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Complementary Medicine in Australia and New Zealand - Its popularisation, legitimation and dilemmas (Hardcover)
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Complementary Medicine in Australia and New Zealand - Its popularisation, legitimation and dilemmas (Hardcover)
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In the late nineteenth century on the eve of the formation of
Australia as a nation-state in 1902, the Australian medical system
could be best described as a pluralistic one in the sense that
while regular medicine constituted the predominant medical system,
it was not clearly the dominant one in that regular physicians
faced competition from a wide array of alternative practitioners.
As regular medicine increasingly assumed the guise of being
scientific, it evolved into biomedicine and developed a link with
corporate and state interests in the early twentieth century in
Australia, as in other capitalist developed societies. Relying upon
state support, Australian biomedicine has achieved dominance over
alternative medical system, such as homeopathy, herbal medicine,
osteopathy, chiropractic, and naturopathy. Various social forces,
particularly the development of the holistic health movement, have
served to challenge biomedical dominance in Australia, like
elsewhere. What started out as a popular health movement in the
early 1970s has evolved into the professionalized entity that is
generally referred to as 'complementary medicine' in Australia (as
opposed to 'complementary and alternative medicine' in the US and
UK). Complementary medicine in Australia encompasses many medical
systems and therapies. Since the 1980s certain heterodox medical
systems, particularly chiropractic, osteopathy, acupuncture and
Chinese medicine, naturopathy, Western herbalism, and homeopathy,
have achieved considerable recognition from the Australian state,
either at the federal level or at the state and territorial levels.
Indeed, the Australian state appears to have gone further than any
other Anglophone country in terms of providing public funding for
complementary medicine education. Conversely, it has committed a
limited amount of funding for complementary medicine research
compared to the United States.
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