The pancreas
in Room 201. A postop in 620. The cath scheduled for 7 a.m. Modern
medicine has a way of reducing people to less than the sum of
their parts. That kind of thinking, viewing people as diseases
or procedures, said Mary Jo Krietzer, Ph.D., RN, director of the
Center for Spirituality and Healing at the University of Minnesota,
is the root of much dissatisfaction and stress in nursing.
But that is
changing, thanks to a resurgence in modalities-holistic (with
or without a "w"), integrative, complementary or alternative-that
many say were part of nursing in the beginning. Alternative therapies
focus on looking at the entire person-mind, body and spirit.
"Nursing
started out to be holistic," said Karen Rader, MSN, RN, a
certified healing touch practitioner in Indiana. "Holistic
techniques don't take away from medicine, but complement it."
People who are ill tend to experience a lot of stress, for example,
and holistic medicine offers many therapies designed to deal with
stress.
"Florence
Nightingale herself was extremely holistic," said Marsha
Walker, MSN, RN, a registered massage therapist and certified
holistic nurse in Austin, Texas. "She advocated that nurses
were to tend not only to a person's body, but their environment,
food, air, their spirit."
The broad
range of holistic healing approaches may not be common in mainstream,
Western medicine, but most techniques have been around for centuries,
if not millennia. Many were routinely taught in nursing schools
before medicine's technological boom in the 1970s and '80s.
Traditional
Chinese medicine, including acupuncture, herbal therapies, hypnosis,
therapeutic massage, imagery, aromatherapy, meditation and other
modalities are used as alternatives to conventional therapies,
or in addition to them (thus the term complementary or integrative).
But nurses say the holistic approach isn't so much about the technique
as it is about attitude.
"A lot
of nurses don't see any difference between what they've always
been doing and this 'new' holistic thing," particularly those
who were trained before the 1970s, Walker said. "A person
can be practicing this way without ever taking a single class.
There are a lot of nurses who naturally take into account the
total person, without ever hearing of holistic nursing."
There is ample
anecdotal evidence of the effectiveness of integrative practices,
and a growing body of scientific evidence.
A study conducted
by the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine
(NCCAM) at the University of Maryland in Baltimore found that
patients treated with acupuncture after dental surgery had less
intense pain than patients who received a placebo.
Another study
found that older people with osteoarthritis experienced significantly
more pain relief after using conventional drugs and acupuncture
together than those who used conventional therapy alone.
Researchers
at the Minneapolis Medical Research Foundation now are studying
the use of acupuncture to treat alcoholism and other addictions.
The Kessler Institute for Rehabilitation in New Jersey is studying
acupuncture to treat a stroke-related swallowing disorder and
the pain associated with spinal cord injuries.
The NCCAM
is spearheading additional research into clinical outcomes, effectiveness,
safety and benefits of a variety of alternative practices. The
World Health Organization considers acupuncture an effective treatment
for a comprehensive list of diseases, said Patricia Faust of the
Austin Academy of Oriental Medicine.
At any rate,
the movement is speeding on without necessarily waiting for scientific
proof.
Americans
spent $3.24 billion on herbal supplements in 1997. According to
the NCCAM, more than 42 percent used an alternative therapy in
1997, most likely herbal medicines, massage, megavitamins, self-help
groups, folk remedies, energy healing or homeopathy. The more
than $27 billion spent on these therapies in 1997 exceeded out-of-pocket
spending for all U.S. hospitalizations.
Brian Berman,
MD, director of the Complementary Medicine Program at the University
of Maryland School of Medicine, recently reported that of the
125 U.S. medical schools, 66 percent include complementary medicine
information in core curriculum and half offer electives courses
in complementary medicine. Nursing schools increasingly are including
it again as well.
Whether they
actually employ these techniques, nurses need to know enough about
alternative therapies to intelligently discuss them with patients
who are increasingly more likely to expect such options. "The
times they are 'a-changing.' Patients are demanding more person-centered
treatment," said Jon Suskevitch, RN, a nurse clinician at
Duke University Medical Center. "They want the health care
team to recognize them as a whole person."
Healthier
healers
Nurses also can benefit from the study and application of these
approaches. "Many people who practice integrative medicine
recognize the effect it has on the healer," Krietzer said.
"It encourages you to value your own health and develop good
self-care practices. Becoming a healer in the true sense of the
word is more than facts or procedures. There is a whole inner
life that needs to be attended to. That is incredibly fulfilling."
"While
nurses are natural caregivers, there is a lot of stress and frustration,
especially in a hospital setting," said Tim Shurr, president
of the International Association of Wholistic Medicine. "It
affects how the nurse is feeling, and that affects how the patient
is feeling."
Massachusetts-based
Seeds & Bridges, a holistic nursing continuing education program,
found that participants in its training reported increased job
satisfaction, increased productivity, decreased sick time and
workers comp use, and overall better patient outcomes.
"The
real power of transformation in this field is not in just substituting
an herb for a drug," Krietzer said. "It is looking at
patients in a more comprehensive way.
"Is it
more work? I don't think so. To the extent you can help a patient
relax in the ICU, for example, and get them off a ventilator sooner,
have them require fewer meds, that's not more work. This isn't
doing what we always do and then layering the integrative medicine
on top of it. It is a different way of everything we do."