|
|
Medicine for the Third Millennium:
An Historical Perspective
by Richard Kinsolving, PhD
|
A funny thing happened
on the way to the new millennium: the practice of medicine became
lost. Science made the trip, and so did the physicians themselves,
with their instruments, hospitals, clinics, as well as regulations,
insurance companies, HMOs, and of course drugs and pharmaceutical
companies. Am I saying that most medical practices do not practice
medicine? Well, not exactly.
By the turn of the Nineteenth Century, medicine was an art striving
to become more scientific. At that time, a major medical subject
was Materia Medica, a ponderous list of natural products, herbs,
and simple chemicals. Most were available as powders, liquids
and mixtures. In order to use these materials, the physician had
to titrate (adjust) the dose for the patient and observe responses.
Because so little knowledge existed as to the causes of disease,
medicine was mostly an art. Through physician experience and careful
observation, a patient’s condition was (hopefully, but not
always) maintained in such a state that he could function while
the disease ran its course. This was either to remission or death.
The physician had to know the individual patient in order to treat
him. Much of this medicine was holistic and natural.
This knowing and treating the individual patient continued through
the middle of the Twentieth Century. Materia Medica gave way to
science and became pharmacology. It was replaced with an armamentarium
of new chemical entities we call drugs, specific man-made molecules
with very specific strong activities. Some call this hard or harsh
medicine. Standard dosages, rather than titration, became the
norm. Forgotten was the need to titrate the patient and understand
the whole patient. Technical knowledge became so massive that
no one physician could begin to know the whole subject, so medicine
gave way to specialization and group practice. Science revealed
the causes of disease and doctors began treating specific diseases
instead of designing their treatments for individual patients.
This new medicine has greatly improved the lives of the population
in developed countries (and greatly improved the profits of the
pharmaceutical suppliers).
But when this new medicine was combined with the economic reality
of the late Twentieth Century—of insurance, HMOs, regulations,
the need to help too many patients in too short a time (and most
critically, lawsuits)—the practice of medicine as an art
was lost. Indeed, many feel that the practice of medicine itself
has gone, replaced with use of drugs and treatments that are standardized
for insurance needs, legal protection, and to appease an ever-expanding
population. Symptoms are often treated at the expense of defining
the underlying cause of the disease. Patients ‘by the number’
are treated rather than the individual patient. It is ironic that
with the advances of medicine as a science, many feel the practice
of medicine has actually declined.Where is medicine going? Look
no further than the number of natural product supplement and biotechnology
companies. On the surface, biotechnology and natural products
seem to be at opposite poles. However, they can be seen as opposite
sides of the same coin. Natural products are mild medicines, and
use non-synthetic agents to work with the body chemistry to reach
a desired end.
Biotechnology seeks to make natural body chemicals (usually peptides)
to reach this same end. Most proponents in each camp will deny
their commonality. Today, there are many new biologicals (drugs
derived from human source, as cytokines, interferons, hormones,
etc.), highly refined and often pure. Unfortunately, these powerful
new products are being used as if they were chemicals, in the
same old chemical treatment regimens. We have entered the new
century with so much specific knowledge about the human body,
but with so little wisdom as to how to put this information together
in order to treat the whole patient.
The field of science which drives much of biotechnology is immunology.
A vast number of natural products and therapies actively modify
or stimulate immune function. Only in the last fifty years have
we come to know that much of disease has a common denominator,
failure of immune function. Indeed, many diseases are really symptoms
of a non-functioning immune system. Personally, I believe that
cancer and other chronic diseases cannot exist in the presence
of an intact immune system. These diseases are allowed to progress
because the immune system has been compromised. They ultimately
succeed by overwhelming immune function. The fact that cancer
responds to alternative treatments is explained by the many natural
treatments which modify or restore immune function.
The immune system has many functions only recently recognized
and whose importance is still not universally accepted. It has
a protective function against the enemy from without—bacteria,
fungi and viruses—but also the more dangerous enemy within:
cancer cells, which are body cells that do not follow the rules.
The body is a complex mass of different cells with specific functions.
Each cell must be subordinated to the needs of the whole body
and follow the control commands of other body mechanisms, and
this may include the cell’s death in the process. When cells
are produced that do not respond to these higher commands, they
must be eliminated, a function of the immune system. The immune
system is the quality control department of the body. The immune
system is subject to many demands which may tax its ability to
respond to all needs equally. It may be impaired by exogenous
agents, environmental toxins, and carelessly ingested processed
foods, etc. When out of control cells are not eliminated in their
early stages, they become established as a new entity in the body,
at constant war with the immune system. This war may go on for
several years, and only when the war is lost is a cancer detected.
Other failures of the immune system lead to other diseases: overreactions
(allergies); attacks against healthy cells leading to the autoimmune
diseases, as rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes, etc. Many natural
medicines modulate the immune system, stimulate generally or only
a particular function, occasionally inhibit. Many aspects of aging
are slow-programmed immune failure, a condition which can be countered
in part with natural products. The natural medicines are most
effective for prevention and less so as therapeutics. But they
do play a role as components in a therapeutic protocol when combined
with some conventional medicine. We call this integrative medicine.
There are combinations that restore immune function which allow
other treatments to be more effective.
Because immunology has been slow to fully develop, much of conventional
medicine has ignored its recent accomplishments and prefers not
to learn a new discipline. This issue, combined with the cookbook
therapy now so commonly accepted by modern medicine, leaves many
patients adrift. Failures in therapy lead them to seek their own
remedies.
No one decries this loss of ability to practice medicine more
than the patients; they are coming to understand that something
of real value has been lost. They are searching for this lost
art of medical practice. They are searching on the internet. They
are searching in publications such as the one you are reading.
They do not trust that the physicians will be allowed to treat
them. They are finding that an important part of good health is
first avoiding becoming ill by changing diet and lifestyle, by
utilizing natural supplements and mind-body spirit training. When
ill, they seek more natural courses of treatment such as acupuncture,
lymphatic massage, and other physical arts, combined with natural
and herbal products. Those few physicians who with open minds
survey the old medicine with its natural products and combine
some of those agents with the rational use of conventional medicine
are redefining medicine.
Medicine should be a holistic approach looking to all possible
therapies and seeking to define a treatment protocol using what
is deemed best for the individual patient. It may take many years
for this integrative medicine to be recognized as the true medicine
of the third millennium, but it will occur. Patients will not
give up the internet and the publications that empower them. They
will not go back to the problems of the past.
Richard Kinsolving, PhD is an immunopharmacologist with many years
in drug discovery and research on the immunology of cancer. He
is research and technical consultant to Immune Recovery Clinic
in Atlanta, Georgia.
Back
to New Life Journal..
|
| |
August/September
2004
Issue
|
| |
| |
| |
Business Listings
Your guide to health practitioners
and sustainable businesses in Asheville, NC, Atlanta and Athens,GA, Greenville,
SC and the Southeast
NATURAL HEALING
massage, acupuncturists, energy medicine, herbalists, yoga centers,
natural medicine, healers, alternative therapies, healing workshops
NATURAL FOODS
health food stores, restaurants, nutritionists, whole foods chefs,
natural foods lectures & programs, organic farmers, caterers
MIND & SPIRIT
therapists, churches, workshops, retreat centers, support groups
BUSINESSES
sustainable businesses in the Southeast |
|
| |
|