Protect cancer patients from exploitation by alternative medicines
industry, says expert
Newswise — It is time to protect patients from “vile and cynical
exploitation” by the alternative medicines industry, argues a cancer
expert in this week’s BMJ.
It is estimated that up to 80% of all patients with cancer take a
complementary treatment or follow a dietary programme to help treat
their cancer, writes Jonathan Waxman, Professor of Oncology at
Imperial College London.
Yet the rationale for the use of many of these approaches is obtuse
– one might even be tempted to write misleading, he says.
Indeed the claims made by companies to support the sales of such
products may be overtly and malignly incorrect and, in many cases,
the products may be doctored by chemicals borrowed from the
conventional pharmaceutical industry. The reason that these products
are accessible to patients is that they are not subject to the
testing of pharmaceuticals because they are classified as food
supplements.
So why do patients take alternative medicines? Why is science
disregarded? How can it be that treatments that don’t work are
regarded as life saving?
Waxman believes that it is because the complementary therapists
offer something that doctors cannot offer – hope. If you eat this,
take that, avoid this, and really believe this then we can promise
you sincerely that you will be cured.
And if the patient is not cured, it is the patient who has failed,
not the alternative therapy. The patient has let down the
alternative practitioner and disappointed his family who have
encouraged his “treatment.”
As well as the complementary medicines they take, many patients will
have changed their diets in order to cure their cancers, says the
author. But although there is a strong dietary basis to the
development of cancer, once cancer has been diagnosed no change in
diet will lead to any improvement in cancer outcomes, he writes.
Why do patients change their diet? For some it is a way of taking
back some control of a situation that is entirely out of their
control, says Waxman. For others it is because of the pressure put
on them by families, friends or vested interest groups to “go
organic.”
“It’s time for legislation to focus on a particularly vulnerable
section of our society and do something to limit the exploitation of
our patients,” he says. Why not subject the alternative medicines
industry to the level of scrutiny that defines pharmaceuticals?
“Reclassify these agents as drugs - for this is after all how they
are marketed - and protect our patients from vile and cynical
exploitation whose intellectual basis, at best, might be viewed as
delusional. The current EU initiative to bring forward legislation
on this matter is welcomed.”