We are in favour of evidence based medicine. But medicine is not only a science. There is much less good evidence to support common medical practice than most people imagine. Complementary medicine can be helpful to people for whom conventional medicine has nothing to offer. It throws up a lot of questions about rationing and about topping up of NHS treatments. The NHS does pay for some complementary and alternative medicine, but mostly for people who are terminally ill, or have severe and enduring mental illness.
- The Case Against Homeopathy 2013-04-10
- The Case for Homeopathy 2013-04-10
- Community Meditation Centres 2014-08-20
- Homeopathy on the NHS 2012-09-07
- A vision of a National Real Health Service 2012-04-29
- A kind of magic? Ben Goldacre on Homeopathy
- British Homeopathic Association
- British Psychological Society
- College of Medicine
- Complementary Medicine Group Exeter University
- Counselling Ltd
- Doctors attack ‘bogus’ therapies 2006
- Evolution could explain the placebo effect 2012
- Homeopathy on the NHS
- House of Lords Report November 2000
- Hoxton Health Group
- John Kapp’s work
- Institute of Transactional Analysis
- Medline
- The Mysterious Placebo Effect (1997)
- National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (USA)
- NOAH
- Non-diseases
- Professional Organisation of Complementary and Alternative Medicine in the United Kingdom 1997 and 2000
- Professor savages homeopathy December 2005
- Quackwatch
- Regulation of alternative medicine
- Selling Sickness
- Smallwood Report – The Role of Complementary and Alternative Medicine in the NHS