Functional medicine is a systems-based, root-cause approach to health. It often includes:
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Extensive lifestyle and nutritional interventions
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Gut health, inflammation, and hormone balancing
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Personalised lab tests
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Use of supplements and sometimes herbal medicine
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Emphasis on long appointments and listening to patient history
It’s sometimes practised by conventionally trained doctors who’ve moved toward a holistic model.
📊 What Evidence Supports It?
✅ Areas with Evidence Backing:
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Nutrition and Anti-inflammatory Diets
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Strong evidence that Mediterranean-style and low-inflammatory diets improve outcomes in:
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Asthma
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Rheumatoid arthritis
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IBS
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Type 2 diabetes
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Depression
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Functional medicine often emphasises whole-food diets, removal of triggers (gluten, dairy), and gut healing.
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Mind-Body Practices
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Meditation, breathwork, cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT), and trauma-informed care show clear benefits for:
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Anxiety and depression
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Chronic pain and fatigue
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Breathing-related anxiety
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These are often core components of integrative or functional care.
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Supplement Use
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Evidence supports:
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Vitamin D for immunity and asthma support (including ABPA)
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Magnesium for muscle and nerve health
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B12 and folate in neuropathy
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Omega-3s for inflammation
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Functional medicine practitioners often use lab-guided supplementation.
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Patient-centred care model
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Evidence shows longer consultations, continuity of care, and active listening improve outcomes in chronic illness, even without radical therapies.
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❌ Where Evidence Is Weaker or Emerging:
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Many supplement protocols and “gut healing” programs are not yet backed by large clinical trials.
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Some tests used in functional medicine (e.g., food intolerance panels, microbiome mapping) lack standardisation and clinical validation.
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Functional medicine can be very expensive, and quality varies a lot between practitioners.
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Some critics argue it can promote over-testing and unnecessary restrictions.
📚 Scientific Studies & Reviews
Area | Summary of Evidence |
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Asthma & Diet | Anti-inflammatory diets (Mediterranean, DASH) reduce exacerbations (Cochrane, 2021) |
Gut-Lung Axis | Emerging research on gut health affecting lung inflammation (2020 reviews in Frontiers in Immunology) |
Functional Medicine model | One study at Cleveland Clinic showed improved outcomes vs standard care for chronic disease after 6–12 months (Journal of the American Medical Association, 2020) |
Stress & Breathing Disorders | CBT, mindfulness and pacing improve asthma, COPD and chronic breathlessness (NICE guidelines) |
🩺 So—Should You Consider It?
Possibly yes, if:
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You’re looking to reduce reliance on medications like corticosteroids
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You want to explore nutrition, breathwork, and natural anti-inflammatory strategies
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You work with a qualified, experienced practitioner who respects your current treatments and doesn’t ask you to stop them
But approach with caution, if:
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You’re being sold expensive supplements, unvalidated tests, or restrictive diets without clear rationale
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You’re being advised to abandon proven therapies like antifungals or steroids without a safe taper
✅ How to Proceed Safely:
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Choose a practitioner who is medically trained (e.g. GP, nurse, or naturopathic doctor with evidence-based credentials)
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Ask for collaboration with your respiratory or infectious disease team
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Focus on nutrition, anxiety management, physical rehab, and reducing inflammation as starting points
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Be skeptical of miracle cures or overly rigid protocols
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