Americans spend a good chunk of their health care dollars on alternative medicine, such as acupuncture, yoga, chiropractic care, and natural supplements, a new government report shows.
In fact, they paid more than $30 billion out of pocket in 2012 on chiropractors and other complementary health practitioners, as well as supplements and other forms of alternative medicine.
“Substantial numbers of Americans spent billions of dollars out-of-pocket on these approaches—an indication that users believe enough in the value of these approaches to pay for them,” said study co-author Richard Nahin.
He is lead epidemiologist at the U.S. National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health.
Expenditures in 2012 included:
• $14.7 billion out-of-pocket on visits to complementary practitioners such as chiropractors, yoga instructors, acupuncturists or massage therapists — nearly 30 percent of what people spent on traditional medical services.
• $12.8 billion on natural product supplements, which was about one-quarter of what people spent on prescription drugs.
• $2.7 billion on books, CDs, videos and other self-help materials related to complementary health.
Overall, spending on complementary medicine amounted to just over 9 percent of out-of-pocket health care expenditures and about 1 percent of all money spent on health care in the United States, the researchers found.
Most of this alternative health care is being used by adults, not children, the report found. The researchers said about $28 billion was spent on adults, compared with just $1.9 billion for children.
Even people with lower incomes spend quite a bit on complementary medicine, according to the report published June 22 in the
National Health Statistics Reports.
Nahin and his colleagues found that families making less than $25,000 a year spent, on average, $314 out-of-pocket on visits to complementary health practitioners in 2012, and an average $389 on natural supplements.
“That’s telling us that even people with low incomes are willing to spend a substantial amount on these products and interventions,” Nahin said.
Families earning much higher incomes—$100,000 or more a year—spent an average of $518 on complementary practitioners and an average of $377 on supplements, the findings showed.
Other data suggests that there are trends within complementary medicine regarding the popularity of different approaches.
For example, Nahin explained, the use of yoga has increased dramatically, while chiropractic care and massage therapy has tended to remain level.
“Yoga is going up because it’s more accepted in the culture, and it’s being used for lifestyle changes and as a form of low-impact exercise,” Nahin said.
But while people use yoga to promote wellness and well-being, they use chiropractic care and acupuncture as a treatment for a medical condition, most often chronic pain, he said.
“If you look at data on back pain across the last 10 years, it’s been fairly flat,” Nahin said. “It hasn’t changed, so perhaps use of these types of practitioners that treat back pain wouldn’t change.”
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