Sins of commission.

AuthorLarson, Christina
PositionFunding of alternative medicine research - Brief Article

THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR Complementary and Alternative Medicine at NIH is just one way that alternative medicine enthusiasts are using the federal government to gain respect and funding. Another card they've been happy to play recently is that old Washington stand-by: the commission.

In March 2000, after intense lobbying from Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa), a complimentary and alternative medicine (CAM) convert who swears bee pollen cured his allergies, President Bill Clinton created the White House Commission on Complementary and Alternative Medicine Policy. From the start, it was clear this wouldn't be the most rigorously objective group: The 20-member commission was stacked with alt-medicine proponents, from "Tom's of Maine" co-founder Tom Chapell to Wayne Jonas, who ran the government's first CAM office, to James Gordon, author of Manifesto For A New Medicine.

Sure enough, the commission's report, delivered to HHS Secretary Tommy Thompson last month, resembles a detailed CAM wish-list. Its recommendations range from calling for CAM proponents to hold seats on important policy boards to requiring mandatory training in CAM reference materials for public librarians.

By far, the most consequential recommendation is that federal health plans, including Medicare and Medicaid, begin to cover CAM treatments. Insurance coverage has become the brass ring of the alternative medicine movement, whose advocates believe demand for their services would skyrocket if more private or federal insurers were willing to foot the bill.

Of course, at a time when soaring costs have already forced Medicare to cut doctors' payments for routine treatments--and, subsequently, many physicians have dumped their Medicare patients--and the powerful seniors'...

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