|
Question: It now seems safe to say that alternative medicine is no longer on the fringeof health care. A visit to your neighborhood drug store tells the story. There, you'll findshelves stacked with about as many brands and types of vitamins asover-the-counter cold remedies. The trend reflects the fact that Americans spend more than $30 billion of theirown money on complementary and alternative therapies each year, according to a1997 study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. They also made 628 million visits to alternative health-care practitioners, 243million more than visits to all primary-care physicians. Nearly half of thosevisits were to chiropractors and massage therapists. Alternative Medicine DefinedDr. David Eisenberg is the author of that landmark study and director of theCenter for Alternative Medicine and Research and Education at Beth IsraelDeaconess and assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, bothin Boston. His definition of alternative medicine is any form of therapy not taught widelyin medical schools or generally available in hospitals. The term "integrative"or "complementary" medicine refers to the weaving together of alternativeoptions and allopathic or conventional science-based medicine.
Answer: This is an example how the naturopath mafia forges with statictics. Of course they do it for money. Jan Drew is advertizing quackery. Asis his only intention. Here again, as you can see. Jan Drew is part ofthe naturopath mafia and lures people into buying quackery andsharlatanism. If you do not want to ruin your health, do never trust criminals likeJan Drew ! More about Jan Drew and his methods of operation you can find in theFAQ about Jan Drew, which is published in this news-group.
|