Complementary medicine refers to a group of therapeutic and diagnostic disciplines that exist largely outside the institutions where conventional health care is taught and provided.[1] A physician visiting the sick in a hospital. ...
As its name suggests, complementary medicine differs from alternative medicine in that it does not offer a competing (or 'alternative') viewpoint to that based on science-based knowledge. Even so, the two are commonly categorised together as complementary and alternative medicine (or CAM for short). Alternative medicine is defined as any of various systems of healing or treating disease (as chiropractic, homeopathy, or faith healing) not included in the traditional medical curricula taught in the United States and Britain.[1] Complementary medicine is defined as any of the practices (as acupuncture) of alternative medicine accepted... Part of a scientific laboratory at the University of Cologne. ... This article needs additional references or sources for verification. ... It has been suggested that this article or section be merged into Alternative medicine. ... The term complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) is an umbrella term for alternative medicine and complementary medicine. ...
References
^ Zollman C, Vickers A. (1999). "ABC of complementary medicine. What is complementary medicine?". Brit Med J319: 693-696. PMID 10541511.
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Complementarymedicine practitioners are predominantly sought after to treat chronic conditions, prevent future illness, or maintain health and vitality.
One is that complementarymedicine is not yet evidence-based and thus presents an unexplored area for comprehensive outcomes research.
Thus, providers of conventional medicine should be better educated and also able to collaborate with licensed complementarymedicine providers to minimize risks arising from a patient's simultaneous use of both complementary therapies and conventional treatments.