Abstract

Current definitions of complementary medicine are based on comparisons with orthodox medicine. Such definitions become problematic with increasing use of complementary therapies and principles within orthodox practice. Therapies now described as complementary need to be located within a new model of medicine which focuses on the degree of intervention. This is conceptualised in terms of the putative effects of an intervention on a healthy individual. Basic self-care may be described as low intervention medicine, with drug therapy and surgery as high intervention medicine. Complementary therapies, as well as certain orthodox practices such as nutrition and physiotherapy, are classed as intermediate medicine. The Degree of Intervention Model is more accurate, more historically and geographically stable and less divisive than the traditional complementary/conventional model.

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