Literature DB >> 1475649

Ethical and professional aspects of the practice of alternative medicine.

N Lynöe1.   

Abstract

The question of who should provide alternative medical treatment raises a number of different problems of both an ethical and a professional nature. Providing medical treatment, including alternative medical treatment, presupposes that the physician in question possesses diagnostic competence. It is in the best interests of society that medical care is safe, and therefore society must monitor the medical profession, e.g. in order to assure itself that the treatment provided is in agreement with the tenet of science and proven experience. The democratization of the patient-doctor relationship and the liberalization of the availability of medical and alternative medical treatments means that society also has an interest in ensuring that physicians offer alternative medical treatments or cooperate with practitioners of alternative medicine. A question is whether this is also of interest to the physicians? Another question touching on professional ethics is whether the doctor has the same responsibility to respect the desire of a patient to receive alternative medical treatment as he would have to respect the patient's right to forego ordinary medical treatment. These questions are analysed here against the background of the perspective of the relevant interest groups and are graded with regard to the disease and treatment concerned, how far the disease has advanced, the age of the patient, and whether or not the patient is competent to make his own decisions. These considerations are relevant in a discussion of who is qualified to provide or prescribe alternative medical treatment. This study points out that the individual physician should have the possibility to compromise and improvise from case to case.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Entities:  

Keywords:  Professional Patient Relationship

Mesh:

Year:  1992        PMID: 1475649     DOI: 10.1177/140349489202000406

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scand J Soc Med        ISSN: 0300-8037


  7 in total

Review 1.  Complementary and alternative medicine in autism: an evidence-based approach to negotiating safe and efficacious interventions with families.

Authors:  R Scott Akins; Kathy Angkustsiri; Robin L Hansen
Journal:  Neurotherapeutics       Date:  2010-07       Impact factor: 7.620

2.  The ethics of complementary medicine.

Authors:  E Ernst
Journal:  J Med Ethics       Date:  1996-08       Impact factor: 2.903

Review 3.  Frequency and circumstances of placebo use in clinical practice--a systematic review of empirical studies.

Authors:  Margrit Fässler; Karin Meissner; Antonius Schneider; Klaus Linde
Journal:  BMC Med       Date:  2010-02-23       Impact factor: 8.775

4.  Ethnomedicine and dominant medicine in multicultural Australia: a critical realist reflection on the case of Korean-Australian immigrants in Sydney.

Authors:  Gil-Soo Han; Harry Ballis
Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed       Date:  2007-01-03       Impact factor: 2.733

Review 5.  The right to traditional, complementary, and alternative health care.

Authors:  Maria Stuttaford; Sahar Al Makhamreh; Fons Coomans; John Harrington; Chuma Himonga; Gillian Lewando Hundt
Journal:  Glob Health Action       Date:  2014-04-25       Impact factor: 2.640

6.  Complementary and alternative medicine in Indian Parkinson's disease patients.

Authors:  Awadh Kishor Pandit; Deepti Vibha; Achal Kumar Srivastava; Garima Shukla; Vinay Goyal; Madhuri Behari
Journal:  J Tradit Complement Med       Date:  2015-08-20

Review 7.  Additional treatment with mistletoe extracts for patients with breast cancer compared to conventional cancer therapy alone - efficacy and safety, costs and cost-effectiveness, patients and social aspects, and ethical assessment.

Authors:  Petra Schnell-Inderst; Caroline Steigenberger; Marcel Mertz; Ilvie Otto; Magdalena Flatscher-Thöni; Uwe Siebert
Journal:  Ger Med Sci       Date:  2022-07-14
  7 in total

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