UK: the current state of regulation of complementary and alternative medicine

There is no legislation that restricts the practice of CAM in the UK apart from the practice of chiropractic and osteopathy and limits on advertising the treatments of certain conditions such as cancer and tuberculosis. The UK government has increasingly recognised the need for comprehensive regulat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Complementary therapies in medicine 2002-03, Vol.10 (1), p.8-13
Hauptverfasser: Walker, L.A., Budd, S.
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container_title Complementary therapies in medicine
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creator Walker, L.A.
Budd, S.
description There is no legislation that restricts the practice of CAM in the UK apart from the practice of chiropractic and osteopathy and limits on advertising the treatments of certain conditions such as cancer and tuberculosis. The UK government has increasingly recognised the need for comprehensive regulation of CAM, though it abandoned its original plan for a single overarching regulatory body. Initiatives to examine and hasten the process of regulation have included setting up a central, well-recognised charitable body to facilitate progress for individual professions, and an authoritative survey of the existing professional organisations. One pathway open to individual professions is statutory self-regulation, which requires a single governing body, a systematic corpus of knowledge, recognised training courses and demonstrated efficacy. The other pathway is voluntary self-regulation. Chiropractic and osteopathy have adopted statutory self-regulation, though this has proved expensive for individual members of these professions. A recent House of Lords report on CAM has recommended that the herbal medicine and acupuncture professions should also develop a system of statutory regulation. Other professions, such as aromatherapy, are in the process of establishing single professional bodies as a first step towards self-regulation. Among the issues that remain to be resolved is the relationship between the CAM professions and statutory registered practitioners who also practise CAM.
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Complementary Therapies - legislation & jurisprudence
Complementary Therapies - standards
Delivery of Health Care, Integrated
Humans
Manipulation, Chiropractic - standards
National Health Programs - legislation & jurisprudence
National Health Programs - standards
Research - standards
Research Support as Topic
United Kingdom
title UK: the current state of regulation of complementary and alternative medicine
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