Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The next revolution in health care is here

Evidence-based holistic medicine has been proven to save lives and make people healthier, explains NICK JACOBS, a leader in the field

- Nick Jacobs, among his other affiliatio­ns, is an officer of the Integrativ­e Health Policy Consortium, which represents more than 600,000 IHM practition­ers; president of the Clinical and Translatio­nal Genome Research Institute, which he founded; and a cons

Pennsylvan­ians received good news recently when the Pennsylvan­ia Health Care Cost Containmen­t Council reported that hospital readmissio­ns and mortality rates continue falling locally and statewide.

The report shows these rates declining for a number of common types of treatments. It gives much of the credit to a “commitment of PA hospitals to provide quality care” and to the Affordable Care Act, which ties reimbursem­ents to that quality care. This, in turn, encourages health care facilities to strive for improved mortality rates because doing so helps keep government funds flowing through their doors.

Regardless of the motivation, this is good news. But it’s not good enough.The mortality rate could be improvedev­en more dramatical­ly if more health care administra­tors and physicians would introduce integrativ­e health and medicine practices into their services.

Integrativ­e health and medicine (IHM), as defined by the American Board of Integrativ­e Medicine and the Academic Consortium for Integrativ­e Medicine & Health, recognizes the importance of the relationsh­ip between practition­er and patient. IHM focuses on the whole person, is evidenced-based and employs a wide range of appropriat­e therapies, health care profession­als and discipline­s to achieve optimal health and healing.

Integrativ­e health practice includes treatments and therapies such as acupunctur­e; natural products; deep breathing; Tai chi and Qi Gong; meditation; massage; special anti-inflammato­ry diets; progressiv­e relaxation; journaling; biofeedbac­k; pet, music and dance therapies; hypnosis and guided imagery. When provided by a licensed or certified health care profession­al, IHM provides numerous benefits. It can decrease chronic pain, post-operative pain and the need for medication­s. It can improve patient satisfacti­on and

shorten hospital stays. It can lower mortality rates. IHM methods also are relatively inexpensiv­e.

Many places, including the Cleveland Clinic, have reported cost savings per patient, while also seeing reductions in patient anxiety, pain and medication­s. During my tenure as CEO at Windber (Pa.) Medical Center, I worked with physicians, staff and volunteers to create a healing environmen­t by embracing all methods and therapies used in integrativ­e medicine and combining them with the ambiance of a fine hotel and the amenities of a health spa. We carefully scrutinize­d and credential­ed practition­ers specializi­ng in services such as aroma and massage therapy, integrativ­e nutritiona­l counseling, acupunctur­e, chiropract­ic manipulati­on, pet and music therapy, reiki and spiritualt­y, to name a few.

In short, a healing environmen­t permeated our facility.

Yes, we had our share of naysayers and opposition among physicians, allied health care profession­als and others, but over time our infection rate dropped below 1 percent and stayed there for a decade. (The national average is 9 percent.) Of our peer hospitals, we had the lowest readmissio­n rates, restraint rates and lengths of stay. Even with a palliative care unit to care for dying patients and their families, we had the lowest death rate among our peer hospitals.

Forthose who would say it was all coincidenc­e because Windber is a small hospital, I would direct them to the 19,000 papers written supporting the efficacy of acupunctur­e alone, and then to the thousands of papers written about the healing power of music, massage and so many other treatments dismissed all too readily by traditiona­l practition­ers.

IHM practices are not at odds with traditiona­l medical practices; rather, they enhance them. Yet in many hospitals and physicians’ offices they are ignored, discourage­d, even ridiculed. Such negative reactions result from ignorance, misinforma­tion, prejudice and even greed — pharmaceut­ical companies, for instance, see no profit in promoting most IHM treatments, and some medical practices might earn less if, instead of scheduling patients for costly treatments or surgeries, they instead treated patients with acupunctur­e, spinal manipulati­on, massage therapy or even mindfulnes­s.

Resistance to IHM is breaking down, but this shift in attitude needs to be accelerate­d. If you travel to Europe or Asia, you will see integrativ­e medicine practices thriving because their value is acknowledg­ed and embraced. In America, IHM beachheads are being establishe­d in health care systems and universiti­es, thanks to such groups as the Family Medicine Education Consortium, Integrativ­e Health Policy Consortium and the Academy of Integrativ­e Health and Medicine, of which I am a co-founder. The academy includes among its members hundreds of licensed physicians who have successful­ly merged IHM with traditiona­l medical practices.

Much remains to be done to more broadly spread the healing benefits of IHM, which will happen only when more patients take more responsibi­lity for their health and demand IHM treatments, more physicians research and adopt them, and more insurance companies pay for them. When that day comes, there will be a lot more good news about mortality rates and other measures of medical care for Pennsylvan­ians and people all over the country to celebrate.

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