Read the Beforeitsnews.com story here. Advertise at Before It's News here.
Profile image
By ScienceBlogs (Reporter)
Contributor profile | More stories
Story Views
Now:
Last hour:
Last 24 hours:
Total:

The CEO of The Cleveland Clinic defends its quackademic medicine [Respectful Insolence]

% of readers think this story is Fact. Add your two cents.


I’ve been pretty hard on The Cleveland Clinic over the years, but justifiably so. After all, The Cleveland Clinic is one of the leading centers of quackademic medicine in the US; i.e., an academic medical center that studies and uses quackery as though it were legitimate medicine. Of course, this is a problem that is not in any way limited to The Cleveland Clinic. A decade ago, I was kept track of which academic medical centers had “complementary and alternative medicine” (CAM) or “integrative medicine” programs that integrated quackery like acupuncture, chiropractic, naturopathy, reiki, and even homeopathy in a little list that I liked to refer to as the “Academic Woo Aggregator.” However, that little list didn’t remain little for long, and soon I found the Academic Woo Aggregator to be too difficult to maintain and I gave it up. Sadly, the reason was that there were just too many medical schools and academic medical centers that embrace quackademic medicine.

Since then, the situation has only gotten worse, with The Cleveland Clinic leading the way. For instance, it was, as far as I know, the first to actually integrate a traditional Chinese medicine herbal clinic into its offerings. Then it hired Mark Hyman, MD of “Ultrawellness” fame to open its Center for Functional Medicine. “Functional medicine,” recall, is basically a form of quackery that combines the worst of conventional medicine (a whole lot of unnecessary lab tests) with a whole lot of “make it up as you go alongquackery to “correct” abnormal lab tests in the name of “biochemical individuality.” Sometimes the quackery of functional medicine reaches truly ridiculous proportions. Unfortunately, functional medicine has been wildly successful at the Clinic.

So I was only somewhat surprised last week when a social media kerfuffle erupted over the publication of what can only be described as an antivaccine screed by Daniel Neides, MD, the director of The Cleveland Clinic’s Wellness Institute. It was a screed that would not have been the least bit out of place on antivaccine websites like Age of Autism, NaturalNews.com, The Thinking Moms’ Revolution, or the like. This incident led me to ask: What the heck do you expect? That’s what happens when you embrace quackery, particularly when a lot of it is “detox” quackery, a prominent component of functional medicine and naturopathy. A lot of antivaccine pseudoscience is based on the idea that vaccines are full of “toxins,” and there’s a natural affinity between antivaccine beliefs and any form of pseudomedicine that embraces “detoxification.” And, make no mistake, The Cleveland Clinic embraces “detox,” even selling such products on its website, while Dr. Neides is very much into “detox” quackery.

In the wake of the controversy, The Cleveland Clinic issued a statement that it really, truly supports vaccination and promised that Dr. Neides would be “disciplined.” It also suffered tsunami of negative press, with bloggers like me taking it to task for its quackademic medicine, refreshingly (to me, at least) joined by mainstream news organizations like The Washington Post and STAT News where reporters didn’t miss the broader picture. I figured the controversy was finished and only hoped that it sparked some intrepid health reporter somewhere to look into the wider problem of quackery in academic medicine.

Apparently, I was mistaken. It turns out that Toby Cosgrove, MD, CEO of The Cleveland Clinic, is unhappy at the negative press and wants to defend his hospital’s Wellness Institute. He decided to do so in an opinion piece released by The Cleveland Clinic Newsroom entitled Vaccines, Wellness and a Healthier America. He starts out by observing that smoking, poor diet, and lack of exercise were the leading factors that led patients to requiring his service as a cardiac surgeon, all of which is true enough. Lifestyle has a large effect on health; no one denies that other than the doctor caricatures who are portrayed as denying that diet or exercise can be used to improve health. These caricatures are most commonly utilized by proponents of “integrative medicine” to denigrate what they disparagingly call “conventional medicine.” That being said, certainly “conventional medicine” could do a better job at helping patients use lifestyle interventions to improve their health, but CAM advocates almost inevitably use a false dichotomy in which it is necessary to embrace quackery in order to promote “wellness.” Although he doesn’t say it explicitly, it’s implicitly clear from Dr. Cosgrove’s editorial that he buys into this false dichotomy.

First, he has to deny most vociferously that there are any elements in his institution that are antivaccine:

Historically, healthcare has not done a good job of promoting disease prevention. Our Wellness Institute has built a framework to guide patients to healthier lifestyle choices. However, in a recent online column, the Wellness Institute’s medical director shared his personal views about vaccination – views that do not represent Cleveland Clinic in any way.

Vaccinations are a key component to preventing disease and maintaining a healthy society. There is no debating that; the research is clear. To say otherwise is irresponsible and runs counter to Cleveland Clinic’s commitment to evidence-based medicine.

Deadly, debilitating diseases like polio, smallpox and measles are no longer the threats they once were, thanks to vaccines. In fact, according to Healthy People 2020, routine childhood immunization (DTap, Td, Hib, Polio, MMR, Hep B, and varicella vaccines) saves 33,000 lives, prevents 14 million cases of disease, and reduces direct health care costs by $9.9 billion.

Harmful myths, untruths and junk science about vaccinations have been scientifically debunked. Serious adverse effects are incredibly rare. And there is no demonstrated link between autism and vaccination.

So far, so good. This is about as unequivocal a rejection of Dr. Neides’ ignorant antivaccine nonsense as one would expect from the CEO of an internationally known academic medical center. One notes that he hasn’t said exactly what action he’s decided to take against Dr. Neides, even though it’s been well over a week since his antivaccine column made national news. Clearly Dr. Neides hasn’t been fired yet (which would be appropriate), or likely we would have heard about it. Presumably he has suffered some “discipline” less than firing.

But it has apparently initiated action that appears designed far more to give the appearance of concrete action to correct the problems that led to someone like Dr. Neides feeling comfortable publishing antivaccine rants under The Cleveland Clinic’s logo than to actually do something substantive:

After the director of its Wellness Institute was forced to walk back an anti-vaccine blog post over the weekend, the Cleveland Clinic revealed Monday that it has already spent months reevaluating the institute’s focus and expects to halt the sale of some alternative medicine products.

Clinic spokeswoman Eileen Shiel told STAT that hospital administrators are concerned that the institute’s focus has grown too unwieldy and less connected to the clinic’s broader mission of providing the best, evidence-based medicine and services to patients. She said the wellness center will likely stop selling some of its commercial products, such as homeopathy kits sold in the gift shop of its suburban Lyndhurst location, and move toward general wellness programs that would improve diet and lifestyle decisions by patients and its own employees.

Yes, The Cleveland Clinic sells a homeopathic detox kit on its own website. It has also begun offering pure quackery like reiki, craniosacral therapy, myofascial release, and acupuncture to children. It even offers the “energy medicine” quackery that is “therapeutic touch” to babies.

Be that as it may, what would have served Dr. Cosgrove best would have been to stop with the statement defending vaccines, but he just couldn’t do it. Of course he couldn’t! He just started his column bragging about how important the Wellness Institute is to The Cleveland Clinic, how he had established it in 2007 and “placed its leader in the C-suite with the title of Chief Wellness Officer.” He couldn’t let the criticism go. He had to turn it around and complain about those of us who didn’t miss the broader point

Still, critics have used the column to disparage the Wellness Institute as a whole and the concept of wellness in general.

Ouch. Now there’s half a straw man. As to the charge of using Dr. Neides’ column as a jumping off point to “disparage” the Wellness Institute, I plead guilty as charged—and proud of it! The Cleveland Clinic Wellness Institute is a cesspit of quackery mixed with more reasonable and evidence based treatments, and I have no qualms about pointing out how if you embrace “detox” quackery, antivaccine quackery can’t be far behind. I’m also very happy to see that at least a couple of mainstream news outlets started to “grok” the general outlines of that point. As for disparaging “the concept of wellness in general”? Er, not so much. Here, Dr. Cosgrove is disingenuously conflating criticism of the Wellness Institute with “disparagement” of wellness in general. The two are not the same thing, and what was being disparaged is the amount of pseudoscience passing for medicine under the auspices of the Clinic’s Wellness Institute, not the concept of wellness in general.

None of this stops Dr. Cosgrove from justifying the Wellness Institute by arguing that chronic disease is rampant (which is, of course, true, given the obesity epidemic and the aging of the population) and that health care costs are on track to reach 20% of the the GDP by 2024. It does not follow from that that what he is doing at The Cleveland Clinic is the answer. Well, part of it can help:

At Cleveland Clinic, the Wellness Institute works hand-in-hand with the Medicine Institute to help patients and employees change unhealthy behaviors and to make healthy life choices. These goals align with public health initiatives set by the CDC, such as immunizations, safe healthy food, smoking cessation, control of infectious disease, and a focus on heart disease and stroke.

Yes, they do, and no one is criticizing The Cleveland Clinic or its Wellness Institute for promoting these things. These are the interventions that every science-based hospital should be promoting. They are the default. No one argues against that. What we do argue against is the quackery that the Wellness Institute, as pointed out by Dr. Cosgrove himself, promotes:

Some approaches may be considered unconventional, but most – acupuncture, yoga, Chinese herbal medicine, guided imagery and relaxation techniques – have scientific backing. We have heard from our patients that they want more than conventional medicine can offer and we believe it is best that they undertake these alternative therapies under the guidance of their Cleveland Clinic physician.

No, no, no, no, no. Acupuncture is a theatrical placebo. Yoga is fine, but nothing more than a form of gently exercise, which has nothing special to it compared to other forms of exercise. Guided imagery might have some evidence, as might relaxation techniques, but, again, they’re being lumped together with the quackery. The most telling statement is the last one, however. I’d rephrase it, though: We at The Cleveland Clinic know that patients want quackery, and we know we can make money off of it. So we will, while assuaging our consciences by telling ourselves that the best “safe” way to provide the quackery to patients is through our facility and that our embrace of pseudoscience is “justified by the magnitude of the disease challenge.” I wonder if that includes the use of

And that the Cleveland Clinic is somehow doing cutting edge research:

In the meantime, we will move the science forward. Our Center for Functional Medicine is the first in the country to conduct research studies on the impact of functional medicine when combined with traditional approaches for certain disease – asthma, inflammatory bowel disease and diabetes.

OK, my irony meter melted down here. Dr. Cosgrove, reassuringly, started his column by saying how pro-vaccine The Cleveland Clinic is and how all the horrible things about vaccines written by Dr. Neides in his column do not represent the position of The Cleveland clinic. He now finishes his column by bragging about the Clinic’s Center for Functional Medicine is supposedly doing cutting edge research into asthma, inflammatory bowel disease, and diabetes. Does he have even clue one that Dr. Mark Hyman, the guru of functional medicine that he hired to found the Center for Functional Medicine co-authored a an antivaccine book of the thimerosal/mercury fear mongering variety with Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. in 2014, right around the time that the Cleveland Clinic hired him? Dr. Hyman even appeared on The Dr. Oz Show with RFK Jr. to promote the book a mere 11 days before The Cleveland Clinic announced that it had hired Dr. Hyman. There’s no way Dr. Cosgrove didn’t know about Dr. Hyman’s appearance on a nationally syndicated TV show to promote an antivaccine book. He was clearly fine with it then. Or, at least, Hyman’s antivaccine propaganda didn’t bother the pious pro-vaccine Dr. Cosgrove enough to scuttle the launch of the Center for Functional Medicine. Nor did Dr. Hyman’s long history of http://scienceblogs.com/insolence/2009/09/08/dr-mark-hyman-mangles-autism-science-on/ based on antivaccine preconceptions.

I call BS on Dr. Cosgrove’s self-righteous indignation and his assertion that The Cleveland Clinic under his leadership is so very, very pro-vaccine. That’s not to say that the vast majority of physicians and other health care professionals working at the Clinic aren’t pro-vaccine. I have no doubt that they are. It is, however, to say that Dr. Cosgrove doth protest too much. He championed the Wellness Institute. He turned a blind eye to Dr. Hyman’s antivaccine views. He now claims that he is shocked—shocked, I tell you—to find an antivaccine loon in charge of his Wellness Institute.

I call BS on Dr. Cosgrove and his Cleveland Clinic, period.


Source: http://scienceblogs.com/insolence/2017/01/18/the-ceo-of-the-cleveland-clinic-defends-its-quackademic-medicine/


Before It’s News® is a community of individuals who report on what’s going on around them, from all around the world.

Anyone can join.
Anyone can contribute.
Anyone can become informed about their world.

"United We Stand" Click Here To Create Your Personal Citizen Journalist Account Today, Be Sure To Invite Your Friends.

Please Help Support BeforeitsNews by trying our Natural Health Products below!


Order by Phone at 888-809-8385 or online at https://mitocopper.com M - F 9am to 5pm EST

Order by Phone at 866-388-7003 or online at https://www.herbanomic.com M - F 9am to 5pm EST

Order by Phone at 866-388-7003 or online at https://www.herbanomics.com M - F 9am to 5pm EST


Humic & Fulvic Trace Minerals Complex - Nature's most important supplement! Vivid Dreams again!

HNEX HydroNano EXtracellular Water - Improve immune system health and reduce inflammation.

Ultimate Clinical Potency Curcumin - Natural pain relief, reduce inflammation and so much more.

MitoCopper - Bioavailable Copper destroys pathogens and gives you more energy. (See Blood Video)

Oxy Powder - Natural Colon Cleanser!  Cleans out toxic buildup with oxygen!

Nascent Iodine - Promotes detoxification, mental focus and thyroid health.

Smart Meter Cover -  Reduces Smart Meter radiation by 96%! (See Video).

Report abuse

    Comments

    Your Comments
    Question   Razz  Sad   Evil  Exclaim  Smile  Redface  Biggrin  Surprised  Eek   Confused   Cool  LOL   Mad   Twisted  Rolleyes   Wink  Idea  Arrow  Neutral  Cry   Mr. Green

    MOST RECENT
    Load more ...

    SignUp

    Login

    Newsletter

    Email this story
    Email this story

    If you really want to ban this commenter, please write down the reason:

    If you really want to disable all recommended stories, click on OK button. After that, you will be redirect to your options page.