This week's blog post is written by the founder of Yes to Life, Robin Daly, about the charity's recent sell out annual conference which took place on Saturday 25th November 2017, entitled 'Starting the Conversation - exploring ways in which integrating conventional cancer care and lifestyle medicine can improve outcomes’.
In any conflict, there are forces at work
maintaining division, suspicion and mistrust in order to keep the sides
fighting and true to the cause. There are a myriad of ways to do this with
propaganda, disinformation, fear-mongering and more. It’s really not that hard
to create division in the world.
And then there are forces working to bring
peace, resolution and reconciliation. For these there really is only one tool
at their disposal: dialogue. It may seem a poor balance of odds, but this one
strategy really is a powerful one. If the foot soldiers on either side of a
struggle should ever get to talk to each other, they quickly find that,
contrary to the propaganda, the enemy are simply other people with similar concerns,
needs and hopes to their own. They quickly discover that both sides have been
puppets of powerful forces at work to actually gain in some way from the
continued struggle, and for whom they have been paying a high price, at times
the highest price - their life.
Medicine is one such conflict, with the forces
of conventional medicine ranged against ‘natural’ approaches in a struggle that
seeks to force people into taking sides, to box them into the simplistic black
and white, propaganda-driven world of good versus bad, science-based versus
‘dangerous’, proven versus ‘no evidence’. And people are paying a high price,
sometimes the highest, for forsaking all the resources only available from the
‘opposition’. For example, conventional techniques can be life-saving for
people with cancer, but all too often the accompanying side effects create new
forms of suffering both in the short term and sometimes for life, for which
there is little on offer. In contrast, the world of ‘natural’ and ‘lifestyle’
medicine excels at protection against damage, and prevention and management
of side effects.
As in war, dialogue is the only way out of this
tragic state of affairs. As long as nutritionists and oncologists keep each
other at a safe distance, then they can continue believing the quackbusters’
tabloid-style characterisation of nutritional science as ‘nutribollocks’ (yes
that is a direct quote!) and the conspiracy theorist’s labelling of
conventional oncology as just ‘cut, burn and poison’. But start a constructive
conversation, one that centres on the common ground they share - the wellbeing
of patients - and you could soon be generating some mutual respect that might
even lead to useful collaboration.
A constructive conversation is exactly what we
had in mind for this year’s Yes to Life Annual Conference, ‘Starting the
Conversation - exploring ways in which integrating conventional cancer care and
lifestyle medicine can improve outcomes’. The morning sessions featured a
formidable lineup of forward-thinking NHS health specialists, people who have
themselves already started to explore the wealth of resources for patients that
sit outside of conventional thinking and practice. And the afternoon showcased
many of those resources, alongside some inspiring projects where collaboration
is already well under way.
‘Integration’ is the aim of the conversation and
the collaboration. Integrative Medicine, or, in the specific area of cancer,
Integrative Oncology, aims to bring together the best resources from the widest
possible spectrum of approaches, and to combine them in ways that exceed the
potential of any one approach alone. It’s a powerful formula that has the
potential to fill some of the most glaring ‘gaps in care’ that our NHS suffers
from. Successive governments have, for decades, been pressing for
‘patient-centred care’ and ‘patient choice’. But step into a modern oncology
unit, and you’ll be hard-pressed to find anything even vaguely approaching
this. It seems that, on its own, the NHS simply can’t escape the old ‘Doctor as
God’ model. In contrast, approaches such as Naturopathy or Functional Medicine
are the very embodiment of a person-centred approach. Here you will find ready
antidotes to the criticisms most often levelled at the health service: scarcity
of time and attention, lack of care and compassion, conveyor belt treatments,
toxicities and side-effects of treatments, and so on.
In Britain, we are shockingly far behind some
other countries in embracing integration. The ability to stoically resist this
patient-driven revolution seems to be a negative aspect of our national
healthcare system. We may pay for our care in the UK, but we are far from being
customers with expectations of personal service. Fortunately though, we are
blessed with some pioneering doctors who are paving the way towards a new kind
of medicine in which patients are equal partners in the quest for health and
wellbeing. Leading the vanguard is Dr Rangan Chatterjee, GP, Functional
Medicine Practitioner, and BBC TV Doctor in the House. Dr Chatterjee is
singlehandedly opening up new avenues to health for viewers across the nation
and simultaneously inspiring GPs to respond to their patients’ needs in an
entirely different way. We were extremely fortunate to be able to interview him
for an exclusive video for the conference.
The conference ‘hit the ground running’ with a
talk from the passionate and inspirational patient advocate and bestselling
author Sophie Sabbage, giving the patient perspective on the need for
integration. Her talk titled ‘Caught in the Crossfire’ outlined clearly how it
is patients who pay the price for the continued hostilities between
professionals.
We were also fortunate to be host to the UK
oncologist who is leading the field in the adoption of lifestyle medicine,
Professor Robert Thomas. A genuine trailblazer, Prof Thomas offers all his NHS
patients a lifestyle consultation. In his presentation, he demonstrated his
clear understanding of, and support for nutritional and lifestyle approaches,
bemoaned the unscientific messages from mainstream medicine regarding the role
of sugar in cancer, and introduced us to some of the high quality trials of
natural approaches he has initiated.
Two other GPs presenting at the conference are
also engaged in tackling the status quo. Dr Rupy Aujla is passionate about
cooking and nutrition and is starting an approved training course for GPs to
raise their understanding of the direct relationship between food and health.
Dr Malcolm Kendrick chooses to ignore the divide between conventional and other
approaches, instead relying on his own assessment of the evidence and the
balance of risk to benefit, a position that is entirely in tune with
patient-centred care and patient choice.
The potential for integration was laid out in
the afternoon sessions, with expert input from Nutritional Therapist Liz
Butler, Medical Herbalist Claudia Manchanda, Food and Environment Scientist Dr
Robert Verkerk, Functional Medicine Practitioner Meleni Aldridge, and a
presentation on the benefits of Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) by Mark
Boscher of Herts MS Therapy.
Alongside these presentations we were introduced
to two examples of integration at work, clearly to the benefit and the approval
of patients:
The NHS PREPARE for
Surgery programme is a collaboration between exercise specialists and oncology
staff to improve the results and the experience of surgery. Lizzy Davis of
CanExercise joined NHS colleagues Hayley Osborn and
Maria Halley to share their passion for the scheme and its successes.
Dr Catherine Zollman,
Medical Director of Penny Brohn UK and Oncology Nurse Susie Budd introduced us to the working partnership developing between the
charity and oncology services in Bristol that is bringing a marked improvement
to the patient experience of undergoing conventional care.
The conference set out to demonstrate that the
aims of integration are directly in line with established government policy,
that integration works for everyone
involved, and that movement towards integration is finally under way. It was
also to provide inspiration to the many who have yet to experience firsthand
any progress towards those elusive goals of patient-centred care and patient
choice, from some real-world pioneers and working examples within the NHS. Change
is indeed afoot, and we are all needed to maintain the momentum that has been
generated. The battle certainly isn’t over yet, but the conversation has begun.
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