Regulation of non-conventional therapies in Portugal: lessons learnt for strengthening human resources in health

Abstract Background The integration of non-conventional therapies (NCT) into health policies and health services delivery is a worldwide trend and might have a role in achieving Universal Health Coverage. WHO has encouraged countries to integrate NCT into health service delivery and to increase the...

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Main Authors: Pascoal Amaral, Inês Fronteira
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-09-01
Series:Human Resources for Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12960-021-00655-3
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spelling doaj-a5e2e037bf754a06bfa5edb1dd7eb6972021-09-19T11:55:54ZengBMCHuman Resources for Health1478-44912021-09-011911710.1186/s12960-021-00655-3Regulation of non-conventional therapies in Portugal: lessons learnt for strengthening human resources in healthPascoal Amaral0Inês Fronteira1Escola de Medicina Tradicional Chinesa de LisboaGlobal Health and Tropical Medicine, Instituto de Higiene e Medicina Tropical, Universidade Nova de LisboaAbstract Background The integration of non-conventional therapies (NCT) into health policies and health services delivery is a worldwide trend and might have a role in achieving Universal Health Coverage. WHO has encouraged countries to integrate NCT into health service delivery and to increase the interest and utilization by consumers. Following two resolutions by the European Parliament and by the Council of Europe, in the late 1990s, recommending the recognition of NCT and calling for EU legislation on non-conventional forms of medicine, Portugal initiated, in 2003, its path towards regulation of NCT. We analyze this process and discuss its implications and impacts in terms of health policies, health services delivery and overall health workforce. Case presentation The need to regulate NCT in Portugal stemmed from a growing demand for NCT (and acceptability) among lay citizens and a positive attitude among conventional health professionals which also advocated for a regulatory framework. Political efforts undertaken since 2003 allowed for important advances in the regulation of NCT, beneficiating safe professional practices, and ensuring future academic training at the highest standards, with the defining moment of the social and legal model transition occurring in 2013, when acupuncture, chiropractic, homeopathy, naturopathy, osteopathy, phytotherapy and traditional Chinese Medicine were recognized and regulated. Nevertheless, and because the process knew important time gaps, significant deficiencies arose, mainly between regulation of the training and of the professional activities and the capacity to ensure the continuous production of NCT professionals at an acceptable rate and with minimum quality standards guaranteed. Conclusions The regulation of NCT in Portugal was lengthy but steady and was able to bring consumers a safer practice environment and NCT professionals a legal and deontological umbrella for their training, practice, and professional development. Nevertheless, and despite the growing acceptability and normative quality assurance of NCT and its workforce, the regulation process has highlighted some fragilities in terms of accessibility and availability that need attention and urgent action to achieve universal coverage.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12960-021-00655-3Non-conventional therapiesRegulationWorkforcePortugalEuropean Union
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pascoal Amaral
Inês Fronteira
spellingShingle Pascoal Amaral
Inês Fronteira
Regulation of non-conventional therapies in Portugal: lessons learnt for strengthening human resources in health
Human Resources for Health
Non-conventional therapies
Regulation
Workforce
Portugal
European Union
author_facet Pascoal Amaral
Inês Fronteira
author_sort Pascoal Amaral
title Regulation of non-conventional therapies in Portugal: lessons learnt for strengthening human resources in health
title_short Regulation of non-conventional therapies in Portugal: lessons learnt for strengthening human resources in health
title_full Regulation of non-conventional therapies in Portugal: lessons learnt for strengthening human resources in health
title_fullStr Regulation of non-conventional therapies in Portugal: lessons learnt for strengthening human resources in health
title_full_unstemmed Regulation of non-conventional therapies in Portugal: lessons learnt for strengthening human resources in health
title_sort regulation of non-conventional therapies in portugal: lessons learnt for strengthening human resources in health
publisher BMC
series Human Resources for Health
issn 1478-4491
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract Background The integration of non-conventional therapies (NCT) into health policies and health services delivery is a worldwide trend and might have a role in achieving Universal Health Coverage. WHO has encouraged countries to integrate NCT into health service delivery and to increase the interest and utilization by consumers. Following two resolutions by the European Parliament and by the Council of Europe, in the late 1990s, recommending the recognition of NCT and calling for EU legislation on non-conventional forms of medicine, Portugal initiated, in 2003, its path towards regulation of NCT. We analyze this process and discuss its implications and impacts in terms of health policies, health services delivery and overall health workforce. Case presentation The need to regulate NCT in Portugal stemmed from a growing demand for NCT (and acceptability) among lay citizens and a positive attitude among conventional health professionals which also advocated for a regulatory framework. Political efforts undertaken since 2003 allowed for important advances in the regulation of NCT, beneficiating safe professional practices, and ensuring future academic training at the highest standards, with the defining moment of the social and legal model transition occurring in 2013, when acupuncture, chiropractic, homeopathy, naturopathy, osteopathy, phytotherapy and traditional Chinese Medicine were recognized and regulated. Nevertheless, and because the process knew important time gaps, significant deficiencies arose, mainly between regulation of the training and of the professional activities and the capacity to ensure the continuous production of NCT professionals at an acceptable rate and with minimum quality standards guaranteed. Conclusions The regulation of NCT in Portugal was lengthy but steady and was able to bring consumers a safer practice environment and NCT professionals a legal and deontological umbrella for their training, practice, and professional development. Nevertheless, and despite the growing acceptability and normative quality assurance of NCT and its workforce, the regulation process has highlighted some fragilities in terms of accessibility and availability that need attention and urgent action to achieve universal coverage.
topic Non-conventional therapies
Regulation
Workforce
Portugal
European Union
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12960-021-00655-3
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