Thursday, August 06, 2009

According to a July 30 article on WebMD, Americans "spend almost a third as much money out-of pocket on herbal
supplements and other alternative medicines as they do on
prescription drugs."
In
a new government report, out-of-pocket spending on alternative
medicines like herbal supplements, chiropractic visits, and meditation
was estimated at about $34 billion in one year.
“The bottom line is that Americans spend a lot of money on CAM products,
classes,
materials and practitioner visits,” National Center for Complementary
and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) Director Josephine P. Briggs, MD,
said. “We estimate that this (represents) approximately 11% of the
total out-of-pocket spending on health care.”
Highlights from the report released by NCHS and NCAAM include:
- In 2007, 38 million adults spent $12 billion on about 354 million visits to CAM practitioners.
- Two-thirds
of the out--of-pocket spending did not involve a practitioner, but
alternatives like over-the-counter herbal therapies, classes, and
materials.
- The largest single expenditure was for
"non-vitamin, non-mineral herbal supplements and other products (almost
$15 billion) followed by practitioner visits ($12 billion), stretching and meditation-related classes such as yoga, tai chi, and qigong ($4 billion), homeopathic medicines ($2.9 billion) and relaxation techniques ($0.2 billion)."
Briggs
further commented that chronic pain, back pain in specific, is the most
common reason people use alternative medicine. “Americans," Briggs
said, "turn to treatments like acupuncture, chiropractic care, and
massage therapy
to deal with these painful conditions,” adding that groups like the
American College of Physicians and the American Pain Society are on
record as endorsing these therapies as useful options for the treatment
of chronic back pain.
>> Click here for more information about CAM training
>> Click here to read the complete WebMD article on CAM