05.03.10
With the recent passage of healthcare legislation, prevention and wellness continue to be hot topics on Capitol Hill and in the news. Included in the discussion is a new paradigm of prevention—functional medicine—that is gaining momentum in the healthcare arena. Functional medicine can be described as personalized healthcare that incorporates both conventional and alternative therapies. The functional medicine model focuses on primary prevention and underlying causes for serious illness—assessing and preventing complex chronic disease. The Congressional Dietary Supplement Caucus, in cooperation with the Council for Responsible Nutrition (CRN) and the Natural Products Association (NPA), recently hosted a speaker lunch briefing, “Functional Medicine: Frontline Against Chronic Disease,” which addressed many of these health aspects.
Mark Hyman, MD, medical director of the UltraWellness Center and a nationally recognized author, speaker and authority on prevention and wellness, spoke to nearly 60 attendees at the lunch briefing about the importance of treating the entire system, not just the symptoms, when it comes to health conditions or illnesses. “The irony is that the current healthcare system will pay for expensive medical treatments, but it won’t pay for dietary supplements to keep our bodies healthy,” he said. “As a nation, we are overfed but undernourished. Dietary supplements play an important role in functional and preventive medicine.” Dr. Hyman went on to give examples of patients who had come to him, after seeing a series of doctors, because they wanted him to look at their entire system, not just the symptoms of illness. He discussed how he categorized the various illnesses of these patients into their various bodily systems, such as the digestive system, and then worked with his patients to get their bodies back on track through proper diet, exercise, dietary supplements and use of prescription medications, when necessary.
Mark Hyman, MD, medical director of the UltraWellness Center and a nationally recognized author, speaker and authority on prevention and wellness, spoke to nearly 60 attendees at the lunch briefing about the importance of treating the entire system, not just the symptoms, when it comes to health conditions or illnesses. “The irony is that the current healthcare system will pay for expensive medical treatments, but it won’t pay for dietary supplements to keep our bodies healthy,” he said. “As a nation, we are overfed but undernourished. Dietary supplements play an important role in functional and preventive medicine.” Dr. Hyman went on to give examples of patients who had come to him, after seeing a series of doctors, because they wanted him to look at their entire system, not just the symptoms of illness. He discussed how he categorized the various illnesses of these patients into their various bodily systems, such as the digestive system, and then worked with his patients to get their bodies back on track through proper diet, exercise, dietary supplements and use of prescription medications, when necessary.