Homeopathy and Integrative Medicine

 

The scientific (but also logical) basis for Integrated Medicine

 

 

 

 

 

The increase in chronic pathologies requires a deep revision of the “Rules of Engagement” with the patient and his clinical problem

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Gino Santini A, Rosaria Ferreri B and Francesco Macrì C

A MD, National Secretary, SIOMI (Società Italiana di Omeopatia e Medicina Integrata – Italian Society of Homeopathy and Integrated Medicine); Director, ISMO (Istituto di Studi di Medicina Omeopatica – Institute of Homeopathic Medicine Studies), Rome

B MD, Virologist, Homeopath, Phytotherapist, Nutritionist- Scientific Referee for Integrated Medicine in non-oncological pathways – Pitigliano Hospital Centre for Integrated Medicine (Tuscany), Grosseto

C MD, Pediatrician, Allergist, Vice President SIOMI (Società Italiana di Omeopatia e Medicina Integrata – Italian Society of Homeopathy and Integrated Medicine), Rome

Corresponding author – Gino Santini, ISMO, Via Adolfo Venturi 24, 00162 Rome, Italy
Phone: +39.338.6789012 – E-mail: g.santini@siomi.it

Keywords – Integrated Medicine, Evidence Based Medicine, Quality of Life, Chronic Care Model, Real World Medicine, Traditional Medicine, Complementary Medicine, Patient Reported Outcomes

Abstract – Evidence Based Medicine (EBM) was born with the intention of eliminating as many biases as possible in the search for a clinical treatment. This strategy, absolutely necessary in the treatment of acute pathologies (where the main attention is paid to the disease), becomes more difficult to implement in chronic conditions, where it is also necessary to add information on the patient and his clinical history. This has led to the development of a model of chronic pathology (Chronic Care Model, CCM) that allows to broaden the advantages of EBM in a framework of Real-World Medicine (RWM), according to the canons of what is now called Integrated Medicine (IM). The Italian experience of a public hospital, where IM has been adopted for several years, shows the possibilities of this new vision of medicine for patients suffering from chronic diseases.

Disclosure statement – Authors declare no competing interest.

All coauthors have reviewed and approved of the manuscript prior to submission.

Part of this work has been presented by the first author at the international “VIII Triennial Siomi Conference”, 16 March 2019, Florence (Italy), in a relation entitled: “From EBM to Real Life Medicine”.

The concept of Integrated Medicine has been clearly defined for the first time in Italy on 3rd December 2011, when SIOMI presented its Manifesto for Integrated Medicine, containing the conceptual and functional definitions of this discipline as agreed with the Italian leading health institution. The event has been celebrated with a monographic edition of HIMed (Homeopathy and Integrated Medicine, SIOMI’s official journal)1 in which the individual assertions written in the Manifesto have been accompanied by the thorough scientific, clinical, ethical, and epistemological analysis habitually required to allow a complex discipline to interact transparently and safely with patients, doctors, and the medical world.

There is a great confusion in the international literature over the terminology, conceptualisation and even the definition of the health model of Integrated Medicine (IM), which only increases the scepticism of many – albeit poorly informed – members of the scientific community. From this perspective, it should be stressed that IM has no intention of rejecting the use of everything that comes under the umbrella of academic medicine, but instead it aims, as its own name suggests, to integrate it with therapeutic practices currently defined as unorthodox, and now generally known as Traditional Medicine (TM) or Complementary Medicine (CM). There is also another discussion in the international literature about the use of the term “integrated” and “integrative”, indicating the medical approach with complementary medicines; we have decided to use the term “integrated”, stressing about the use of  “shared protocols”, as the intervention of complementary medicine is intended to complete a therapeutic protocol already in use and also to standardize our intervention as Traditional Medicine do. In the case of “integrative medicine” more people are involved in putting together traditional medicine and complementary medicine together creating new approaches, but now our experience is to complete the existing model of cares ; however, as described in our scientific papers, to “personalize” the intervention it is possible to add a homeopathic medicine or an acupuncture point in the standard protocol based on a peculiar patients’ aspect and on a personal evaluation of the complementary medicines’doctor. In our opinion, this process is necessary because the evidence coming from the ever-growing number of scientific publications, together with the positive clinical experiences of doctors and patients alike, comprise a solid basis for the further exploration of disciplines that could integrate (or even in some cases replace) the practices of academic medicine and lead to improvements where the methods of biomedicine have produced disappointing results.

After the clarification of these important points, we need to take a few steps back to understand the history that has led to this situation. Everything started in 1992, when the evidence-based medicine (EBM) workgroup published the results of an in-depth review of medical attitudes in JAMA2, the first of this kind. The group was coordinated by David Sackett, who later has written a book3 that has been, for many years, considered the final statement on EBM. Sackett’s perspective can be approximately summarised as follows: “The practice of Evidence Based Medicine means integrating individual clinical expertise with the best available external clinical evidence coming from a systematic research… [including] the more thoughtful identification and compassionate use of individual patients’ predicaments, rights, and preferences in making clinical decisions about their care” 4 (our italics).

While EBM has led to the objective verification of most clinical practices, the individual patients’ “predicaments, rights and preferences” are still now largely ignored. The reason is surprisingly clear, if interpreted considering the current model of chronic disease, which consider a given medical disorder as having an environmental trigger that could acts on a constitutional predisposition, that may be considered the cause of the host individual’s response and, ultimately, of the chronic disease itself.

EBM has always aimed to improve the efficiency of clinical studies by eliminating, as far as possible, all confounding factors (biases) that might alter the results’ interpretation. This methodology is undoubtfully the best approach when studying any therapeutic treatments for acute disorders – those areas of medicine where the declared aim is to eradicate any interference generated by the patient’s response, to avoid “contaminating” results and making it unreliable. For this reason, the study population must be as homogeneous as possible, with minimal differences between the participants’ various characteristics. All this, it should be stressed, is ideal when applied to a disease with a short latency period that is consequently easy to recognise and diagnose. In brief, in an “acute” case we could or indeed should focus on the disease, whose identified features can be found in all affected patients, while ignoring the constitutional prevalence of the patient where it occurs. In this context, it is very easy to extrapolate the results obtained in the study group to a larger population, as suggested by Sackett.

The problem arises when the same system is applied to a chronic disease. This is a dramatically different situation, as the definition of chronicity includes several factors that make more complicated to “measure” the disease, its intensity, and its evolution. The ways in which individual patients have learned to adapt to their own condition make it very difficult, for example, to put together a homogeneous study group in which to investigate all these factors. Furthermore, the many complexities of the patient’s response mean that its adaptation process often succeeds in “compensating” for the clinical imbalances caused by the disease, thus generating periods of relative wellbeing alternating with periods of relapse. It should also be considered that patients often present other comorbidities alongside their main disease, and that the complexity of everyone can lead to different responses even in similar conditions. It becomes evident that the simplification and verification process proposed by EBM is difficult to apply in such contexts.

The undeniable results achieved by EBM have led to a growing disregard for individual clinical experience and a greater reliance on clinical trials, to the point that the latter have become the solo identifying element of a method applied even in the absence of the specific factors that require its use, such as in the case of lifelong diseases. Sackett himself recognised the excessive “extremism” conferred upon his work, and indeed published an article5 in the British Medical Journal in which he attempted to redress the balance. This revision of EBM has, in recent years, led to the individual clinical expertise theorised by Sackett being identified with Patient Reported Outcomes (PRO)6, which offer the patient’s perspective on a disease or treatment which cannot be measured with any clinical test, but that could be just as important for the patients themselves as the determination of any given parameter. In brief, individuals with the same state of health, diagnosis or disease can have different perceptions of their own feelings and their own health status because they have different abilities to deal with their own limitations and disabilities, and this finally leads to a different perception of their Quality of Life (QoL).

In this way, more suited factors to measuring the clinical variables typical of chronic diseases have gradually come in and play a role in the complex equilibrium of clinical research: Quality of Life (QoL), the patients’ satisfaction about the results of the treatment, their psychological condition, their limitations of working or social life, and also the adherence to treatment.7 All these factors, as noted by Jeff Sloan’s group in Explore8, comprise an integral part of the investigational methodology in most procedures characterised as TM/CM, and above all in homeopathy. It is therefore legitimate to ask if randomised controlled trials (RCTs) are always the most reliable way to generate clinical evidence in medicine, given the complexity of the therapeutic regimens (especially in chronically ill patients with many comorbidities), the demographic and clinical variability of the patients, the continuation of many therapies and, finally, the questionable adherence of prescribers to the guidelines. As a result, RCTs without additional information on the patient’s experiences and chronicity are insufficient to guide the clinical decisional process, due to the controlled (but false!) environment for which they are designed, which often makes it impossible to generalise their results to the so-called real world.

The same conclusions9 were reached by a network of scientific societies10 involved, for the main part, in the study of chronic diseases. There is now an adequate body of scientific evidence to begin challenging the monopoly of EBM in clinical research in favour of a growing area known as Real World Evidence (RWE), which also includes the patients’ experiences and that can produce evidence on the best way to improve the prescribed treatments, especially in the case of chronic diseases. These were the premises on which Edward Wagner based an editorial in Effective Clinical Practice11, back in 1998, which laid the foundations for what is now known as the Chronic Care Model (CCM): his discussion of the results of a 4-year clinical trial on more than 4000 patients with diabetes, decompensated heart disease, anxiety and depression confirmed the validity of a model that has had a significant effect on morbidity and complications. Later developments of the CCM in different clinical sectors12, 13, 14 offered an inevitable source of inspiration for the Italian Ministry of Health’s 2016 National Chronic Disease Plan, in which the integration of EBM and RWM was totally re-evaluated and the much-need distinction between acute and chronic states of disease has been done.

In 2011, Tuscany Region, moving in the direction to evaluate the real efficacy of Complementary Medicines in patients’ cares, has realized the first Integrated Medicine hospital in Pitigliano, within the public Italian healthcare system, with these goals: a) to potentially establish a clinical setting between orthodox medicine and CM practitioners, based on mutual agreement and close cooperation in terms of therapy and treatment; b) to test the interdisciplinary approach among inpatients; c) to verify the beneficial effects deriving from the approach regarding the improvement of life quality in patients suffering from chronic diseases as well as the decrease of side-effects triggered by the conventional therapy; d) to verify potential advantages coming from the integrated medicine in terms of costs management regarding the regional healthcare system.

Complementary medicines, as homeopathy and acupuncture has been offered both to inpatients and outpatients and in ten years of integrated cares the model of integrated carers has been described and the results of the integrated protocols have been published in scientific papers regarding allergic patients15, 16, oncologic patients17, rehabilitation patients (neurological and orthopaedic patients)18 and palliative cares’ patients19; here  we report some highlights from our experience in the Neurological and Orthopedic Centre of Manciano: in eleven years (February 2011 – December 2022) we have integrated complementary medicines in  1910 hospitalized patients (1160 orthopedic patients undergoing hip/knee arthroplasty and spinal operations and 750 patients with sequelae of ischemia / cerebral hemorrhage and/or outcomes of acute and chronic neurological pathologies) ; in the paper mentioned above, examining a group of 383 patients, with a  mean age of 70.28 y.o. for neurological patients  and of 70.13 y.o. for orthopedic patients, we have evaluated ( treated vs control ) the change in two indices: activities of daily living performance indices for patients with knee or hip replacements (Barthel index) and stroke patients (Barthel index and Trunk control test) and number of days of analgesic drug treatment for orthopedic patients. The above results were that integration of IM have changed the observed values resulted positive, indicating that IM treatment increases the performance about activities of daily living in both stroke patients and orthopaedic patients, with p-values in Fisher’s exact tests of 0.008 for stroke patients for the Barthel Index and of 0.046 for the Trunk Control Test . The treatment also reduced the duration of analgesic treatment by 2.8 days (Fisher p-value: 0.0015).

The model of care in which complementary medicine could be included in a mode of integration already exists and is the Chronic Care Model, devised in 1999 and suitable for including the various professional figures and non-professionals who take care of the chronically ill patient in his pathway. The Chronic Care Model was presented for shared evaluation at the ECH (European Committee of Homeopathy) meeting in Lisbon in July 2015 and a scheme (see figure 1) was shown which, taking the Chronic Care Model as a model, included the possible areas of intervention by complementary medicine, shared with other professionals.  The Region of Tuscany has also created several integrated pathways including homeopathy, phytotherapy and acupuncture, some of which have recently been approved, such as the diagnostic and therapeutic care pathways for gynaecological cancers, breast cancer and colon cancer.

In conclusion, notwithstanding the issues caused by the complexity of the patients, different ways of thinking, differences in legal regulations and objective difficulties caused by the health directives of individual governments, the time is now right to develop a proposal for Integrated Medicine in a European context. Despite the continued problem of hard-line academic positions (probably caused by a lack of the cultural foundations needed to understand this development), Integrated Medicine could lead to a growth in the art of healing in all areas of human life: not only patients’ health, but also their relationship with themselves and with society.


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