Functional medicine is a systems-based, root-cause approach to health. It often includes:

  • Extensive lifestyle and nutritional interventions

  • Gut health, inflammation, and hormone balancing

  • Personalised lab tests

  • Use of supplements and sometimes herbal medicine

  • 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:

  1. Nutrition and Anti-inflammatory Diets

    • Strong evidence that Mediterranean-style and low-inflammatory diets improve outcomes in:

      • Asthma

      • Rheumatoid arthritis

      • IBS

      • Type 2 diabetes

      • Depression

    • Functional medicine often emphasises whole-food diets, removal of triggers (gluten, dairy), and gut healing.

  2. Mind-Body Practices

    • Meditation, breathwork, cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT), and trauma-informed care show clear benefits for:

      • Anxiety and depression

      • Chronic pain and fatigue

      • Breathing-related anxiety

    • These are often core components of integrative or functional care.

  3. Supplement Use

    • Evidence supports:

      • Vitamin D for immunity and asthma support (including ABPA)

      • Magnesium for muscle and nerve health

      • B12 and folate in neuropathy

      • Omega-3s for inflammation

    • Functional medicine practitioners often use lab-guided supplementation.

  4. Patient-centred care model

    • Evidence shows longer consultations, continuity of care, and active listening improve outcomes in chronic illness, even without radical therapies.


❌ Where Evidence Is Weaker or Emerging:

  • Many supplement protocols and “gut healing” programs are not yet backed by large clinical trials.

  • Some tests used in functional medicine (e.g., food intolerance panels, microbiome mapping) lack standardisation and clinical validation.

  • Functional medicine can be very expensive, and quality varies a lot between practitioners.

  • Some critics argue it can promote over-testing and unnecessary restrictions.


📚 Scientific Studies & Reviews

Area Summary of Evidence
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:

  • You’re looking to reduce reliance on medications like corticosteroids

  • You want to explore nutrition, breathwork, and natural anti-inflammatory strategies

  • 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:

  • You’re being sold expensive supplements, unvalidated tests, or restrictive diets without clear rationale

  • You’re being advised to abandon proven therapies like antifungals or steroids without a safe taper


✅ How to Proceed Safely:

  • Choose a practitioner who is medically trained (e.g. GP, nurse, or naturopathic doctor with evidence-based credentials)

  • Ask for collaboration with your respiratory or infectious disease team

  • Focus on nutrition, anxiety management, physical rehab, and reducing inflammation as starting points

  • Be skeptical of miracle cures or overly rigid protocols

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