ABSTRACT

"Western Medicine", "Alternative Medicine", "Complementary Medicine", "Holistic Medicine", and "Natural Medicine." There is really only one "medicine" that heals and puts the whole patient, not the disease, at the center of care: Integrated Medicine. This practice integrates all modalities of healing to produce not merely a medical cure, but a deeper healing of the patient on his or her own terms.

The Clinical Practice of Complementary, Alternative, and Western Medicine is a scientifically based text that informs and leads the practitioner easily through the maze of alternative therapies. Unlike other books that address the different alternative modalities, this text integrates homeopathy, acupuncture, chinese herbology, western herbology, and clinical nutrition, then combines them with traditional medicine. The author explains the new paradigm of patient-centered and Integrated Medicine and includes an extensive section on the physical underpinnings of this new paradigm, a paradigm that employs thermodynamics, non linear dynamics, chaos theory, and fractal geometry in an easy to understand discourse.

The book incorporates the author's fundamental training in the alternative modalities and his ten years of clinical practice, a practice in which multiple integrated modalities of healing were utilized in the healing of over 10,000 patients. The Clinical Practice of Complementary, Alternative, and Western Medicine is a tremendously valuable reference for practitioners who want to learn about and practice alternative therapies and those who want to be more informed about what their patients may be doing and taking, and the influences those self-administered therapies may be having on their care.

part |2 pages

Section I: Integrated Medicine — Background

chapter 1|2 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|13 pages

Principles of Integrated Medicine

chapter 4

Integrated Medical Biology

part |2 pages

Section II: Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM)

chapter 6|14 pages

Chinese Herbal Prescribing

chapter 7|106 pages

Acupuncture

part |2 pages

Section III: Other Forms of Alternative Medical Treatment

chapter 8|14 pages

Homeopathy

chapter 9|2 pages

Anthroposophical Medicine

chapter 10|6 pages

Neural Therapy

chapter 11|-218 pages

Bioenergetic Medicine

chapter 12|4 pages

Ayurvedic Medicine

chapter 13|18 pages

Western Herbology or Phytotherapy

chapter 14|16 pages

Therapeutic Nutrition

chapter 15|6 pages

More Specialized Complementary Therapies

part |2 pages

Section IV: The Practice of Integrated Medicine