Post by Jules on Sept 5, 2003 3:02:48 GMT -5
Everyone should have access to complementary medicine, according to the Prince of Wales.
Prince Charles' Prince of Wales' Foundation for Integrated health has launched a five-year plan which outlines how to improve access to therapies.
One in five adults in the UK are estimated to have used some form of complementary medicine. The Prince's plan was published in advance of a World Health Organization resolution, due to be considered next week, which will call for complementary therapies to be integrated into mainstream care.
The Prince of Wales is known to be a keen advocate of complementary therapies. Writing in the introduction to the plan, 'Setting the Agenda for the Future', he said: "The key challenge in th next five years lies in getting the message of an integrated approach to healthcare into the community & in giving everybody - patient & professional alike - the means to make the kind of informed decisions that will give them access to the best possible choices."
The plan calls for everyone to have access to the treatment of their choice "safe in the knowledge that it is effective & well regulated." But it says many therapies are not available to patients or health professionals, & it is critical that complementary therapies are not covered by the audit & inspection processes which cover the NHS.
It calls for NHS trusts to be given guidance on how to provide complementary healthcare, community schemes to be developed to provide therapies, funding integrated healthcare, & encouraging medical schools to teach complementary medicine.
Professor Dame Lesley Rees, professor of chemical endocrinology at St Bartholomew's Hospital & the chair of trustees at the Foundation, said: "Patients are clearly voting with their feet for complementary therapies, but too often they do not tell their doctors what they are doing & frequently do not know where or how to obtain appropriate advice."
A spokeswoman for the British Medical Association said: "While recognising the growing interest in complementary & alternative therapies, it is important that patients are protected against unskilled or unscrupulous practitioners of health care. Standards of good practice should be set to help both referring doctors & their patients."
He added: "People want to know what works & what doesn't. It is sensible if the NHS is going to share treatment & management of patients with complementary & alternative therapies that there should be good information about therapies available for health care workers & patients. Only those therapies that are Adequately regulated should be available on the NHS."
Prince Charles' Prince of Wales' Foundation for Integrated health has launched a five-year plan which outlines how to improve access to therapies.
One in five adults in the UK are estimated to have used some form of complementary medicine. The Prince's plan was published in advance of a World Health Organization resolution, due to be considered next week, which will call for complementary therapies to be integrated into mainstream care.
The Prince of Wales is known to be a keen advocate of complementary therapies. Writing in the introduction to the plan, 'Setting the Agenda for the Future', he said: "The key challenge in th next five years lies in getting the message of an integrated approach to healthcare into the community & in giving everybody - patient & professional alike - the means to make the kind of informed decisions that will give them access to the best possible choices."
The plan calls for everyone to have access to the treatment of their choice "safe in the knowledge that it is effective & well regulated." But it says many therapies are not available to patients or health professionals, & it is critical that complementary therapies are not covered by the audit & inspection processes which cover the NHS.
It calls for NHS trusts to be given guidance on how to provide complementary healthcare, community schemes to be developed to provide therapies, funding integrated healthcare, & encouraging medical schools to teach complementary medicine.
Professor Dame Lesley Rees, professor of chemical endocrinology at St Bartholomew's Hospital & the chair of trustees at the Foundation, said: "Patients are clearly voting with their feet for complementary therapies, but too often they do not tell their doctors what they are doing & frequently do not know where or how to obtain appropriate advice."
A spokeswoman for the British Medical Association said: "While recognising the growing interest in complementary & alternative therapies, it is important that patients are protected against unskilled or unscrupulous practitioners of health care. Standards of good practice should be set to help both referring doctors & their patients."
He added: "People want to know what works & what doesn't. It is sensible if the NHS is going to share treatment & management of patients with complementary & alternative therapies that there should be good information about therapies available for health care workers & patients. Only those therapies that are Adequately regulated should be available on the NHS."