A bitter sugar pill to swallow
Dec. 12th, 2009 08:10 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Thanks to Bob Park for mentioning this story: "Sen. Tom Harkin, the Iowa Democrat also known as Senator Bee Pollen, could not let the Health Reform Bill go through without a provision mandating that insurers reimburse alternative medicine providers."
From the LA Times article:
Yay, we get to pay for therapeutic touch and moxibustion.
Now, I'm not against alternative medicine just because it's alternative. I'll happily consider anything that works. But how do we know whether something works? One of the supporters of alternative medicine mentions that the practices have been around for centuries. I would prefer some sort of double-blind testing, yet just as a reminder to everyone:
"Makers of supplements, which unlike pharmaceuticals are not subject to federal drug-testing standards before they are marketed, pushed for the pilot program. Its inclusion would enhance the credibility of supplements and, manufacturers say, introduce them to lower-income consumers."
We'll be paying for things that have not been tested for either safety or efficacy.
On the other hand, maybe we'll be able to save a lot of money by giving sick people bee pollen instead of an MRI.
From the LA Times article:
Insurers and some scientific watchdogs say the measure would undermine one of the central principles of the healthcare overhaul: that the system cut costs by eliminating medical treatments that aren't proven effective.
...
The leading champion of these measures is Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa), chairman of the Senate Health Committee, who credits bee-pollen pills with curing his seasonal allergies. He is also the leading recipient in Congress of campaign donations from chiropractors and dietary-supplement makers.
Yay, we get to pay for therapeutic touch and moxibustion.
Now, I'm not against alternative medicine just because it's alternative. I'll happily consider anything that works. But how do we know whether something works? One of the supporters of alternative medicine mentions that the practices have been around for centuries. I would prefer some sort of double-blind testing, yet just as a reminder to everyone:
"Makers of supplements, which unlike pharmaceuticals are not subject to federal drug-testing standards before they are marketed, pushed for the pilot program. Its inclusion would enhance the credibility of supplements and, manufacturers say, introduce them to lower-income consumers."
We'll be paying for things that have not been tested for either safety or efficacy.
On the other hand, maybe we'll be able to save a lot of money by giving sick people bee pollen instead of an MRI.
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Date: 2009-12-13 03:09 am (UTC)What fucking bullshit. Or should I say beeshit.
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Date: 2009-12-14 11:26 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-12-15 01:11 am (UTC)The ads invoke tradition when they can, and there's certainly an element of technophobia being appealed to (because the alternatives are always "natural", a marketing buzzword completely empty of actual definition). But when the alternative medicine folks can't come up with a traditional pedigree for their products and treatments, they seamlessly switch sides to extoll the wonders of this new discovery which disproves the tired old dogma of the modern medical establishment.
It's all about distrust of authority, one which almost borders on paranoid conspiracy theory -- THEY are all working together to keep you sick so you'll keep coming back for their expensive treatments.
* Reading between the lines, THEY may not actually include doctors. Some of the ads seem to imply that doctors are unwitting dupes of the system. I'm guessing that this twist was added since most people probably know a doctor or two, and it's hard to demonize the familiar. Of course, it also plays to good old American anti-intellectualism, since four years of medical school is equated with four years of "brainwashing".