risk-benefit definition of safety, one cannot assume any therapy, which on the surface appears mostly harmless, is safe.
Homeopathy provides an example of the need to match appropriate criteria to specific CAM therapies. Homeopathy, which uses highly dilute substances, appears to
be inherently safe. Homeopathic remedies often begin with highly toxic substances. But, through a process of serial dilution, these substances end up having little or
none of the toxic component remaining in the final preparation. However, specific precautions are still required. For example, not all homeopathy preparations (or
those labeled as homeopathic) are extremely dilute. Some “low-potency” preparations or those mixed with herbal products may contain potentially dangerous
substances (
31
).
One may also assume that prayer has no direct toxic effect. However, adverse effects from “psychic” phenomena have been documented (
32
). Whether one
understands the mechanisms (e.g., psychogenic, cultural, autonomic), can we reasonably assume that these practices have no adverse effects?
Therapies with known toxic effects (e.g., herbal preparations) may actually prove to be inherently safer (given their relative benefits) than comparable conventional
therapies. An example is the use of hypericum, or St. John's Wort, for the treatment of mild to moderate depression. The efficacy of this herb for this indication has
been demonstrated in clinical trials and has very few adverse effects. In direct comparison with conventional antidepressant agents, hypericum has fewer side effects
with comparable efficacy (
33
). This finding illustrates that a therapy with higher potential direct toxic effects than homeopathy or prayer may be inherently more
desirable—that is, “safer”—given the indications and comparative value to a conventional therapy because of a reduced risk-benefit ratio. Therefore, decisions about
safety requires evaluation using various criteria, both for systems as a whole (e.g., homeopathy, prayer, herbalism) and for specific products within systems during
application for specific indications.
To be considered sufficiently safe for application, certain therapeutic systems (e.g., acupuncture and homeopathy) may require only toxicity screening and appropriate
training for their use as a whole system. In this case, specific product safety testing for each indication is unrealistic. Other inventions (e.g., herbalism or megavitamin
therapy) require screening of both the entire system for general safety characteristics and specific testing of standardized products for
specific indications before
marketing. Examples of these approaches are the WHO
Guidelines for Safe Acupuncture Treatment (
3
) and ongoing work in several countries developing both safe
and practical regulation of botanical products (
34
,
35
and
36
). (See
Chapter 5
for guidelines on how to use potential risk in making evidence-based decisions about
CAM.)
COMPONENTS OF SAFETY
Adverse effects from CAM practices can be classified into three broad categories:
Direct adverse effects are either short-term, in which they are often called
toxic effects, or long-term, in which they are called
side effects.
Indirect adverse effects are those events that occur because of incompetent delivery of the therapy or diagnostic procedure.
Definitional adverse effects. Many CAM systems use different diagnostic categories, patient preferences, explanatory models, and outcome values than those
commonly accepted in the West. Failure to provide clarity in these definitional and descriptional areas can lead to misunderstanding of application or attempted
application of the practice, which can also produce adverse effects.
Mislabeling
Mislabeling occurs when a product or device does not contain the items it purports to contain or does not perform the actions its claims to perform. In products such
as herbal preparations, mislabeling may involve the application of a specific herbal name and yet the product may not contain that herb. For example, confusion and
mislabeling of various ginseng species has lead to inaccurate claims of toxicity. Herbal products sometimes are labeled as containing a single herb, but actually
contain products from a variety of plants (
37
). Some homeopathic products are labeled homeopathic because they include highly dilute preparations combined with
plant products, or even pharmacological doses of conventional drugs. Likewise, acupuncture needles may not be prepared with appropriate manufacturing and
sterility standards and yet be labeled sterile. Mislabeling may occur because good manufacturing processes are not incorporated in the manufacture of the product. In
fraudulent cases, mislabeling may occur deliberately. Although fraudulent mislabeling of products occurs, its frequency is unknown and probably
represents a minority
of products compared to those who mislabel because of inadequate manufacturing and standardization procedures.
A significant subset of mislabeling is underlabeling. Underlabeling occurs when potentially toxic or active ingredients are not listed on the product's contents label. For
example, some Traditional Chinese and Ayurvedic herbal preparations may contain toxic doses of mercury, lead, arsenic, and other heavy metals (
38
). In some cases,
these substances are in the product because practitioners in the CAM system believes they provide important therapeutic effects. These substances are clearly toxic
and have long-term damaging effects, especially if ingested by children, but may not appear on the label. Nor can the predictions about their concentration be
estimated from the name of the plant product or herbal mixture. The recent Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act passed by the U.S. government may have
aggravated this problem by allowing some products that are frequently used as therapeutic agents to be classified as foods. This classification results in less labeling
of the content and description of appropriate usage. Underlabeling can be a serious type of mislabeling.
Misrepresentation
Misrepresentation involves claiming effectiveness for ineffective interventions or diagnostic procedures. Even in relatively benign conditions, misrepresentation can
cause adverse effects because of the risk of wasting time and money, the increased use of diagnostic techniques (including repeated history-taking and physical
exams), and the generation of false expectations about the outcome. In addition, misrepresentation of ineffective therapies causes harm if effective therapies are not
used for the alleviation of the condition.
There are two key decisions needed to evaluate misrepresentation. The first is whether an intervention is needed at all. Many conditions have a benign natural course
or recover spontaneously and require no intervention. In these cases, any intervention carries potential risks. For example, close to 80% of individuals who visit a
general practice in which a specific diagnosis is not reached will have his or her problem resolve or improve with no therapy (
39
). In this case, any intervention with
potential side effects, inconvenience, cost, or one that produces anxiety or other psychological factors is inappropriate. Thus, prognostic need is an important part of
evaluating misrepresentation. Increased self-care with natural medicines and the assumption of comprehensive medical care by practitioners without extensive
experience and training in the management of serious disease can lead to unfavorable, avoidable, and, therefore, adverse outcomes. Examples of these outcomes
have
been published, such as an attempted treatment of diabetes mellitus using ineffective herbal preparations (
5
,
6
and
7
). Other examples include the treatment of
cancers in the early stages using biological or homeopathic preparations and the reliance on prayer and mental healing while serious conditions progress (
40
). The
prevalence of such events from a public health perspective is unknown.
The first aspect of misrepresentation can only occur if there is truly an effective conventional therapy available for the condition. In many incidences, there may not be
an effective therapy. For example, acupuncture or homeopathic treatment may alleviate pain and improve function in patients with pancreatic cancer because of
nonspecific effects. Because the side effects of these therapies are less than those produced by chemotherapeutics used in conventional medicine for the treatment
of pancreatic cancer, and because conventional treatment does not change the prognosis of this disease, the use of these two alternative modalities in the treatment
of pancreatic cancer could not be considered as causing harm or misrepresentation in this sense.
Comparative Trials
Direct comparative trials of CAM therapies compared with proven conventional therapies has increased. There are now a number of examples comparing
acupuncture, homeopathy, and herbal preparations, as well as spinal manipulation and Traditional Chinese Medicine with and without the incorporation of
conventional medicine in randomized controlled trials. These trials often, but not always, demonstrate similar benefit with equal or reduced adverse effects from
complementary therapies, although costs are rarely measured.
Examples of such direct comparison is the hypericum versus imipramine trial described previously (
41
), the comparison of classical homeopathy versus salicylates in
the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis published by Gibson et al. (
42
), and the controlled trial comparing antacids, cimetidine, deglycyrrhizinated licorice, and gefarnate
in the treatment of chronic duodenal ulceration (
43
). Hammerschlag has summarized the direct comparative trials of acupuncture versus conventional medicine in a
variety of conditions. In most trials in which the benefit of conventional treatments is similar to acupuncture, adverse effects were usually equal or less (
44
). More trials
of this type are needed in complementary medicine.
Misapplication
Misapplication of effective therapies can also result in harm. Misapplication usually occurs because of inadequate training, in knowledge, skills, or experience or from
incompetence or practitioner impairment. Conventional medication
has well-established training, certification, licensing, and monitoring procedures to ensure that the
knowledge, skills, and qualifications of a practitioner are adequate. Even with these safeguards, misapplication occurs. If CAM practitioners engage in the entire
scope of a medical practice, then their knowledge, skills, and experience in these areas must be at least comparable to those involved in conventional primary care, or
their practice should be specifically restricted and defined. Appropriate referral to and from medically qualified practitioners requires knowledge by those practitioners
of which conditions are best managed and under what circumstances. As the number, type, and background of complementary practitioners increases and as the
identification of more effective and ineffective CAM therapies occurs, it is likely that a generalist medical coordinator with knowledge about both CAM and
conventional medicine will be needed to prevent misapplication.
Misapplication can occur if practitioners fail to properly refer to or apply effective practices. Schools of acupuncture for physicians consist of about 200 to 400 hours of
training in acupuncture, which is often considered inadequate in countries where extensive use and training of traditional acupuncturists has occurred for centuries. In
addition, non-MD acupuncturists may have inadequate medical training. The WHO is attempting to address these problems by creating categories of acupuncturists
with various training standards and scopes of practice. Thus, minimum hours and standards for the training of qualified medical doctors in acupuncture is defined, as
are minimal training and experience in anatomy, physiology, pathophysiology, prognosis, and scope of practice for acupuncturists in Western diagnosis and medicine.
Without such standards for all those who may engage in, refer to, or recommend complementary practices, misapplication is likely to continue unchecked. In the
United States, there are at least three certifying bodies in acupuncture and Oriental medicine, each having different requirements for certification and scopes of
practice. States seeking to provide appropriate laws for licensing and regulating acupuncturists may use criteria from different organizations or from none of these
organizations in their certification process. A similar situation exists
with homeopathic practitioners, having various certification and licensing and training
requirements for MDs, NDs, DCs, and even lay practitioners. Whereas all 50 states recognize, license, and regulate chiropractors, only about 24 states have statutory
regulations dealing with acupuncture, 12 with naturopathy, and 4 with homeopathy, one of which dates back to 1906. The situation in the United Kingdom is even
more chaotic, where the practice of medicine does not require any certification or licensing. (See
Chapter 2
for a list of current licensing laws for various practices by
state.)
Misdiagnosis
Finally, harm can occur because of incorrect, inaccurate, or inappropriate diagnosis and patient classification, resulting in the application of effective therapies for the
incorrect condition. Harm can also occur from failure to detect conditions that can be corrected. Harm from inappropriate diagnosis and patient classification is
different from suboptimal application of effective therapies. The former involves clinical disagreement and diagnostic accuracy, or failure to detect and apply the
therapy to the main cause of a condition. The practitioner should especially be alert for CAM systems that create their own diagnostic class for which their therapy is
then applied. Iridology claims to diagnose specific conditions from patterns in the eye. This results in unnecessary treatments not proven to effect that particular
condition (
45
). Many other similar diagnostic methods are available that in principle set up situations for the same risk. Electrodermal diagnostic methods, for example,
claim to be able to detect functional changes in acupuncture meridians and subsequently the corresponding organ locations. These measurements then become an
“electromagnetic” diagnosis of disease. These “diseases” created with such instruments are then “treated” using a variety of means. Without proof that such a
“diagnosis” is important, these treatments are claimed to be “preventive,” and patients may go through multiple “measurements” and “treatments.” This can cause
harm by creating anxiety, excessive and unnecessary testing, treatments, and expenditures of time and energy, all of which have unknown benefit.
Similar CAM
diagnostic systems, including combinations of endocrinological and blood measurements from normal serum, radiathesia, intuitive diagnosis, auricular diagnosis, and
the use of pleomorphism, all carry the same risk of misinformed application and misdiagnosis.
Orthodox medicine has its share of similar questionable screening and diagnostic methods, including tests such as PSA for all men, mammography for younger
women, occult stool blood tests, fetal monitoring in normal pregnancies, and so on. In many of these tests, their reliability and correlation with significant outcomes are
questionable, yet their application leads to interventions, all of which carry risks. An overdependence on medically “correct” (e.g., objective, proven, most common,
most easily verified, most high-tech) outcomes in place of attending to subjective, quality of life, and individually valued outcomes is probably a major reason why the
people turn to CAM practitioners (
30
). These are definitional and value issues that if not addressed can lead to adverse effects from treatment.
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