VAL JOHANSON Complementary Healthcare Council Perspective |
Osteoarthritis
- A Proven Complementary Approach
|
Editor's
Note: It is not so long ago that herbal medicine was the norm
for pharmacy dispensing. |
Extracts
of Professor Marc Cohen's paper: Comparison of Treatments for
Osteoarthritis, Osteoarthritis
accounts for some of the highest medical costs in our society
and afflicts an estimated one million Australians, including 90%
of people over the age of 60. The most common
conventional treatment for osteoarthritis is the use of NSAIDs
which are the most commonly prescribed medication world wide and
which accounts for about 5% of all prescriptions in Australia.
Glucosamine
has shown good evidence as being both effective and safe in treating
osteoarthritis. The following comparison is both startling and revealing about the choices made today in Australia, which are prejudiced against the better and cheaper treatment, in favour of the more dangerous and more expensive, but heavily promoted drug therapy.
The cost of
using NSAIDS for a range of conditions in Australia today is subsidised
by taxpayers at around $800 million per year, and this medication
which suppresses symptoms, but often allows the disease to progress,
kills around1200 people each year and hospitalises thousands more.
Natural treatments which work, are much safer, help to reverse the disease and cost much less, are taxed, unsupported, and face new inappropriate controls, even though they are already produced under GMP in the world's best practise for complementary products. It is alarming to find the current government policy supports the use of high-risk, high cost therapy such as NSAIDs through PBS subsidies, but penalises the use of low cost low risk therapies such as glucosamine through the addition of GST. The government needs to be encouraged to support the use of safe effective therapies through appropriate funding models and policies, for avoiding or ignoring these treatments deprives Australians of safe and effective options. A campaign to educate doctors on how to access up-to-date information on complementary medicines is urgently needed to improve the health of all Australians. Selected References (see Cohen's article for full list of 47): Cohen, M. (2003). "Complementary Therapies for Osteoarthritis". AIMA Holistic Healthcare in Practice: 58-71 Day, R.R., R., D; Roughead, EE; (1999). "Towards the safer use of non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs." J Qual CLin Practice 19:51-53 Rashad S, R.P., Hemingway A, et al. (1989). "Effect of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs on the course of osteoarthritis." The Lancet 2 (519-522). Segal,
L. (2002). Priority Setting in Osteoarthritis. Natural Healthcare
Summit, Darling Harbour, Sydney. |