Title: Exercising choice in health treatment
1Exercising choice in health treatment
- Improving Access to Complementary and Alternative
Medicine (CAM) in Europe - A joint presentation by the
- European Council for Classical Homeopathy
- and the European Shiatsu Federation
- for the first EU Open Health Forum 17 May 2004
2What is Complementary and Alternative Medicine
(CAM)?
- A diverse range of autonomous health-care
practices used both for health support and
prevention and for care in illness. - WHOLE PERSON - WHOLE SYSTEMS
- COMPLEMENTARY ALTERNATIVE
- Acupuncture
- Chiropractic/Osteopathy
- Herbal Medicine(Phytotherapy)Aromatherapy
- Homeopathy/Flower Remedies/Shiatsu
- Reflexology/Massage
- Culture specific approaches
- Traditional Chinese Medicine, Ayurveda, Unani
3How widespread is CAM?
- Use of CAM has grown and continues to grow at a
significant rate across Europe year after year. - Around 40 EU citizens use or have used CAM,
notably women and those with high levels of
education. CAM is experiencing rapid growth in
EU. - This means CAM is an issue for 150 - 200 million
EU citizens and can be of particular interest for
individuals with chronic conditions and
psychosomatic disorders.
4Benefits of CAM for citizens
- Individuals choose CAM because they are seeking a
different philosophical view which perceives
health in a holistic way and connects the
physical, mental, emotional and spiritual aspects
of their lives and benefits them at all those
levels. - There is much reported evidence of a range of
health benefits from CAM treatment even though
research in this area is very poorly funded. - Citizens are actively involved in improving their
health. They take more responsibility for their
own health and reduce on the burden health
services. This has the potential to reduce the
need for costly, conventional interventions.
5Who provides CAM - how is it regulated?
- CAM is provided by
- practitioners who have trained wholly in the CAM
disciplines - conventional health care professionals - doctors,
nurses, physiotherapists - who have done
postgraduate training - CAM regulation varies from country to country
- The variation is between the extremes of
- certain therapies being legally restricted to
doctors only - (e.g. homeopathy in France, Austria)
- a common law situation where anyone can practise
any therapy (e.g.Netherlands, United Kingdom,
Ireland)
6Current trends in regulation
- Moves towards recognition and regulation
- Belgium, Netherlands, Portugal
- Legislative moves to positively recognise and
regulate acupuncture homeopathy, chiropractic,
osteopathy. - United Kingdom
- Statutory regulation of the professions of
osteopathy and chiropractic achieved with
acupuncture and herbal medicine soon to follow. - Austria
- Recent recognition of shiatsu as a profession.
- Moves towards restriction
- Bulgaria, Italy
- Legislative proposals to limit homeopathy to
doctors only.
7Why is the regulation of CAM an issue of equity?
- Significant limits to patient choice and access
- Availability - lack of qualified or recognised
practitioners - Accessibility - restriction of practice to
doctors only - - restriction of products and medicines
- - lack of information about skills and education
- Quality - lack of minimum standards, ethical
guidelines - Financial - mostly private provision
- Patients accessing the benefits of CAM in their
home country cannot necessarily access them in
other Member States.
8What is the EU position on CAM?
- Practice and delivery
- No official EU position on CAM particularly
because healthcare services remain a national
responsibility. (Art 152 EU Treaty of
Amsterdam). - This means no recognition of professional
qualifications or agreed criteria for competence,
skills or education for CAM. - Products
- Herbal and homeopathic medicines together with
food supplements are now regulated by EU
Directives .
9European Parliament Resolution (1997)
- Called on the Commission to
- carry out studies into the safety, efficacy,
use - launch a process of recognising CAM
- encourage the development of research
programs - create a directive on food supplements
- A Directive on food supplements is the only
concrete response from the Commission and Council
so far.
10What could the EU do for CAM?
- Implement the European Parliament Resolution !
- Address the legalisation of CAM
- positively encourage national governments to
legislate in a way which respects the diverse
philosophical and theoretical bases of different
CAM or NCH disciplines. - analyse the models of regulation that promote
freedom of responsible practice, eg the Irish
consultative model which seeks to both protect
the rights of citizens to safe treatment and to
support the right to practice of practitioners
through regulation of training. Other excellent
examples include recommendations and guidelines
from the Council of Europe (1999) and WHO (2002). - promote the effective legal right of the
professions to practice as access is entirely
dependent on this. - implement a specific research budget line for CAM.
11The EU should focus on maintaining choice and
quality in health for all
- CAM can contribute to better health status and
quality of life by empowering citizens to have
more responsibility for their health and control
over their lives. - There should be a variety of professional
training available and recognised which respects
the different CAM approaches. - CAM disciplines should not be forced to operate
under the control of conventional medical
thinking. - The EU has a clear role in ensuring a harmonised
environment for CAM and ensuring that all EU
citizens have the right and opportunity for
choice in health treatments.
12The way forward for the EU Integrated
Healthcare
- Conventional and non-conventional approaches to
healthcare and those that practise them working
together in an integrated approach offer a wider
range of options for the greater benefit of
patients. - The recommendations of the Council of Europe and
WHO both offer good guidance on a constructive
way forward for the EU and all individual Member
States of Europe.