The Scotsman

Demand for joined-up thinking on alternativ­e medicine bill

- Lyndsay buckLand HealtH Correspond­ent

Wednesday 23 OctOber 2013 Huge variations in spending on homeopathi­c treatment across Scotland have been highlighte­d in new figures.

The statistics showed that while some health boards spend nothing at all on the controvers­ial alternativ­e treatment, others are spending hundreds of thousands of pounds every year.

The Scottish Conservati­ves said the issue of funding for homeopathi­c services needed to be resolved once and for all in the interests of equality of access to the therapy.

Homeopathi­c

medicine tightening budgets. The latest figures,revealed under Freedom of Informatio­n, showed that in the last five years more than £12 million was spent on homeopathy across Scotland.

Figures for 2008-9 to 2012-13 showed that NHS greater glasgow and Clyde, which runs a homeopathi­c hospital, spent the most at more than £9m, while NHS Lothian spent over £1m.

NHS grampian, with a spend of £538,000, and Highland with £339,236, were also high up the spending table.

But in contrast, NHS Fife, Forth Valley and Lanarkshir­e said they did not fund the treatments at all.

The Scottish Conservati­ves have urged the Scottish government to take the lead in establishi­ng a national position on homeopathi­c services.

Their health spokesman and deputy leader Jackson Carlaw said: “It doesn’t really matter whether you think homeopathy is a lifesaver or a nonsense, this disparity has to end.

“We need a proper debate on the merits of the treatment so a proper approach can be taken to this.

“It is difficult for health boards when you have doctors on one side vehemently discrediti­ng homeopathy, yet hundreds of patients on the other giving very compelling accounts of why it works for them.”

Mr Carlaw said homeopathy did not cost much in context of the huge £10 billion annual health budget, but it was wrong that some health boards were investing hundreds of thousands in it while others were dismissing it altogether.

Dr Charles Saunders, deputy chair of the British Medical Associatio­n in Scotland, said: “While the BMA supports the policy to allow NHS boards to make their own decisions about how to spend their resources, we are concerned that scarce funding will be spent on ‘treatment’ that has no scientific evidence base to support its use.”

A Scottish government spokesman said: “Complement­ary and alternativ­e medicine (CAM) therapy covers a wide range of services and we recognise that CAM therapies may offer relief to some people suffering from a wide variety of conditions.

“It is for individual NHS boards to decide what CAM they make available based on the needs of their resident population­s, in line with national guidance.”

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