When I started working with ICIM ten years ago, I quickly
learned that integrative medicine had enemies. Shady entities like the
Federation of State Medical Boards and Quackbusters were organized with the
single aim to slander and persecute physicians who explored natural medicine. According
to consumer advocate and past ICIM member Tim Bolin, Stephen Barrett MD (who
the Pennsylvania licensing board officially classifies as "Not in Good
Standing,") single handedly operates "quackwatch.com" out of his
basement in Allentown, Pennsylvania. http://www.quackpotwatch.org/WisconsinWar/who_are_these_so.htm.
Insurance companies fund vigorous lawsuits, and doctors who
do alternative therapies risk being accused of Medicare and Medicaid fraud
because there are no codes to match their methods. Our own James Carter MD
wrote a comprehensive book Racketeering In Medicine as a resource
describing the war against holistic healing.
Wikipedia is among the ranks of detractors. The Association
for Comprehensive Energy Psychology created a petition to Jimmy Wales, Founder
of Wikipedia: Create and enforce new
policies that allow for true scientific discourse about holistic approaches to
healing. It says “Unfortunately, much of the information related to
holistic approaches to healing is biased, misleading, out-of-date, or just
plain wrong...For five years, repeated efforts to correct this misinformation
have been blocked.” Change.org expanded the request, with almost 8,000
supporters writing, "As gatekeepers for the status quo, they refuse
discourse with leading edge research scientists and clinicians or, for that
matter, anyone with a different point of view.” Jimmy Wales’s response unveiled
his personal bias, calling integrative medicine practitioners “lunatic
charlatans.” The website Natural News did an exposé on the issue. In 10 shocking facts you never knew about
Wikipedia and Jimmy Wales, Mike Adams writes, “Wikipedia claims to be run
by "volunteers" but is actually edited by corporate-paid trolls on
many topics such as GMOs, vaccines, chemotherapy and pharmaceuticals... The
fact that Wales continues to allow anonymous editing across Wikipedia means any
corporate troll can alter information in Wikipedia pages to benefit the
financial interests of that corporation (or government, or industry group,
etc.). http://www.naturalnews.com/051060_wikipedia_Jimmy_Wales_extortion_racket.html#
Wikipedia isn’t the only trusted source of news that is
openly hostile toward integrative medicine. The Alliance for Natural Health
accused PBS of relying on “expert testimony” from Big Pharma employees their
Frontline documentary program, produced in part by the Canadian Broadcasting
Commission. Frontline aired an hour-long program titled Supplements and Safety which left viewers with the one-sided
impression that dietary supplements are unregulated and unsafe.http://www.anh-usa.org/has-pbs-become-a-front-for-big-pharma/
These days, integrative medicine faces new challenges with
increasingly restricted access to sterile water, LDA, EDTA, and other vital
supplies. Even the compounding pharmacies we rely on are threatened; we risk
losing our source of essential tools for our practice of medicine.
As we gather in Toronto, ICIM will create a sanctuary from
our enemies.
On Friday night we have rented a small Gothic church for a
private organ recital. This lovely building has become a testimony to tenacity
and stubbornness. Toronto reporter Kevin Plummer wrote an article telling the
story called Historicist: The Heart of
the City: The eventful history of the Church of the Holy Trinity http://torontoist.com/2012/10/historicist-the-heart-of-the-city/
In the summer of 1845, Mary Lambart Swale of Settle, England
died at the age of 25, and gave the Toronto Diocese a gift of 5000 sterling to
build a church. Unlike other Anglican churches which relied on the sale of pews
as a major source of revenue, Mary stipulated that the pews of her church would
be “free and unappropriated forever.” This unique policy opened the door for
not only poor people of the city of Toronto, but eventually other
outcasts: draft-dodgers, hippies, professors,
and excommunicated priests.
Holy Trinity came into a blazing spotlight in the mid-60s
when the Eaton family and investors announced a $200 million downtown
development to take place on and around its property. The church flatly refused
to sell, to the consternation of the mayor and many local politicians. Instead,
they held out for their alternate plan of creating a park surrounding the
church, an oasis from city “progress” all around it.
Today on its website The Church of the Holy Trinity
describes itself as” a community of people who seek to express Christian faith
through lives of integrity, justice and compassion. We foster lay leadership,
include the doubter and the marginalized, and challenge oppression wherever it
may be found.”
By struggling against powerful forces of mainstream culture,
Holy Trinity has maintained itself as a place of healing and hope.
We need to stay ever focused on our calling and mission as
physicians and healers. First, to do no harm. As we re-examine this oath, we
need to understand what is wrong with the current standard of care. Propped up by gatekeepers of corrupt
political systems and big money rather than pure scientific exploration,
mainstream medicine has turned away from the physician’s ancient mandate to
help the body heal itself.
With an insatiable curiosity for what works, ICIM is about
expanding the evidence, opening the envelope, and open minded exploration tempered
by critical thinking and scientific training.
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