Increasing use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) therapies such as chiropractic, massage therapy, and herbal medicine, raises questions about the clinically appropriate use of CAM in pediatrics. Nonjudicious use of CAM therapies may cause either direct harm or, by creating an unwarranted financial and emotional burden, indirect harm. When advising patients concerning CAM therapies, pediatricians face 2 major legal risks: medical malpractice and professional discipline. Pediatricians can incorporate these considerations into advising and clinical decision-making about CAM therapies to address the best interest of the pediatric patient while helping to manage potential liability risk. This article provides a suggested framework, including asking the following questions: (1) Do parents elect to abandon effective care when the child's condition is serious or life-threatening? (2) Will use of the CAM therapy otherwise divert the child from imminently necessary conventional treatment? (3) Are the CAM therapies selected known to be unsafe and/or ineffective? (4) Have the proper parties consented to the use of the CAM therapy? (5) Is the risk-benefit ratio of the proposed CAM therapy acceptable to a reasonable, similarly situated clinician, and does the therapy have at least minority acceptance or support in the medical literature? Such an approach ideally can help guide the pediatrician toward clinical conduct that is clinically responsible, ethically appropriate, and legally defensible.
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March 2005
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March 01 2005
Complementary Therapies in Pediatrics: A Legal Perspective
Michael H. Cohen, JD, MBA;
Michael H. Cohen, JD, MBA
*Division for Research and Education in Complementary and Integrative Medical Therapies, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
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Kathi J. Kemper, MD, MPH
Kathi J. Kemper, MD, MPH
‡Department of Pediatrics, Brenner Children's Hospital, Wake Forest University Health Sciences, Winston-Salem, North Carolina
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Address correspondence to Michael H. Cohen, JD, MBA, Harvard Medical School, Osher Institute, 401 Park Dr, 22W, Boston, MA 02215. E-mail: michael_cohen@hms.harvard.edu
Pediatrics (2005) 115 (3): 774–780.
Article history
Accepted:
July 30 2004
Citation
Michael H. Cohen, Kathi J. Kemper; Complementary Therapies in Pediatrics: A Legal Perspective. Pediatrics March 2005; 115 (3): 774–780. 10.1542/peds.2004-1093
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