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experiencelifemag.com
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Not Your Average Patient: How Empowering Health Seekers Are Redefining Healthcare
Is healthcare something delivered by a provider when you get sick - or
something you do for yourself to stay vital, healthy and well? A growing number of health seekers say “both.” Together, they’re forging an
empowered new path through America’s broken medical system.
A Higher Standard of Health
More Than a Cure
Treating the Whole Person
Active Strategies
Healthy and Whole
Breaking the Money Barrier
Alternative Advantages
Resources
Say the word “healthcare,” and most of us think of a trip to the clinic or
hospital. But Anne Dellenbaugh takes the term literally — as in caring for her
health. Dellenbaugh, a wilderness guide in Brunswick, Maine, starts each
morning with meditation, a breakfast of cooked fruit and a bit of yoga. Some
mornings include a walk outdoors or some pleasure reading before settling into
her workday. Evenings, she reads or plays the cello, and then meditates once
more as she prepares for sleep. Once a month she sees an acupuncturist, and,
less frequently, she seeks treatment from an osteopath to sustain her energy.
For Dellenbaugh, 55, this is all part of her quest not just to maintain, but to
optimize, her health. Over the course of the past few decades, health-savvy
consumers like Dellenbaugh have been gradually expanding the definition of
healthcare. Their definition goes well beyond the old “disease care” model to
include a host of self-care strategies — strategies supported by consultations
with naturopaths, herbalists, homeopaths, acupuncturists, massage therapists and
other healing professionals whom they see as allies in their commitment to
optimal health. Many of these motivated health seekers have embraced
meditation and yoga, whole foods, nutritional supplements, stress-reduction
plans, and fitness regimens as the foundation of their health-maintenance
programs. Some seek chi-balancing treatments or cranial-sacral work when they
are under extra stress, consult chiropractors or massage therapists when their
bodies feel a little of out whack, and might even check in with a “medical
intuitive” when a major health concern arises. Call it what you will —
extreme self-care, obsessions of the “worried well” or educated
self-preservation — this approach to wellness is not just a stopgap measure for
symptoms of illness or chronic pain. It’s a regular, ongoing practice designed
to create optimal wellness and vitality. And often it involves the use of
complementary and alternative medicine (CAM), holistic healing, integrative
medicine, and other care modalities, not so much as a stand-in for
conventional medical interventions, but rather as a preventive measure designed
to keep the need for those interventions to an absolute
minimum. Health-motivated folks like Dellenbaugh may pay visits to health
practitioners and healing-arts professionals more regularly and frequently than
their less-healthy counterparts, and yet they prefer to embrace integrative
practices, not to address entrenched symptoms or to recover from illnesses, but
rather to achieve and maintain a level of optimal well-being. These
proactive healthcare consumers regard a high level of energy and vitality not as
some pie-in-the-sky goal, but as their baseline-normal birthright — and they’re
willing to put some effort (and if necessary, some out-of-pocket expense) into
claiming it.
A Higher Standard of Health
Although the most recent large-scale research
into CAM-usage patterns dates to the late ’90s, that data sheds light on
preferences and motivations that persist today, and that are particularly well
represented within the ranks of the empowered health seeker. A 1993
study led by the director of the Osher Institute at Harvard Medical School,
David Eisenberg, MD, showed that, in 1990, one in three U.S. adults regularly
used some form of complementary and alternative medicine and spent $10.3 billion
in out-of-pocket expenditures on CAM treatments (which is comparable to the
$12.8 billion in out-of-pocket money spent on hospitalizations in the same
year). A 1998 follow-up study Eisenberg conducted showed that the
prevalence of CAM use had increased from 33.8 percent in 1990 to 42.1 percent in
1997. A National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) in 1999 found that most CAM
therapies were used in conjunction with conventional medical services. The most
recent large-scale data collection regarding CAM dates to a National Health
Interview Survey in 2002, which indicated that 36 percent of 31,044 respondents
had used one of the 27 CAM treatments mentioned in the survey in the
previous 12 months. In his 1998 research, Eisenberg found that CAM use was
higher among those with some college education (50.6 percent) — findings
confirmed by a 2002 NHIS study — and those who earned annual incomes over
$50,000 (48.1 percent). Eisenberg attributed one-third of all CAM use to
“disease prevention and health promotion,” especially among baby boomers. NHIS
data indicated that CAM use increases with age (70.3 percent of CAM use was
found among those 85 and older) and that individuals who more frequently saw
conventional practitioners were also more apt to use CAM. Researchers are
careful to point out that motivations for using CAM are hard to tease out of
surveys and that reasons for using it are complex and can change over time, but
analysis of these large-scale studies has shown that the “pursuit of wellness”
is a major contributor to CAM use and that an interest in “health promotion and
disease prevention” is another driving force. In a 1998 paper on the
appeal of alternative therapies, Eisenberg and his Harvard colleague Ted
Kaptchuk, MD, wrote that CAM, when used as a treatment for illness, offers
patients a “participatory experience of empowerment and authenticity when
illness threatens their sense of intactness.”
More Than a Cure
In some cases, CAM users are simply substituting natural
remedies for conventional treatments — taking an herbal decongestant instead of
NyQuil, for example, or seeing an acupuncturist for back pain instead of taking
pain killers. But others, like Dellenbaugh, have moved beyond the notion of
treating a specific symptom or illness and have become more invested in a
broader concept of whole-person health. These individuals tend to see themselves
as the captains of their own healthcare team, with professionals offering
valuable counsel and care whenever their support is needed. “Health is not
about what you do one time or what you do for a week,” says Dellenbaugh. “Health
is an issue of habits; it’s about what you do over the long haul with your
life.” Dellenbaugh started down her own health-sustaining path 12 years ago,
when she was diagnosed with terminal cancer. Today, she is cancer-free, but she
says she didn’t so much discover a “cure” as find new ways to optimize her
health and vitality — vitality that ultimately proved more powerful than her
disease. Savvy healthcare consumers like Dellenbaugh tend to reject the
notion that good health is simply the absence of symptoms or illness: To them,
being healthy means living at your full potential — physically, emotionally and
spiritually. It means having the energy to embrace the life of your highest
choosing, and the resilience to weather whatever challenges come your way.
Taken in the context of the dominant medical model, which even many
conventional doctors have taken to describing as “sick care,” such viewpoints
are far from mainstream. But they sound increasingly appealing to many, and in a
society burdened by exploding healthcare costs and the pressures of widespread
chronic disease, they also offer real, practical promise. By better
understanding how these highly motivated, self-directed health seekers approach
their own health-care needs, we can all inch a little closer to optimal
health ourselves.
Treating the Whole Person
Prudence Tippins was in her mid-30s when she
noticed something strange happening to her normally clear complexion. The skin
on her back and chest turned raw, red and bumpy. When the rash spread to her
cheeks, forehead and nose, Tippins went to see a doctor who diagnosed her with a
dermatological condition called rosacea. He told her that no one knows what
causes it, and that there is no cure. Tippins’s doctor prescribed an
antibiotic, but it didn’t work. When she returned, his only offer was a stronger
antibiotic, and at that point she decided to seek an alternative. “I had never
really thought about my health or cared much about it,” she says. “But this felt
like my body was trying to tell me something.” To decipher her body’s
message, however, Tippins couldn’t remain a passive patient. Instead, she began
actively researching and pursuing healthier behaviors — not simply to relieve
her rosacea symptoms, but to build the kind of vitality that characterizes a
truly healthy person. The combination of Tippins’s dissatisfaction with
conventional treatment, her curiosity about the root cause of her problem, her
willingness to pursue alternative approaches and information, and her interest
in allowing her condition to become a catalyst for healthier choices all fit the
empowered health-seeker model. And in her view, they were all essential in
helping her achieve the health improvements she sought. Over the years, the
43-year-old Viroqua, Wis., writer has learned a great deal about health, and
she’s adopted a number of proactive tactics to improve her well-being, including
eating a mostly raw-foods diet and embracing the healing effects of herbal
homeopathy. She also does yoga and meditates every day. Tippins says that
what began as a quest to improve her complexion has now become a deep commitment
to a health-centered lifestyle — one that has calmed her skin, but also keeps
her feeling more vibrantly well than she has ever felt before. “I’ve
become very intuitive about what my body is telling me,” she explains, “and the
healthier I’ve become, the healthier I want to become.” This attitude is
typical of many empowered health seekers, who might initially go looking to
clear up a particular problem, but then, once they’ve found relief from
those symptoms, find themselves surprised and excited by how good they feel
overall. As a result, they become motivated to achieve even greater health
gains. In Tippins’s case, the rosacea still comes and goes — she sees the
inflammatory disorder as a barometer of her health at any given time — but
her new approach to healthcare has left her feeling better in every aspect
of her life, including her mental and spiritual health. “I’m just a lot happier
than I was,” she says. “My energy level is better, my relationships have
improved, because I’m so much more patient than I used to be. My entire life is
better.” To achieve these kinds of results, Tippins had to be willing to
change her daily behaviors and to look beyond the pat answers that conventional
medical wisdom provided. She also had to discard the notion that she was simply
treating her malady — a notion deeply ingrained in those of us raised on Western
(or allopathic) medicine — and instead embrace the idea of caring, in a more
holistic and proactive way, for her self.
Active Strategies
Most of us pay visits to health professionals only when
there is something wrong with us. Dellenbaugh, Tippins and other optimal-health
seekers typically prefer a more proactive approach. They are far more likely to
seek support either as a matter of maintenance (some have standing weekly or
monthly appointments for vitality-enhancing bodywork treatments, for example) or
at the first signs of distress, as opposed to waiting for a symptom to become
urgent or entrenched. They also develop long-term relationships with
health professionals they trust — professionals who encourage them to take an
active role in their treatment and who take time to advise them about the likely
underlying causes of whatever problems they may be facing. The most
empowered health seekers among us share a set of common attitudes and values
about health and well-being that inform their healthcare strategies. Here are
four basic approaches that anyone can adopt on his or her way to a healthier
life: Empowered Approach No. 1: Take an interest in how your body
works, and why it may be acting up. Savvy healthcare seekers are
motivated by a deep desire to understand how their bodies function, and what
treatments, practices and approaches are likely to work best for them based on
their health challenges. Holistic practitioners can be valuable partners in this
effort. They’re generally eager to explain their methods, help educate you about
your body and point you in the direction of helpful resources, like books and
trusted Web sites, where you can learn more on your own. But experience may be
the best teacher of all. Only by trying acupuncture or massage or homeopathy —
or by being willing to make recommended dietary and lifestyle changes — can you
tell how well these approaches might work for you. Empowered Approach No. 2:
Become a full partner in your own care. Expert advice and guidance is
indispensable on the journey to better health, but conscious healthcare
consumers maximize that guidance by actively partnering with their healthcare
providers. Whether you’re in your allopathic dentist’s chair or you’re visiting
the homeopath, you benefit by sharing with your practitioner what you know about
your body, including symptom patterns, possible causes and preferred treatment
approaches. Ask questions, raise concerns and talk openly about any tactics
you’ve already tried. It’s also perfectly acceptable to inquire about the
experience, training and treatment philosophy your care provider brings to the
table, and to tell him or her about concerns or fears you may have. “The
model has shifted from a paternal relationship [between doctor and patient] to a
partnership,” explains Brent Bauer, MD, director of complementary and
integrative medicine at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., and the medical
editor-in-chief of the Mayo Clinic Book of Alternative Medicine (Time Inc.,
2007). “Today’s patients are much more informed. Half my patients show up with
their latest Internet search for a diagnosis, and half the time they’re correct.
Sometimes I learn things from them. So the relationship is more of a
collaboration.” Most integrative practitioners — and, increasingly, their
conventional counterparts — see themselves more as guides than absolute experts.
They want patients to share the kind of deep knowledge necessary to craft an
effective healthcare strategy. Empowered Approach No. 3: Pay attention
to symptoms, but treat root causes. Health-savvy individuals listen to what
their symptoms tell them about their general health and then address the root
causes of those symptoms. An ulcer, for example, can be controlled with
medication, explains Paul Bergquist, MD, the director of CAM at Vernon Memorial
Hospital in Viroqua, Wis. “But if you can’t get at the underlying cause, as soon
as you take away the medicine, the ulcer can come right back,” he says. The
empowered approach is to understand what’s causing your ulcer, and why you are
vulnerable to it, and then address both to prevent recurrence. This kind
of integrated lifestyle approach requires a patient’s commitment to
understanding that a given condition or symptom may be the result of his or her
body’s response to chronic nutrition-and-lifestyle stresses. High
cholesterol, high blood pressure and back pain may not be the real problems, in
other words, but rather symptoms of an underlying vulnerability or imbalance,
the resolution of which may provide both the relief of those symptoms and the
return of vibrant health. Empowered Approach No. 4: Insist on a
whole-person approach. In conventional allopathic practice, healthcare is
divided into specialties — gastroenterology, oncology, dermatology. There are
neck doctors, mouth doctors and chest doctors. But empowered health seekers
prefer health professionals who see all of the body’s systems as connected. And
they seek out practitioners who treat individuals as whole people, not simply as
a collection of symptoms or independently operating mechanical and chemical
systems. Responsible health professionals, in the view of empowered
health seekers, see their patients in the contexts of their daily lives, habits,
relationships, thoughts and attitudes — so they take an active interest in all
of them. “The most important thing is that each person is [treated as]
an individual, and not as a set of symptoms,” explains Bergquist. “Each person
has a whole set of beliefs and programming, and illness or health can
develop out of that set of beliefs.”
Healthy and Whole
Whether
or not you’d define yourself as an empowered health seeker today, there’s no
doubt that playing an active and informed role in your own healthcare is
worthwhile. So is upgrading your definitions of what health is all about: not
just the absence of symptoms and disease, but the experience of optimal
vitality, balance and overall well-being. It’s the kind of well-being
that’s expressed not just by the body, but by the person as a whole. As
Dellenbaugh puts it, “We tend to evaluate our health from the outside: How many
miles can I run, or what does my body look like?” Optimal wellness, on the other
hand, is about feeling your best, inside and out. With guidance from
those who have already mastered the art of feeling great, it seems likely that
that kind of vitality can be within more people’s reach. Joseph Hart is a
regular contributor to Experience Life.
Breaking the Money Barrier
Because many alternative therapies aren’t yet covered by health insurance,
they can seem expensive — $50 or more for a session of massage therapy,
acupuncture or chiropractic services. Throw in elective lab tests, herbal
remedies and nutritional therapies, and you can be looking at some significant
bills. That can be a major disincentive to people who either can’t afford the
out-of-pocket expense or who see that seeking a prescription might net them a
short-term cost savings. But seen another way, proactive alternative treatments
often prove to be affordable investments in good health. Here are some examples
of how empowered health seekers think (and budget) differently from your average
healthcare consumer: The average patient says: I can’t afford out-of-pocket expenses for self-care
and alternative practitioners. It just costs way too much! The empowered
health seeker says: I can’t afford not to get the health support that really
works for me. Good health is my most valuable asset, and the cost of maintaining
it is low, relative to the importance of my vitality and well-being. Plus, the
cost of most self-care strategies and integrative treatments are relatively
affordable compared with the cost of a trip to the emergency room, or to the
long-term treatment costs associated with a chronic condition. My health
insurance is there primarily for accidents and other dire health emergencies.
For my daily health maintenance and support services, I’m willing to pay cash,
just like I do for healthy food or my gym membership. Someday, maybe these
cost-effective services will be better covered by insurance and my flex plan.
Until then, I’ll budget what I need in order to stay well. In the long run, it’s
a bargain. The average patient says: If I let myself get sick enough, my insurance will
have to cover the costs of treatment.
The empowered health seeker says: I’m
not waiting until someone else tells me it’s time to get treated; I’d rather
seek help at the first sign of trouble and learn what I need to do to take care
of myself. If I invest in my health now, I have more and better choices about
the kinds of interventions I’m willing to undergo, and I’ll avoid the inevitable
expenses and sacrifices that accompany poor health. By economizing and shifting
my spending from unhealthy habits to proactive, health-supporting strategies, I
can avoid the suffering and expense of a chronic illness, as well as the
stresses a health crisis would put on those around me. I’ll also have a better
shot at avoiding the side effects involved with long-term prescription drug
use. The average patient says: I’m not sick and I feel well enough to get by. Why
bother spending money on treatments if they’re not in direct response to major
symptoms?
The empowered health seeker says: I choose to feel better than
so-so. Besides, optimal health pays off in so many ways: more energy, clearer
thinking, better moods, better productivity. I know that feeling a general lack
of vitality is one of the first warning signs that my body is in need of
better care. Why wait for marked symptoms to emerge before I get the care my
body is trying to tell me it needs now?
Alternative Advantages
According to the Institute of Medicine (part of the National Academy of
Sciences, which advises the federal government on health issues), five chronic
conditions — mood disorders, diabetes, heart disease, asthma and high blood
pressure — account for more than half of all U.S. health expenditures, and these
are some of the same disorders that conventional medicine often struggles to
treat successfully. A National Health Interview Survey in 2002 found CAM
treatments were most often sought out for health problems that lack definitive
cures, that have an unpredictable course and prognosis, and that are associated
with pain or side effects from prescription drug medication. While
integrative approaches can be employed to treat all types of illness — from the
common cold to cancer, the conditions that respond especially well to
alternative and complementary approaches include many of those that conventional
medicine has typically had less success in resolving. They include:
- Fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue
- Depression and anxiety
- Digestive and gastrointestinal health issues
- Skin problems
(eczema, psoriasis, acne)
- Chronic back and joint pain and
arthritis
- Headaches and migraines
- Hormone
imbalances
- Lifestyle- and nutrition-related conditions like heart
disease, diabetes and obesity
- Stress-related conditions like high blood
pressure, insomnia, rashes and ulcers
Resources
Want to learn more? Check out these Web sites and books: Consortium of Academic Health Centers for Integrative Medicine (www.imconsortium.org) — A membership
organization (including 42 major academic research hospitals) devoted to
advancing integrative medicine. Includes a well-organized, vetted list of links
to Web sites exploring integrative treatments for various conditions. National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (http://nccam.nih.gov) — This U.S. government
agency sponsors clinical trials to test the claims of alternative practitioners.
Many studies, resources and publications are available online. Complementary and Alternative Medicine Index (www.umm.edu/altmed) — This Web site from
the University of Maryland Medical Center provides basic information about most
common forms of alternative medicine with links to other resources and medical
research. Alternative Medicine Center at the Mayo Clinic (www.mayoclinic.com/health/alternative-medicine/CM99999/)
— A medical Web site offering detailed information on alternative
treatments. The Institute for Functional Medicine (www.functionalmedicine.org) — IFM
seeks to promote and educate healthcare providers and the public about
functional medicine. The site also offers a searchable database of FM
practitioners. Mayo Clinic Book of Alternative Medicine: The New Approach to Using the Best
of Natural Therapies and Conventional Medicine (Time Inc., 2007) — A basic
primer on alternative medicine for the uninitiated. Encyclopedia of Natural Medicine by Michael Murray, ND, and Joseph Pizzorno,
ND (Prima, 1998) — A classic, popular and comprehensive book on how to treat a
variety of ailments and improve your overall health through natural methods.
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Not Your Average Patient: How Empowering Health Seekers Are Redefining Healthcare
Is healthcare something delivered by a provider when you get sick - or
something you do for yourself to stay vital, healthy and well? A growing number of health seekers say “both.” Together, they’re forging an
empowered new path through America’s broken medical system.
By Joseph Hart | Features, May 2009 |
A Higher Standard of Health
More Than a Cure
Treating the Whole Person
Active Strategies
Healthy and Whole
Breaking the Money Barrier
Alternative Advantages
Resources
Say the word “healthcare,” and most of us think of a trip to the clinic or
hospital. But Anne Dellenbaugh takes the term literally — as in caring for her
health. Dellenbaugh, a wilderness guide in Brunswick, Maine, starts each
morning with meditation, a breakfast of cooked fruit and a bit of yoga. Some
mornings include a walk outdoors or some pleasure reading before settling into
her workday. Evenings, she reads or plays the cello, and then meditates once
more as she prepares for sleep. Once a month she sees an acupuncturist, and,
less frequently, she seeks treatment from an osteopath to sustain her energy.
For Dellenbaugh, 55, this is all part of her quest not just to maintain, but to
optimize, her health. Over the course of the past few decades, health-savvy
consumers like Dellenbaugh have been gradually expanding the definition of
healthcare. Their definition goes well beyond the old “disease care” model to
include a host of self-care strategies — strategies supported by consultations
with naturopaths, herbalists, homeopaths, acupuncturists, massage therapists and
other healing professionals whom they see as allies in their commitment to
optimal health. Many of these motivated health seekers have embraced
meditation and yoga, whole foods, nutritional supplements, stress-reduction
plans, and fitness regimens as the foundation of their health-maintenance
programs. Some seek chi-balancing treatments or cranial-sacral work when they
are under extra stress, consult chiropractors or massage therapists when their
bodies feel a little of out whack, and might even check in with a “medical
intuitive” when a major health concern arises. Call it what you will —
extreme self-care, obsessions of the “worried well” or educated
self-preservation — this approach to wellness is not just a stopgap measure for
symptoms of illness or chronic pain. It’s a regular, ongoing practice designed
to create optimal wellness and vitality. And often it involves the use of
complementary and alternative medicine (CAM), holistic healing, integrative
medicine, and other care modalities, not so much as a stand-in for
conventional medical interventions, but rather as a preventive measure designed
to keep the need for those interventions to an absolute
minimum. Health-motivated folks like Dellenbaugh may pay visits to health
practitioners and healing-arts professionals more regularly and frequently than
their less-healthy counterparts, and yet they prefer to embrace integrative
practices, not to address entrenched symptoms or to recover from illnesses, but
rather to achieve and maintain a level of optimal well-being. These
proactive healthcare consumers regard a high level of energy and vitality not as
some pie-in-the-sky goal, but as their baseline-normal birthright — and they’re
willing to put some effort (and if necessary, some out-of-pocket expense) into
claiming it.
A Higher Standard of Health (Back to Top)
Although the most recent large-scale research
into CAM-usage patterns dates to the late ’90s, that data sheds light on
preferences and motivations that persist today, and that are particularly well
represented within the ranks of the empowered health seeker. A 1993
study led by the director of the Osher Institute at Harvard Medical School,
David Eisenberg, MD, showed that, in 1990, one in three U.S. adults regularly
used some form of complementary and alternative medicine and spent $10.3 billion
in out-of-pocket expenditures on CAM treatments (which is comparable to the
$12.8 billion in out-of-pocket money spent on hospitalizations in the same
year). A 1998 follow-up study Eisenberg conducted showed that the
prevalence of CAM use had increased from 33.8 percent in 1990 to 42.1 percent in
1997. A National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) in 1999 found that most CAM
therapies were used in conjunction with conventional medical services. The most
recent large-scale data collection regarding CAM dates to a National Health
Interview Survey in 2002, which indicated that 36 percent of 31,044 respondents
had used one of the 27 CAM treatments mentioned in the survey in the
previous 12 months. In his 1998 research, Eisenberg found that CAM use was
higher among those with some college education (50.6 percent) — findings
confirmed by a 2002 NHIS study — and those who earned annual incomes over
$50,000 (48.1 percent). Eisenberg attributed one-third of all CAM use to
“disease prevention and health promotion,” especially among baby boomers. NHIS
data indicated that CAM use increases with age (70.3 percent of CAM use was
found among those 85 and older) and that individuals who more frequently saw
conventional practitioners were also more apt to use CAM. Researchers are
careful to point out that motivations for using CAM are hard to tease out of
surveys and that reasons for using it are complex and can change over time, but
analysis of these large-scale studies has shown that the “pursuit of wellness”
is a major contributor to CAM use and that an interest in “health promotion and
disease prevention” is another driving force. In a 1998 paper on the
appeal of alternative therapies, Eisenberg and his Harvard colleague Ted
Kaptchuk, MD, wrote that CAM, when used as a treatment for illness, offers
patients a “participatory experience of empowerment and authenticity when
illness threatens their sense of intactness.”
More Than a Cure (Back to Top)
In some cases, CAM users are simply substituting natural
remedies for conventional treatments — taking an herbal decongestant instead of
NyQuil, for example, or seeing an acupuncturist for back pain instead of taking
pain killers. But others, like Dellenbaugh, have moved beyond the notion of
treating a specific symptom or illness and have become more invested in a
broader concept of whole-person health. These individuals tend to see themselves
as the captains of their own healthcare team, with professionals offering
valuable counsel and care whenever their support is needed. “Health is not
about what you do one time or what you do for a week,” says Dellenbaugh. “Health
is an issue of habits; it’s about what you do over the long haul with your
life.” Dellenbaugh started down her own health-sustaining path 12 years ago,
when she was diagnosed with terminal cancer. Today, she is cancer-free, but she
says she didn’t so much discover a “cure” as find new ways to optimize her
health and vitality — vitality that ultimately proved more powerful than her
disease. Savvy healthcare consumers like Dellenbaugh tend to reject the
notion that good health is simply the absence of symptoms or illness: To them,
being healthy means living at your full potential — physically, emotionally and
spiritually. It means having the energy to embrace the life of your highest
choosing, and the resilience to weather whatever challenges come your way.
Taken in the context of the dominant medical model, which even many
conventional doctors have taken to describing as “sick care,” such viewpoints
are far from mainstream. But they sound increasingly appealing to many, and in a
society burdened by exploding healthcare costs and the pressures of widespread
chronic disease, they also offer real, practical promise. By better
understanding how these highly motivated, self-directed health seekers approach
their own health-care needs, we can all inch a little closer to optimal
health ourselves.
Treating the Whole Person (Back to Top)
Prudence Tippins was in her mid-30s when she
noticed something strange happening to her normally clear complexion. The skin
on her back and chest turned raw, red and bumpy. When the rash spread to her
cheeks, forehead and nose, Tippins went to see a doctor who diagnosed her with a
dermatological condition called rosacea. He told her that no one knows what
causes it, and that there is no cure. Tippins’s doctor prescribed an
antibiotic, but it didn’t work. When she returned, his only offer was a stronger
antibiotic, and at that point she decided to seek an alternative. “I had never
really thought about my health or cared much about it,” she says. “But this felt
like my body was trying to tell me something.” To decipher her body’s
message, however, Tippins couldn’t remain a passive patient. Instead, she began
actively researching and pursuing healthier behaviors — not simply to relieve
her rosacea symptoms, but to build the kind of vitality that characterizes a
truly healthy person. The combination of Tippins’s dissatisfaction with
conventional treatment, her curiosity about the root cause of her problem, her
willingness to pursue alternative approaches and information, and her interest
in allowing her condition to become a catalyst for healthier choices all fit the
empowered health-seeker model. And in her view, they were all essential in
helping her achieve the health improvements she sought. Over the years, the
43-year-old Viroqua, Wis., writer has learned a great deal about health, and
she’s adopted a number of proactive tactics to improve her well-being, including
eating a mostly raw-foods diet and embracing the healing effects of herbal
homeopathy. She also does yoga and meditates every day. Tippins says that
what began as a quest to improve her complexion has now become a deep commitment
to a health-centered lifestyle — one that has calmed her skin, but also keeps
her feeling more vibrantly well than she has ever felt before. “I’ve
become very intuitive about what my body is telling me,” she explains, “and the
healthier I’ve become, the healthier I want to become.” This attitude is
typical of many empowered health seekers, who might initially go looking to
clear up a particular problem, but then, once they’ve found relief from
those symptoms, find themselves surprised and excited by how good they feel
overall. As a result, they become motivated to achieve even greater health
gains. In Tippins’s case, the rosacea still comes and goes — she sees the
inflammatory disorder as a barometer of her health at any given time — but
her new approach to healthcare has left her feeling better in every aspect
of her life, including her mental and spiritual health. “I’m just a lot happier
than I was,” she says. “My energy level is better, my relationships have
improved, because I’m so much more patient than I used to be. My entire life is
better.” To achieve these kinds of results, Tippins had to be willing to
change her daily behaviors and to look beyond the pat answers that conventional
medical wisdom provided. She also had to discard the notion that she was simply
treating her malady — a notion deeply ingrained in those of us raised on Western
(or allopathic) medicine — and instead embrace the idea of caring, in a more
holistic and proactive way, for her self.
Active Strategies (Back to Top)
Most of us pay visits to health professionals only when
there is something wrong with us. Dellenbaugh, Tippins and other optimal-health
seekers typically prefer a more proactive approach. They are far more likely to
seek support either as a matter of maintenance (some have standing weekly or
monthly appointments for vitality-enhancing bodywork treatments, for example) or
at the first signs of distress, as opposed to waiting for a symptom to become
urgent or entrenched. They also develop long-term relationships with
health professionals they trust — professionals who encourage them to take an
active role in their treatment and who take time to advise them about the likely
underlying causes of whatever problems they may be facing. The most
empowered health seekers among us share a set of common attitudes and values
about health and well-being that inform their healthcare strategies. Here are
four basic approaches that anyone can adopt on his or her way to a healthier
life: Empowered Approach No. 1: Take an interest in how your body
works, and why it may be acting up. Savvy healthcare seekers are
motivated by a deep desire to understand how their bodies function, and what
treatments, practices and approaches are likely to work best for them based on
their health challenges. Holistic practitioners can be valuable partners in this
effort. They’re generally eager to explain their methods, help educate you about
your body and point you in the direction of helpful resources, like books and
trusted Web sites, where you can learn more on your own. But experience may be
the best teacher of all. Only by trying acupuncture or massage or homeopathy —
or by being willing to make recommended dietary and lifestyle changes — can you
tell how well these approaches might work for you. Empowered Approach No. 2:
Become a full partner in your own care. Expert advice and guidance is
indispensable on the journey to better health, but conscious healthcare
consumers maximize that guidance by actively partnering with their healthcare
providers. Whether you’re in your allopathic dentist’s chair or you’re visiting
the homeopath, you benefit by sharing with your practitioner what you know about
your body, including symptom patterns, possible causes and preferred treatment
approaches. Ask questions, raise concerns and talk openly about any tactics
you’ve already tried. It’s also perfectly acceptable to inquire about the
experience, training and treatment philosophy your care provider brings to the
table, and to tell him or her about concerns or fears you may have. “The
model has shifted from a paternal relationship [between doctor and patient] to a
partnership,” explains Brent Bauer, MD, director of complementary and
integrative medicine at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., and the medical
editor-in-chief of the Mayo Clinic Book of Alternative Medicine (Time Inc.,
2007). “Today’s patients are much more informed. Half my patients show up with
their latest Internet search for a diagnosis, and half the time they’re correct.
Sometimes I learn things from them. So the relationship is more of a
collaboration.” Most integrative practitioners — and, increasingly, their
conventional counterparts — see themselves more as guides than absolute experts.
They want patients to share the kind of deep knowledge necessary to craft an
effective healthcare strategy. Empowered Approach No. 3: Pay attention
to symptoms, but treat root causes. Health-savvy individuals listen to what
their symptoms tell them about their general health and then address the root
causes of those symptoms. An ulcer, for example, can be controlled with
medication, explains Paul Bergquist, MD, the director of CAM at Vernon Memorial
Hospital in Viroqua, Wis. “But if you can’t get at the underlying cause, as soon
as you take away the medicine, the ulcer can come right back,” he says. The
empowered approach is to understand what’s causing your ulcer, and why you are
vulnerable to it, and then address both to prevent recurrence. This kind
of integrated lifestyle approach requires a patient’s commitment to
understanding that a given condition or symptom may be the result of his or her
body’s response to chronic nutrition-and-lifestyle stresses. High
cholesterol, high blood pressure and back pain may not be the real problems, in
other words, but rather symptoms of an underlying vulnerability or imbalance,
the resolution of which may provide both the relief of those symptoms and the
return of vibrant health. Empowered Approach No. 4: Insist on a
whole-person approach. In conventional allopathic practice, healthcare is
divided into specialties — gastroenterology, oncology, dermatology. There are
neck doctors, mouth doctors and chest doctors. But empowered health seekers
prefer health professionals who see all of the body’s systems as connected. And
they seek out practitioners who treat individuals as whole people, not simply as
a collection of symptoms or independently operating mechanical and chemical
systems. Responsible health professionals, in the view of empowered
health seekers, see their patients in the contexts of their daily lives, habits,
relationships, thoughts and attitudes — so they take an active interest in all
of them. “The most important thing is that each person is [treated as]
an individual, and not as a set of symptoms,” explains Bergquist. “Each person
has a whole set of beliefs and programming, and illness or health can
develop out of that set of beliefs.”
Healthy and Whole (Back to Top)
Whether
or not you’d define yourself as an empowered health seeker today, there’s no
doubt that playing an active and informed role in your own healthcare is
worthwhile. So is upgrading your definitions of what health is all about: not
just the absence of symptoms and disease, but the experience of optimal
vitality, balance and overall well-being. It’s the kind of well-being
that’s expressed not just by the body, but by the person as a whole. As
Dellenbaugh puts it, “We tend to evaluate our health from the outside: How many
miles can I run, or what does my body look like?” Optimal wellness, on the other
hand, is about feeling your best, inside and out. With guidance from
those who have already mastered the art of feeling great, it seems likely that
that kind of vitality can be within more people’s reach. Joseph Hart is a
regular contributor to Experience Life.
Breaking the Money Barrier (Back to Top)
Because many alternative therapies aren’t yet covered by health insurance,
they can seem expensive — $50 or more for a session of massage therapy,
acupuncture or chiropractic services. Throw in elective lab tests, herbal
remedies and nutritional therapies, and you can be looking at some significant
bills. That can be a major disincentive to people who either can’t afford the
out-of-pocket expense or who see that seeking a prescription might net them a
short-term cost savings. But seen another way, proactive alternative treatments
often prove to be affordable investments in good health. Here are some examples
of how empowered health seekers think (and budget) differently from your average
healthcare consumer: The average patient says: I can’t afford out-of-pocket expenses for self-care
and alternative practitioners. It just costs way too much! The empowered
health seeker says: I can’t afford not to get the health support that really
works for me. Good health is my most valuable asset, and the cost of maintaining
it is low, relative to the importance of my vitality and well-being. Plus, the
cost of most self-care strategies and integrative treatments are relatively
affordable compared with the cost of a trip to the emergency room, or to the
long-term treatment costs associated with a chronic condition. My health
insurance is there primarily for accidents and other dire health emergencies.
For my daily health maintenance and support services, I’m willing to pay cash,
just like I do for healthy food or my gym membership. Someday, maybe these
cost-effective services will be better covered by insurance and my flex plan.
Until then, I’ll budget what I need in order to stay well. In the long run, it’s
a bargain. The average patient says: If I let myself get sick enough, my insurance will
have to cover the costs of treatment.
The empowered health seeker says: I’m
not waiting until someone else tells me it’s time to get treated; I’d rather
seek help at the first sign of trouble and learn what I need to do to take care
of myself. If I invest in my health now, I have more and better choices about
the kinds of interventions I’m willing to undergo, and I’ll avoid the inevitable
expenses and sacrifices that accompany poor health. By economizing and shifting
my spending from unhealthy habits to proactive, health-supporting strategies, I
can avoid the suffering and expense of a chronic illness, as well as the
stresses a health crisis would put on those around me. I’ll also have a better
shot at avoiding the side effects involved with long-term prescription drug
use. The average patient says: I’m not sick and I feel well enough to get by. Why
bother spending money on treatments if they’re not in direct response to major
symptoms?
The empowered health seeker says: I choose to feel better than
so-so. Besides, optimal health pays off in so many ways: more energy, clearer
thinking, better moods, better productivity. I know that feeling a general lack
of vitality is one of the first warning signs that my body is in need of
better care. Why wait for marked symptoms to emerge before I get the care my
body is trying to tell me it needs now?
Alternative Advantages (Back to Top)
According to the Institute of Medicine (part of the National Academy of
Sciences, which advises the federal government on health issues), five chronic
conditions — mood disorders, diabetes, heart disease, asthma and high blood
pressure — account for more than half of all U.S. health expenditures, and these
are some of the same disorders that conventional medicine often struggles to
treat successfully. A National Health Interview Survey in 2002 found CAM
treatments were most often sought out for health problems that lack definitive
cures, that have an unpredictable course and prognosis, and that are associated
with pain or side effects from prescription drug medication. While
integrative approaches can be employed to treat all types of illness — from the
common cold to cancer, the conditions that respond especially well to
alternative and complementary approaches include many of those that conventional
medicine has typically had less success in resolving. They include:
- Fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue
- Depression and anxiety
- Digestive and gastrointestinal health issues
- Skin problems
(eczema, psoriasis, acne)
- Chronic back and joint pain and
arthritis
- Headaches and migraines
- Hormone
imbalances
- Lifestyle- and nutrition-related conditions like heart
disease, diabetes and obesity
- Stress-related conditions like high blood
pressure, insomnia, rashes and ulcers
Resources (Back to Top)
Want to learn more? Check out these Web sites and books: Consortium of Academic Health Centers for Integrative Medicine (www.imconsortium.org) — A membership
organization (including 42 major academic research hospitals) devoted to
advancing integrative medicine. Includes a well-organized, vetted list of links
to Web sites exploring integrative treatments for various conditions. National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (http://nccam.nih.gov) — This U.S. government
agency sponsors clinical trials to test the claims of alternative practitioners.
Many studies, resources and publications are available online. Complementary and Alternative Medicine Index (www.umm.edu/altmed) — This Web site from
the University of Maryland Medical Center provides basic information about most
common forms of alternative medicine with links to other resources and medical
research. Alternative Medicine Center at the Mayo Clinic (www.mayoclinic.com/health/alternative-medicine/CM99999/)
— A medical Web site offering detailed information on alternative
treatments. The Institute for Functional Medicine (www.functionalmedicine.org) — IFM
seeks to promote and educate healthcare providers and the public about
functional medicine. The site also offers a searchable database of FM
practitioners. Mayo Clinic Book of Alternative Medicine: The New Approach to Using the Best
of Natural Therapies and Conventional Medicine (Time Inc., 2007) — A basic
primer on alternative medicine for the uninitiated. Encyclopedia of Natural Medicine by Michael Murray, ND, and Joseph Pizzorno,
ND (Prima, 1998) — A classic, popular and comprehensive book on how to treat a
variety of ailments and improve your overall health through natural methods.
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