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Glossary›Integrative Health

Glossary

Integrative Health

A healing-oriented approach combining conventional medicine with complementary therapies to treat the whole person—body, mind, and spirit—through coordinated, evidence-based care.

What is Integrative Health?

Integrative health is a healthcare approach that coordinates conventional medical treatments with complementary and alternative therapies to address the whole person across physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual dimensions. Rather than treating disease in isolation, integrative health emphasizes well-coordinated care among multiple providers, multimodal interventions, and the therapeutic relationship between practitioner and patient. It differs from “alternative medicine” (which replaces conventional care) and “complementary medicine” (which supplements it) by explicitly aiming for systematic integration of diverse modalities under an evidence-informed framework.

The National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH) defines it as bringing together conventional approaches—medication, physical rehabilitation, psychotherapy—with complementary approaches like acupuncture, yoga, massage, and herbal medicine, with emphasis on treating the whole person rather than isolated symptoms or organ systems.

Origins & Lineage

The modern integrative health movement emerged from multiple lineages. Early 20th-century “drugless healing” practitioners—naturopaths, chiropractors, and osteopaths—advanced philosophies based on the body’s inherent healing capacity, or “vital force,” drawing on figures like Henry Lindlahr, William C. Schulze, and Walter B. Cannon. By the 1950s, natural healing reached a professional peak in the United States under leaders like W.A. Budden and Robert V. Carroll before declining under the dominance of pharmaceutical-oriented allopathic medicine.

The field’s contemporary form crystallized in the 1990s. Physician Andrew Weil founded the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine at the University of Arizona in 1994, creating the first academic fellowship to train physicians in integrative approaches. Weil, a Harvard-trained physician who studied ethnobotany and alternative healing systems globally in the 1970s, became widely recognized as the “father of integrative medicine.” His 1983 book Health and Healing critiqued conventional medicine’s over-reliance on drugs and technology, advocating preventive therapies and natural substances.

In parallel, the U.S. federal government established the Office of Alternative Medicine in 1991, which became the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) in 1999, then renamed the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH) in December 2014. This name change reflected a deliberate shift from “alternative” to “integrative,” signaling coordination rather than replacement of conventional medicine.

Globally, the World Health Organization has promoted traditional, complementary, and integrative medicine (TCIM) since the early 2000s, recognizing that these practices serve billions worldwide and can support universal health coverage when integrated responsibly.

How It’s Practiced

Integrative health operates through team-based, coordinated care models. A patient might see a primary care physician for medication management, a licensed acupuncturist for pain relief, a nutritionist for dietary guidance, and a clinical psychologist for stress reduction—all communicating within a unified treatment plan.

Common modalities include:

  • Mind-body practices: meditation, yoga, tai chi, qigong, biofeedback, guided imagery, mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR)
  • Manual therapies: acupuncture, chiropractic adjustment, massage, craniosacral therapy, reflexology
  • Natural products: herbal medicine, nutritional supplements, probiotics (though FDA regulation is limited)
  • Whole medical systems: Traditional Chinese Medicine, Ayurveda, naturopathy, homeopathy
  • Lifestyle interventions: nutrition counseling, exercise prescription, sleep hygiene, stress management

Practitioners emphasize personalized care plans tailored to individual symptoms, resources, developmental stage, and health goals. Many integrative programs focus on chronic conditions poorly served by conventional approaches alone: chronic pain, autoimmune disorders, cancer-related side effects, anxiety, insomnia, migraines, and digestive disorders.

Integrative Health Today

Integrative health has entered mainstream academic medicine. Major medical centers—Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, Stanford, Johns Hopkins—now operate integrative medicine departments offering clinical services, residency rotations, and fellowship training. The American Board of Physician Specialties offers board certification in integrative medicine through the American Board of Integrative Medicine (ABOIM). The Andrew Weil Center has trained over 2,000 fellows from 50 U.S. states and 27 countries.

The U.S. military health system has become a significant adopter, particularly for managing the “polytrauma triad” of chronic pain, traumatic brain injury (TBI), and PTSD among service members, with acupuncture, chiropractic, and mind-body techniques offered at military treatment facilities as alternatives to opioid-based pain management.

Patients encounter integrative health through:

  • Outpatient clinics within hospitals and medical centers
  • Wellness centers offering group classes (yoga, meditation, nutrition workshops)
  • Cancer support programs (“integrative oncology”) providing acupuncture, massage, and counseling alongside chemotherapy
  • Residential retreats focusing on intensive lifestyle change and stress reduction
  • Telehealth consultations with integrative physicians and health coaches

According to 2012 surveys, over 30% of American adults use healthcare approaches not typically part of conventional medicine. The field continues to expand through research funding (NCCIH’s budget exceeded $1.6 billion cumulatively by 2012), clinical trials, and professional education.

Common Misconceptions

Integrative health is not a rejection of conventional medicine. It explicitly includes pharmaceuticals, surgery, and evidence-based interventions when appropriate. Practitioners do not treat acute medical emergencies or replace oncologists, cardiologists, or surgeons—they collaborate with them.

It is not synonymous with “holistic medicine” (which may avoid conventional drugs entirely) or “functional medicine” (which emphasizes root-cause investigation through specialized laboratory testing). While overlapping, integrative health is distinguished by its emphasis on coordinating diverse therapeutic modalities within conventional healthcare settings.

It is not inherently unscientific, though critics note that many complementary modalities lack robust clinical trial evidence, and regulation of supplements is inconsistent. Reputable integrative programs prioritize research, informed consent, and disclosure of evidence quality. The NCCIH has faced criticism for funding studies of implausible therapies, yet it remains the federal government’s lead agency for research in this domain.

Integrative health does not guarantee that all practitioners are equivalently trained. State licensure laws for acupuncturists, naturopaths, and massage therapists vary widely. Patients should verify credentials and seek providers affiliated with academic medical centers or professional organizations like the Academic Consortium for Integrative Medicine & Health.

How to Begin

Start with an integrative medicine consultation at a hospital-based integrative health center, if available in your area. Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, and university medical centers offer these services. During the consult, a physician will assess your health history, current treatments, and goals, then recommend specific modalities and coordinate referrals.

For self-directed exploration, consider:

  • Reading Andrew Weil’s Spontaneous Healing (1995) or Eight Weeks to Optimum Health (1997), foundational texts explaining integrative principles
  • Exploring the NCCIH website (nccih.nih.gov) for evidence-based information on specific herbs, supplements, and practices
  • Trying an 8-week Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) course, the most researched mind-body intervention, available in-person or online
  • Consulting the Society for Integrative Oncology or Academic Consortium for Integrative Medicine & Health to locate credentialed providers
  • Discussing complementary therapies with your primary care physician before adding supplements or modalities, especially if you take prescription medications

Integrative health works best as a partnership—between patient and provider, and between diverse healing traditions—guided by evidence, common sense, and respect for the complexity of human health.

Related terms

holistic healthfunctional medicineayurvedatraditional chinese medicinemindfulness based stress reductionnaturopathy
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