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Complementary and Alternative Veterinary Medicine Considered
David W. Ramey (Author), Bernard E. Rollin (Author)
9780813826165, Wiley
Hardback, published 19 December 2003
274 pages
23.6 x 15.8 x 2 cm, 0.499 kg
Complementary and Alternative Veterinary Medicine Considered is a book that belongs in your veterinary library. If you are a veterinarian wondering if you should incorporate complementary and alternative veterinary medicine (CAVM) into your practice, if you have recently hired an associate eager to try such things as acupuncture or homeopathy, or if you have clients asking you about chiropractic, herbal, or magnetic field therapy for their pets, you'll want to understand the history, science and ethics behind such therapies. In its 2001 Guidelines for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) recognizes the growing interest in CAVM, and encourages the critical examination of these therapies using the scientific method. Following the AVMA's lead on this subject, Complementary and Alternative Veterinary Medicine Considered thoroughly examines a variety of CAVM therapies and asks important questions regarding alternative treatments. For example, is acupuncture effective in pain relief? What is homeopathy? What is the history behind chiropractic? What does the research say (and not say) about various CAVM modalities? And, just as importantly, what are the ethical and regulatory considerations concerning such therapies? This book has the answers to those questions and more. Complementary and Alternative Veterinary Medicine Considered will help practicing veterinarians to make informed decisions about specific CAVM therapies. This text evaluates various prevalent therapies, and will give veterinarians the ethical and scientific bases they need to make sound decisions regarding CAVM therapies Coverage includes but is not limited to:
Foreword, ix Acknowledgments, xi Introduction, xiii 1. The Braid of the Alternative Medicine Movement, 3 2. Historical Aspects of Some CAVM Therapies, 17 3. Science and Medical Therapy, 55 4. Ethics, Evidence, and Medicine, 73 5. Placebos and Perceptions of Therapeutic Efficacy, 87 6. Hope, 107 7. Scientific Aspects of CAVM, 117 8. Untested Therapies and Medical Anarchism, 165 9. Regulatory Considerations, 179 Afterword, 197 Appendix, 203 Notes, 207 Index, 244
Subject Areas: Veterinary medicine [MZ]
