This article defines Complementary and Integrative Health (CIH) as a group of diverse medical and health care systems, practices, and products that are not presently considered part of conventional medicine. Complementary approaches are used together with conventional treatments; integrative health refers to the coordinated use of both evidence-based conventional and complementary approaches. Common modalities include acupuncture, manual therapies (massage, chiropractic), mind-body practices (meditation, yoga, tai chi), natural products (herbal supplements, probiotics), and traditional systems (traditional Chinese medicine, Ayurveda). Core features: (1) whole person focus (physical, emotional, mental, social, spiritual dimensions), (2) patient-centred approach (active participation, self-care), (3) evidence review (some modalities have strong research support for specific conditions), (4) safety monitoring (interactions, side effects, quality control). The article addresses: objectives of CIH; key concepts including integrative medicine, evidence-based complementary practice, and safety; core mechanisms such as acupuncture mechanisms, mindfulness stress reduction, and herbal pharmacology; international comparisons and debated issues (regulation of practitioners, insurance coverage, research quality); summary and emerging trends (integration into cancer care, virtual mind-body programmes, personalised natural products); and a Q&A section.
This article describes CIH without endorsing specific therapies. Objectives commonly cited: providing additional options for symptom management, addressing patient preferences, reducing reliance on medications, and improving quality of life.
Key terminology:
Selected modalities and evidence strength (National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health – NCCIH, systematic reviews):
Safety considerations:
Regulation of CIH practitioners (varies by country):
Integration into conventional care settings:
CIH use (prevalence in general population, 30-50% in high-income countries):
| Modality | US (2022) | Europe (average) | Australia |
|---|---|---|---|
| Any CIH | 35% | 25-40% | 50% |
| Natural products | 18% | 15-25% | 25% |
| Yoga | 15% | 5-10% | 10% |
| Meditation | 14% | 5-8% | 8% |
| Acupuncture | 3% | 2-5% | 4% |
Debated issues:
Summary: CIH includes acupuncture, manual therapies, mind-body practices, and natural products. Evidence supports acupuncture for pain, mindfulness for anxiety/depression, and omega-3s for cardiovascular health. Safety concerns include supplement quality and drug interactions. Integration with conventional care is growing.
Emerging trends:
Q1: Can natural products replace conventional medications?
A: Rarely. For most conditions, natural products have weaker evidence than medications and are not FDA/EMA approved as drug. They may be used as adjuncts (e.g., omega-3s alongside statins) or for prevention.
Q2: Is acupuncture safe?
A: Yes, when performed by qualified practitioners using sterile, single-use needles. Serious complications (pneumothorax, infections) are rare (estimated <1 per 10,000 treatments).
Q3: Do I need to tell my physician about CIH use?
A: Yes. Many patients do not disclose CIH use (underreporting 30-70%). Disclosing allows physicians to check for interactions and coordinate care.
https://www.nccih.nih.gov/
https://www.who.int/health-topics/traditional-complementary-and-integrative-medicine
https://www.acupuncture.org.uk/