Philosophical roots of the term naturopathy or naturopathic
medicine date back thousands of years. Drawing from the curing wisdom of many cultures including Indian (Ayurveda), Chinese
(Traditional Chinese Medicine), Native American, and Greek (Hippocratic),
naturopathic medicine is a system of medicine based on six
time-tested principles:
The healing power of nature:
The body has considerable
power to cure itself, and the role of the naturopathic physician
is to facilitate this natural process with the aid of natural,
nontoxic therapies.
Treat the cause rather than the effect:
Naturopathic
physicians seek the underlying cause of a disease rather than
simply suppressing the symptoms. They avoid suppression of the
natural healing wisdom of the body, such as fever and inflammation.
Symptoms are viewed as expressions of the body's natural attempt
to heal while the causes can spring from the physical, mental/emotional,
and spiritual levels.
First, do no harm:
By employing safe and effective natural
therapies, naturopathic physicians are committed to the principle
of causing no harm to the patient.
Treat the whole person:
The individual is viewed as a
whole, composed of a complex interaction of physical, mental/emotional,
spiritual, social, and other factors. This multifactorial approach
results in a therapeutic approach in which no disease is
automatically seen as incurable.
The physician is a teacher:
Naturopathic physicians are
first and foremost teachers who educate, empower, and motivate the
patient to assume more personal responsibility for his or her
health by adopting a healthy attitude, lifestyle, and diet.
Prevention is the best cure:
Naturopathic physicians are
preventive medicine specialists. Prevention of disease is
accomplished through education and a lifestyle that supports
health.