Publication | Closed Access
A Critique of the Rationale for Cancer Treatment With Coffee Enemas and Diet
34
Citations
15
References
1992
Year
NutritionFamily MedicineClinical Decision-makingCancer ManagementEvidence-based MedicineGastroenterologyCancer EducationCoffee EnemasMedical Decision MakingOncologyThe RationalesPublic HealthCancer ResearchUnorthodox TreatmentCancer PreventionCancer TreatmentUnproven Medical TreatmentNursingMedical EthicsCancer EpidemiologyAlternative MedicinePatient EducationMedicineComplementary Medicine
WHEN THE RATIONALES offered in support of most medical are critically examined, they are frequently found to be scientifically invalid. Yet, according to a recent survey, 1 over 60% of the practitioners of treatments for cancer hold an MD, a PhD, or both, from an accredited medical school or graduate school. Therefore, when a patient asks his or her physician for an explanation of an unproven medical treatment being offered by another trained and licensed physician, it is not enough for the patient's physician to simply label the unorthodox treatment as quackery. To make an effective contribution to the patient's understanding and decision-making process, the clinician must know whether the claims being made for the treatment are supported by scientific evidence and he or she must be able to discuss that evidence in language that is understood by the patient. The explanations justifying the use of coffee
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