Pseudomedicine

Pseudomedicine is medicine which claims to be effective for diagnosing or treating specific medical conditions, but which has been disproven or which is unproven and the mainstream scientific opinion is that it will not be proven to be effective. It is distinct from experimental medicine, which is medicine that has not yet been proven but which is undergoing the process of either being proven and becoming accepted, or being disproven and being discarded.


Definition

PSIRAM has defined pseudomedicine as referring to "treatments that claim to be working concepts of medicine that have no objectively verifiable benefit or are incompatible with the current state of knowledge in the field of science-based medicine."[1]

Historically, the term was used in the early 20th century by the American Medical Association when, as part of the effort to gain establishment status, it combated what it called quackery and pseudomedicine, thus differentiating itself as a professional organization of experts distinct from charlatan practitioners.[2]

Sociology

The National Council Against Health Fraud has said that the existence of pseudomedicine results from the effect of market forces: on the one hand a desire for quick fixes rooted in alienation from mainstream medicine, and on the other hand businessmen only too willing to meet that demand.[3]

List of fields characterized as pseudomedicine

See also

References

  1. cited in Gilson S, dePoy E (1 September 2015). O'Reilly M, Nina Lester J, eds. Child Mental Health: A Discourse Community. The Palgrave Handbook of Child Mental Health. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 190. ISBN 978-1-137-42832-5.
  2. Boyle EW (2007). "Chapter 4:AMA Investigations and Propaganda for Reform". The Boundaries of Medicine: Redefining Therapeutic Orthodoxy in an Age of Reform. ProQuest. p. 194. ISBN 978-0-549-27005-8.
  3. "NEJM focuses on pseudomedicine". NCAHF Newsletter (March/April). 1992.
  4. 1 2 3 Swanson ES (2015). "Pseudoscience". Science and Society: Understanding Scientific Methodology, Energy, Climate, and Sustainability. Springer. p. 65. ISBN 978-3-319-21987-5.
  5. Swanson, Eric (2016). Science and Society - Understanding Scientific Methodology. New York: Springer. p. 68. ISBN 978-3-319-21986-8. Retrieved 9 November 2016.
  6. Atwood IV, Kimball. C. (March 26, 2004). "Naturopathy, pseudoscience, and medicine: Myths and fallacies vs truth". Medscape General Medicine. 6 (1): 33. PMC 1140750Freely accessible. PMID 15208545.
  7. Fodor, Jerry A. (1983). Modularity of Mind: An Essay on Faculty Psychology. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-56025-9 p.14, 23, 131
  8. "Rife machines and cancer". Cancer Research UK. Retrieved 18 December 2015.
  9. "Rife devices." NCAHF Newsletter Mar.-Apr. 1992: 3. Academic OneFile. Web. 18 Dec. 2015.
  10. 1 2 Mack, Cheryl; Leier, Brendan (2016-01-05). "Brokering trust: estimating the cost of physician-assisted death". Canadian Journal of Anesthesia. doi:10.1007/s12630-015-0574-x. ISSN 1496-8975. PMID 26732480. Traditionally, in the rare circumstances in which individual physicians stray into practicing forms of “pseudo-medicine”, the greatest danger presented is a loss of trust in the profession as a whole. To illustrate this danger, we need only recall a recent and somber example of pseudo-medicine in the overextension of medical science into social and political eugenic policies. Eugenics and the selective non-treatment of infants born with trisomy 21 are the best, and perhaps most extreme, examples of situations where medical science was utilized as an appeal to authority to justify and rationalize bias.4 More recent instances might include physician product endorsement and physician conflict of interest in biased industry-sponsored research.5 With PAD, we are again being asked to endorse and sponsor a practice that relies neither on medical science nor on clinical judgment.
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