Alternative medicine describes practices used instead of normal medical treatments. Some patients seek these practices along with normal medicine. When the patient's medical doctor works with an alternative medicine therapist, this is called "complementary medicine."
Alternative medicine includes practices that incorporate spiritual, metaphysical, or religious belief; non-evidence-based practices, non-European medical traditions, or newly developed approaches to healing.
Examples include acupuncture, chiropractic and homeopathy.
Alternative medicine does not prevent or cure any disease.
The opposite of alternative medicine are medical diagnoses and treatments that are proven to work. This is called evidence-based or conventional medicine.
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| Terminology |
- Cargo cult science
- Charlatan
- Crank
- Fringe theory
- Fringe science
- Pseudoarchaeology
- Pseudohistory
- Pseudomathematics
- Junk science
- Paranormal
- Pathological science
- Quackery
- Snake oil
- Superseded scientific theory
- True-believer syndrome
- Voodoo Science
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Topics characterized as pseudoscience | | Medicine | |
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| Social science | |
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| Physics | |
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| Other | |
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Promoters of pseudoscience | |
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| Related topics |
- Bogdanov affair
- Bourgeois pseudoscience
- Demarcation problem
- Scientific method
- Suppressed research in the Soviet Union
- List of topics characterized as pseudoscience
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| Resources |
- Committee for Skeptical Inquiry
- Cults of Unreason
- An Encyclopedia of Claims, Frauds, and Hoaxes of the Occult and Supernatural
- Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science
- Fortean Times
- JREF
- Quackwatch
- Skeptical Inquirer
- The Natural History of Quackery
- The Psychology of the Occult
- The Ragged Edge of Science
- The Skeptic Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience
- The Skeptic's Dictionary
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