Nature Cures Also by James C. Whorton Crusaders for Fitness: A History of American Health Reformers Inner Hygiene: Constipation and the Pursuit of Health in Modern Society Nature Cures The History of Alternative Medicine in America James C. Whorton 1 2002 1 Oxford NewYork Auckland Bangkok BuenosAires CapeTown Chennai DaresSalaam Delhi HongKong Istanbul Karachi Kolkata KualaLumpur Madrid Melbourne MexicoCity Mumbai Nairobi Sa˜oPaulo Shanghai Singapore Taipei Tokyo Toronto andanassociatedcompanyinBerlin Copyright(cid:1)2002byOxfordUniversityPress,Inc. PublishedbyOxfordUniversityPress,Inc. 198MadisonAvenue,NewYork,NewYork10016 www.oup.com OxfordisaregisteredtrademarkofOxfordUniversityPress Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthispublication maybereproduced,storedinaretrievalsystem,ortransmitted, inanyformorbyanymeans,electronic,mechanical, photocopying,recording,orotherwise,withouttheprior permissionofOxfordUniversityPress. LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData Whorton,JamesC.,1942– Naturecures:thehistoryofalternativemedicine inAmerica/JamesC.Whorton. p. cm.Includesbibliographicalreferencesandindex. ISBN0-19-514071-0 1. Alternativemedicine—UnitedStates—History. 2. Alternative medicine—UnitedStates—History—20thcentury. I. Title. R733.W495 2002 615.5'0973—dc21 2002022023 1 3 5 7 9 8 6 4 2 PrintedintheUnitedStatesofAmerica onacid-freepaper For Jackie Contents Preface ix Part I The Nineteenth Century: Natural Healing 1 1. The Hippocratic Heresy: Alternative Medicine’s Worldview 3 2. Every Man His Own Physician: Thomsonianism 25 3. Dilutions of Grandeur: Homeopathy 49 4. Physical Puritanism: Hygeiotherapy 77 5. Magnetism and Mind: From Mesmerism to Christian Science 103 Part II The Early Twentieth Century: Drugless Healing 131 6. The Licensing Question: The Campaign for Medical Freedom 133 7. The Rule of the Artery: Osteopathy 141 8. Innate Intelligence: Chiropractic 165 9. Therapeutic Universalism: Naturopathy 191 Part III The Late Twentieth Century: Holistic Healing 219 10. From Medical Cultism to Alternative Medicine 221 11. The Holistic Health Explosion: Acupuncture 245 12. From Alternative Medicine to Complementary Medicine 271 Conclusion The Twenty-first Century: The Age of Curapathy? 297 Abbreviations 308 Notes 311 Index 360 vii Preface I n the autumn of 1994, a New Yorker cartoonist imagined a clinical scene in which a patient who is literally radiant with health, his body throwing off a nearly blinding aura of wellness, is nevertheless being sternly ad- monished by his physician because he has achieved his health the wrong way: “You’ve been fooling around with alternative medicines, haven’t you?” the doctor scolds.1 New Yorker cartoons constitute the most sensitive of barometers to shift- ing currents in America’s cultural atmosphere. And in truth, whatever one chooses to call it—alternative medicine, unconventional medicine, holistic medicine, complementary medicine, integrative medicine (some even like the term vernacular medicine)—a lot of people have been fooling around with unorthodox forms of therapy in recent years. In a now legendary survey published in 1993, Harvard’s David Eisenberg reported that one in three Americans had used one or more forms of alternative medicine in 1990, and expressedsurprise at the “enormouspresence”ofhealingalternativesinAmer- ican society. When Eisenberg and colleagues repeated the survey in 1997, furthermore, they found that “alternative medicine use and expenditures have increased dramatically” since the first study: now 40 percent of the population employed such procedures.2 That alternative methods were so widespread in the presumably enlight- ened 1990s was a startling realization for the medical profession. It shouldn’t have been, for there’s nothing at all new in the current enthusiasm for un- conventional therapies. Comparable levels of support have been the norm for most of the last two centuries: Americans, in short, have been fooling around with alternative medicine for a long time. That such activity has been mere foolishness has been the opinion, of course,oforthodoxpractitioners.Fromthestart,MDshavescornedalternative ix
Description: