I was impressed when I saw in a recent issue of U.S. News & World Report that the top 18 medical facilities in the country have programs that are investigating alternative medicine. Why did this get my attention and interest? Well, because it seems (to me) that sometimes physicians and administrators are fairly certain that it is their way or the highway – and their way is the conventional way, the bandwagon way.
They may be right; but they are not right to intimidate questioners from asking their questions. I am pleased to see that Johns Hopkins and Mayo’s are themselves now exploring and conducting studies on treatments that are outside western medicine’s traditional approach. Just yesterday came news of research into the claim that acupuncture may increase success rates in getting a fertilized embryo to attach to the uterine wall.
I write about this not because I want to go out and drink weird substances or rub things on my body or . . . well, do things that sound nutty. I write because I am a fan of the “it’s so crazy it might just work” openness of thought. You know, it was a doctor in England who learned of a patient’s crazy tale that a Gypsy potion had helped his heart condition, looked into the situation and discovered digitalis – found in the foxglove plant.