Thousands of studies have shown acupuncture to be little more than a placebo, and herbal remedies have been barely tested. There is no case for public funding, argues David Colquhoun
In April this year, the Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt suggested that Traditional Chinese Medicine could be made available through the NHS, provided there was "good evidence" that it works.
At one level, the answer to this is simple. When TCM has been tested, it doesn’t work. There’s nothing unusual about that. Almost all of Western medicine from 100 years ago was equally ineffective.
TCM isn’t really traditional. In 1822 Emperor Dao Guang banned acupuncture and moxibustion from the Imperial Medical Academy. As practised now in the West, it’s essentially a product of Chairman Mao Zedong’s Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution of 1966 (Atwood, 2009), though Chairman Mao didn’t use it himself. It started as a device to encourage Chinese nationalism, and now it is a mixture of nationalism and big business...
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