Categories
Naturopathy

The Six Core Principles of Naturopathy:

1. Vis Medicatrix Naturae – The Healing Power of Nature

Recognize, respect and promote the healing power of nature inherent in each person. Within each of us is contained the ability to restore and maintain health. The physician facilitates this capacity by identifying and removing obstacles to recovery, and educating the patient to cooperate with the healing process.

2. Tolle Causum – Identify and Treat the Cause

Identify and remove the causes of illness, rather than eliminate or suppress symptoms. Every illness has a cause, and symptoms are expressions of the body’s attempt to heal. To suppress a symptom is to undermine the body’s process of healing. The physician must evaluate fundamental underlying causes which may occur at many levels including physical, emotional, mental and spiritual. By directing treatment at root causes, symptoms resolve in the natural course of healing.

3. Primum Non Nocere – First do no harm

Provide the most effective health care available with the least risk to patients at all times. Recognizing that illness is a purposeful process of the organism, therapeutic action should be complimentary to and synergistic with the healing process, supporting and not antagonizing the body’s ability to heal. Consequently, suppressing symptoms without removing the underlying causes, and without rebuilding weakened organs, is considered harmful and is to be avoided, or at very least, minimized.

4. Treat the Whole Person – The multifactorial nature of healing and disease

Treat each person by considering all individual health factors and influences. We are more than our bodies. We are sentient beings capable of self knowledge, and driven to know the how and why of our creation, and the truth of our Creator. We are relational beings, and live internally complex lives. Effective care, therefore,

requires a personalized and comprehensive approach to evaluating fundamental disease causes, assessing accurate diagnoses and understanding of the underlying pathologies, and establishing appropriate treatment protocols to bring about true healing.

5. Docere – Doctor as Teacher

Educate, inspire rational hope and encourage self-responsibility for health. Through the model of a healthy, sensitive, interpersonal and cooperative doctor-patient relationship, the physician may catalyze and motivate effective change in lifestyle and adaptive habits. Yet the physician is first and always the student of health and of life, expecting nothing more from the patient than from him or herself. Congruence is the greater teacher, and the words spoken from a compassionate and equally committed heart to one’s own healing, caries power and conviction – “physician, heal thyself.”

6. Health Promotion – The Best Prevention

Emphasize the condition of health to promote well-being and to prevent diseases for the individual, each community and our world. The physician is concerned not only with recovery from disease, but equally with maintenance of health and development of ever increasing states of wellness. The simple dictum: “an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure,” speaks volumes. It is far easier to maintain health than to regain it. Life is about quality, and the healthier we are, the higher the quality of our relationships, our work, our giving, and our witness of our true purpose and reason for being.



Categories
Naturopathy

Naturopathic Education & Licensure

Naturopathic doctors in North America are primary care providers trained in conventional medical sciences, diagnosis and treatment, and are experts in “natural therapeutics”. Naturopathy’s focus is upon its philosophy of natural health rather than specific methods and so practitioners use a wide variety of treatment modalities. The core set of interventions defined by the Council on Naturopathic Medical Education and taught at all six accredited schools in North America include:

  • Botanical medicine & Homeopathy
  • Nutrition (examples include vegetarian and whole food diet, fasting, and abstention from alcohol and sugar)
  • Physical medicine (includes naturopathic, osseous and soft tissue manipulative therapy, physiotherapy, sports medicine, exercise and hydrotherapy)
  • Nature cures – a range of therapies based upon exposure to natural elements such as sunshine and fresh air
  • Psychological counseling (including methods of stress management)

A licensed Naturopathic Physician (N.D.) attends a four-year graduate level Naturopathic Medical School and is educated in all of the same basic sciences as an M.D., but also studies holistic and nontoxic approaches to therapy with a strong emphasis on disease prevention and optimizing wellness.

In addition to a standard medical curriculum, the Naturopathic Physician is required to complete four years of training in clinical nutrition, homeopathic medicine, botanical medicine, psychology, and counseling.

A Naturopathic Physician takes rigorous National Board Exams so that he or she may be licensed by a state as a primary care general practice physician. Licensed Naturopathic Physicians must fulfill state-mandated continuing education requirements annually, and will have a specific scope of practice defined by their state’s law.



Categories
Front Page Content Naturopathy

Naturopathic Medicine

Naturopathic Medicine is a complementary and alternative medical discipline which offers scientifically-proven and evidence-based natural therapies and emphasizes the body’s intrinsic ability to heal and maintain itself. It blends centuries-old holistic medicine with modern medical science.

Naturopathy covers all aspects of family health and provides effective treatments for many acute and chronic conditions.

Naturopaths use natural remedies such as herbs, nutrition and foods rather than surgery or synthetic drugs, as well as many additional treatment modalities, with practitioners emphasizing an integrative approach to patient care.

Naturopathic Medicine concentrates on whole-patient wellness – the medicine is tailored to the patient and emphasizes prevention and self-care.

Naturopathic Medicine seeks to find the underlying cause of the patient’s condition rather than focusing solely on symptomatic treatment.

As a primary care provider and health professional, Naturopathic Physicians collaborate as needed with other medical professionals by providing complementary therapies or referring patients when appropriate.

In the US, Naturopathic Medicine has been a distinct healthcare profession for over 100 years. Over the last three decades, more people than ever are seeking and benefiting from Naturopathic Medical Care, and the number of Naturopathic Doctors is growing at a record rate to accommodate this increased demand.