« Eight circuits | Main | The relationship between money and happiness »

October 18, 2007

BBC series has an odd definition of alternative:

The BBC have announced a new series which will investigate the scientific basis of three 'alternative therapies': reflexology, hypnosis and meditation - except that two of them, hypnosis and meditation, are well-supported scientifically validated treatments.

In fact, systematic reviews have found hypnosis to be an effective treatment for reducing nausea and vomiting during chemotherapy, distress during childbirth, irritable bowel syndrome, and needle pain in children, to name but a few. That's not counting the numerous studies on the cognitive neuroscience of hypnosis and hypnotisability.

Similarly, mindfulness meditation-based therapies have been researched extensively and found to be useful in a large number of conditions.

In fact, they are one of the best treatments to prevent relapse in people who have already had several depressive episodes in the past.

Both hypnosis and mindfulness-based therapy are used in Britain's National Health Service and the Royal Society of Medicine has its own dedicated hypnosis section.

Although it's probably true to say that meditation and hypnosis are also used inappropriately by quacks, so are vitamins, painkillers and exercise, none of which are thought of as 'alternative'.

The measure of a treatment is not only what it does, but what it's used for. Antibiotics aren't an alternative therapy unless you're trying to use them to cure cancer.

Presumably, the BBC's next series on alternative music will feature The Rolling Stones and U2 (in contrast, I'm guessing reflexology is the Menswear of medicine).


Link to odd BBC programme announcement.

Vaughan.

Posted at October 18, 2007 07:30 PM

Comments

David Malone says:

I think many lay people would regard meditation and hypnosis as alternative, and I suspect that the program will explain what they are good for, and what they are not good for (much like antibiotics). It sounds like a second part to this series, which covered acupuncture, spiritual healing and the use of herbs in medicine. I quite enjoyed these first time around.

Comment posted at October 18, 2007 09:39 PM

David Malone says:

It seems to have stripped out the URL I posted: http://www.open2.net/alternativemedicine/

Comment posted at October 18, 2007 09:40 PM

CornelisB says:

I heard that in the US you no longer can get funding to study Hypnosis as an alternative therapy because it is no longer considered alternative.

Comment posted at October 21, 2007 07:43 PM

Kevin Kunz says:

Reflexology has been well documented scientifically. Try http://www.reflexology-research.com/Abstracts.html One of the myths affecting reflexology is that there isn't any scientific research. There is quite a lot of research.

Comment posted at October 22, 2007 06:52 PM

kiplinger says:

A treatment doesn't stop being "alternative" just because it has been scientifically validated, it depends whether it has made it into routine conventional (ie orthodox medical) practice or not.
The BBC's definition is accurate: the programmes are dealing with treatments that are not the first-line, first-choice medical treatments -- which are usually drugs and/or surgery -- but are chosen as an alternative to them.

Comment posted at October 26, 2007 07:46 PM

Post a comment

Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)


Remember me?