). However, CAM

Area of Science:

  • Integrative medicine
  • Epistemology in healthcare
  • Medical research methodologies

Background:

  • Evidence-based medicine (EBM) is the dominant paradigm in Western medicine.
  • EBM proponents advocate for controlled clinical trials to validate complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) efficacy.
  • This demand reflects a philosophical stance to establish EBM's epistemology as the sole arbiter of medical knowledge.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To critique the universal applicability of EBM's epistemological framework to CAM.
  • To explore the incompatibility of EBM's population-based methods with individualized CAM approaches.
  • To advocate for the development of CAM-specific methodologies for assessing efficacy and causality.

Main Methods:

  • Philosophical analysis of EBM and CAM epistemologies.

Related Experiment Videos

  • Examination of the theoretical underpinnings of different medical systems.
  • Discussion of the limitations of controlled clinical trials for certain CAM modalities.
  • Main Results:

    • Rigorous controlled trials, central to EBM, may not be scientifically necessary or appropriate for all CAM practices.
    • CAM's focus on individualistic healing and non-measurable concepts (e.g., Qi) challenges EBM's assessment framework.
    • Current CAM knowledge development methods have limitations, including bias and varied interpretation.

    Conclusions:

    • EBM's demand for controlled trials for CAM is a philosophical, not scientific, necessity.
    • CAM requires developing its own coherent methods for assessing causality and efficacy.
    • Orthodox medicine should accept diverse epistemic approaches and demand clear explanations of CAM's methods rather than imposing EBM standards.