Alternative Treatment Medical & Psychosocial Aspects of Disability.
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Transcript of Alternative Treatment Medical & Psychosocial Aspects of Disability.
Alternative Treatment
Medical & Psychosocial Aspects of Disability
Alternative to Allopathic Medicine
Alternative medicine encompasses a variety of modalities used to treat symptoms, infections, pathological conditions, and underlying causes
Alternative modalities incorporate knowledge and theories about the non-physical, non-material aspects of human physiology
Alternative medicine approaches generally promote the idea that the human body has an innate ability to rebalance and heal any disease that develops and therapeutic modalities are designed to enhance and support this process
Commonly Encountered Types of Alternative Medicine
Traditional Adjuvant Therapies Music, Art, Dance, Recreational, and Horticultural therapies Designed to promote personal expression and social
interactions based on the concept that recovery from dis-ease and maintenance of health are enhanced through channels providing emotional and nonverbal expression
Therapies historically have been provided as part of institutional rehabilitation programs; third-party funding has been reduced or eliminated for such non-medical therapeutic programs
Currently, volunteer-based Arts-in-Medicine programs seek to restore some aspects of these modalities to the hospital/institutional milieu
Traditional Chinese Medicine
Acupuncture Ancient art used in Chinese Medicine Based on the theory that there is a life force
called Qi (Chi) that flows throughout the body in channels called meridians
Illness or disease occurs when the flow of Qi is obstructed, unbalanced, deficient, or excessive
Therapy sought for relief of pain and other symptoms; therapy often continued to achieve balance and increase health
Acupuncture techniques use needles or pressure (acupressure, Shiatsu) to stimulate points of the body where meridians exist to promote the proper flow and balance of Qi throughout the body
Traditional Chinese Medicine
Chinese Herbal Medicine Ancient art used in Chinese Medicine Herbs and herbal preparations possess certain
characteristics and energies that provide support to the body while it balances and heals itself
Physiotherapy techniques
Rolfing deep soft tissue
manipulation Generally used for
chronic pain conditions such as myofascial pain.
Accupressure Deep friction
massage
Chiropractic Based on the theory that humans are integrated
beings and body systems and emotions are interrelated
Attend to physiological and biochemical aspects of the body
Evaluate structural, spinal, musculoskeletal, neurological, vascular, nutritional, emotional and environmental relationships of body systems
Health is affected by alignment of spinal structures
Improperly aligned structures negatively impact various body systems
Properly aligned structures promote proper functioning of body systems, thereby supporting the body’s ability to maintain health and immunity
Therapy often sought for relief of pain related to back and neck injuries; therapy continued to promote balance and health
Treatment methods include adjustment and manipulation of spine and adjacent structures, heat (diathermy), cold (ice), ultrasound, percussion on trigger points
Spiritual Healings
Relationship of Soul and Body. Christianity
“Laying on of hands” Relationship of person to God Health-Faith relationship
Native American Healing Relationship to the earth Herbal Medicine
Subtle Energy Medicine (the Woo-Woo modalities)
Therapeutic Touch Popularized by the nursing profession during the
1970s and 1980s Based on the concept that there is an energy field
emanating from each human body that is affected by disease processes or other injury to tissues
Therapeutic intervention consists of the practitioner holding or moving her hands within the client’s energy field to strengthen it and return it to a functional state
Subtle Energy Medicine (the Woo-Woo modalities)
Crystal therapy Based on the concept that crystals emanate vibratory
energies that (a) draw disease processes away from the human body and that (b) enhance the energy of the human body to withstand diseases and heal itself
Therapeutic intervention consists of placing crystals on the body in areas deemed important to the disease process or the health process
Subtle Energy Medicine (the Woo-Woo modalities)
Homeopathy Based on the concept that living
plants emit certain frequencies of energy that or cause specific sets of symptoms in the human body.
The Homeopathic therapist (doctor) matches the patient’s symptoms with a set of symptoms caused by a specific plant or plants and uses a preparation made with that plant to cause an increase in symptoms—thereby calling even more of the body’s defenses into play
Therapeutic intervention consists of the application or ingestion of appropriate homeopathic preparations (generally distilled plant essences in an ethanol or cream base)
Additional Resources and Information from the Web
Acupuncture.com (www.acupuncture.com) Alternative Medicine Homepage (
www.pitt.edu/~cbw/altm.html) 2 of Dr. Andrew Weil's Integrative Medicine sites: www.drweil.com www.drweilselfhealing.com http://www.energymedicinewoman.com/energy.html http://www.shamanlinks.net/Shaman_Links.htm