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Alternative medicine can be great as a pro active healthy lifestyle.
Like if you keep your body cleansed and balanced with anti oxidents and other supplements you can have a better quality of health than not and possibly avoid some health problems you may have gotten with poor eating and poor health habits.
If you really study an illness, the supplements and all your option and what all to do sometimes you can have a better quality of life than being on a bunch of different medications that only mask the problem. If you can find a good alternative dr. often they can figure out what is causing your symptoms and treat them rather than going on meds that mask the symptoms. But you have to be careful to balance everything.
Like some people hear that Apple cider vinegar is good for balancing the PH in their digestive tract. So they drink Apple cider vinegar everyday to the point they do not have enough acidity in their stomach.
So they drink Apple cider vinegar everyday to the point they do not have enough acidity in their stomach.
Which puts them in Metabolic Alkalosis, which can be a VERY life threatening situation. As I stated above, alternative medicine has it's place and it's not for everyone and not for every illness.
In some countries it is known as complementary medicine and many general physicians - up to 30% in 2004 - are able and willing to recommend it with or instead of a prescription medicine. But do you know what the real issue is with complementary medicine? Compliance. If was addressing every single person under the care of a doctor right now (and that would be alot of people) I would say this: you won't stop smoking, you won't stop drinking, you won't lose weight, exercise or manage your health in any responsible way; then how on earth are you going to take "senega and ammonia" for example, four times a day instead of one tiny pill that has been proven to break down mucous in the lungs faster, more effectively, more cheaply etc etc? If you won't finish the pack of antibiotics, or even take your depression medication or your heart pills, how confident am I going to be recommending that you have flax seed oil morning and night? It's not 'necessary', it's 'complementary'. Some of these therapies are so strong they give the liver one hell of a workout too - some also interfere with prescription medicines that have been proven to work in clinical trials and patient cohort studies run over decades. I'm happy to recommend these therapies to patients but only if I am confident they will comply with the directions. And I'm sorry - but there aren't many of you that do!
The ones who did follow the ways of ancient herbalists in China did live much longer than people of our new age dependent on the bi"pharmaceutical". They save your life from the right and kill you from the left. Long live the nature.
How is my response allopathic? And who "lived longer?" The people that died of influenza, whooping cough, plague, post-polio syndrome? What practical answer would you offer for the 40% of patients who don't take their cholesterol medication AT ALL or the 90% of asthmatics who fail to use the inhaler properly? My point was that I wasn't confident that patients would comply with complementary therapies (when they require MORE COMPLIANCE) when they can't/won't even take one pill a day or inhale the mist from the inhaler correctly, stop smoking and/or boozing. So, what is your practical point about being "too allopathic"? Do you want a patient in respiratory distress with air trapping to 'focus on their chakra' or something? And what do you mean by 'long live the nature' which isn't really a sentence?