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What’s The Big Picture? It is important to clarify what the differences are and to address all forms of medicine as patients are often confused because these fields overlap in language but differ in philosophy, scope, and integration.
Think of healthcare approaches as different lenses for understanding the body. Each lens offers something valuable but Integrative Medicine uses the widest lens, allowing us to see the whole person, the interconnections, integral parts, and the full range of therapeutic options. Below will explain why Integrative Medicine is the most comprehensive, interconnected model, without diminishing the value of the other fields.
Clear Differences Explained Simply: Many people hear terms like integrative, natural, functional, or naturopathic medicine used interchangeably but they are not the same. Each approach works with the body differently and has a different scope of practice.
Integrative Medicine Doctor- IMD (Whole-Person, Whole-Systems Care)
What it is: Integrative Medicine is a comprehensive, whole-person, whole-systems approach that blends evidence-based conventional medicine with natural, nutritional, lifestyle, mind-body, and complementary therapies intentionally, collaboratively and thoughtfully.
How it works:
Why it’s different:
Integrative Medicine doesn’t choose one philosophy, instead it integrates everything that works, safely and evidence-informed, to support healing, resilience, and vitality.
👉 This is why it captures the full picture where others do not. Dr. Hartman holds a Ph.D. and Doctorate in Integrative Medicine (IMD)
Key features:
Important for patients to know: In Indiana, medical diagnoses come only from MDs or DOs. As a non-medical integrative doctor, Dr. Hartman does not diagnose, medically claim to treat or prescribe pharmaceutical drugs, but collaborates closely with medical physicians to support healing, resilience, and whole-body wellness.
👉 Integrative Medicine is not defined by licensure, it is a lens, framework, and philosophy of care. It see the whole picture of what patients are dealing with, instead of individual pieces.
Alternative Medicine Doctor (DAM)
What it is:
Alternative medicine refers to approaches used instead of conventional medical care.
Key distinction:
Why this matters:
Integrative Medicine is not alternative—it’s inclusive. It blends therapies rather than forcing a choice between them.
Naturopathic Medicine, Naturopathic Doctors & Traditional Naturopathic Doctors
What it is:
Naturopathic medicine emphasizes nutrition, food-as-medicine, supplementation, botanical therapies, lifestyle interventions, and mind-body practices to support the body’s natural healing processes. A system of care rooted in natural and nutritional therapies, lifestyle counseling, and prevention. It focuses on natural therapies and the body’s innate healing ability, often using nutrition, botanicals, lifestyle, and physical medicine.
Strengths:
Limitations:
Naturopathic Physicians (NDs)
What they are:
Naturopathic physicians are licensed clinicians trained in naturopathic medicine. Some complete a four-year doctoral program in naturopathic medicine, pass the Naturopathic Physicians Licensing Exam (NPLEX), and are licensed to diagnose and treat patients using natural therapies. Their scope and training vary significantly by state and program, and they are not the same as naturopathic doctors.
Important distinction for patients:
Not all natural or holistic providers are NDs, and not all NDs practice integrative medicine. The philosophy and scope depend on the practitioner, not just the title.
Natural Medicine Doctor (NMD or DNM)
What it is:
Natural medicine emphasizes natural therapies such as nutrition, supplements, herbs, homeopathic therapy, lifestyle interventions, and mind-body practices.
Strengths:
Limitations:
(Dr. Hartman holds a PhD, Doctorate, and Masters in Natural Medicine (NMD) and incorporates these principles within an integrative framework.)
Functional Medicine Doctor (FM or FMCP or FMCP -M (if medical)
What it is:
Functional medicine focuses on biochemical pathways and root causes, often using advanced lab testing to understand how systems are functioning.
Strengths:
Limitations:
Why Integrative Medicine Benefits Patients More Fully Than All The Others
Integrative Medicine doesn’t replace these approaches it weaves them all together by:
In short: Integrative Medicine asks not only “What’s wrong?” but “Who is this person, and What does their body need to heal?” “What is the body saying?” “What interconnections are malfunctioning” and “What is the underlying cause(s) that will lead to what the real root cause(s)”
Integrative Medicine is the only model that intentionally holds all the pieces at once.
This table below is designed to help patients see the difference without sounding dismissive of other fields. It is compliant with Indiana scope considerations, and aligned with my philosophy at Whole Body Healthcare and Wellness.
Understanding Different Approaches to Care
| Approach | Primary Focus | Strengths | What May Be Missing |
| Integrative Medicine | Whole person & whole-body systems | Blends evidence-based medicine with nutrition, natural therapies, lifestyle, and mind-body care; honors physical, emotional, mental, environmental, and spiritual interconnections; collaborative and personalized | Nothing is excluded—this model intentionally integrates all appropriate approaches |
| Natural Medicine | Nutrition & natural healing | Strong focus on food-as-medicine, supplements, botanicals, lifestyle, and prevention; supports the body’s innate healing capacity | Limited integration with medical diagnostics or conventional treatments when needed |
| Functional Medicine | Biochemistry & root causes | Advanced lab testing; systems-biology approach; useful for metabolic, hormonal, and inflammatory patterns | Can be lab-driven and reductionist; may overlook emotional, relational, and spiritual dimensions |
| Naturopathic Medicine | Natural & preventive care | Nutrition-focused; lifestyle and root-cause oriented; supports natural healing | Often practiced within a natural-only framework; may not fully integrate conventional care |
| Naturopathic Physicians (NDs) | Naturopathic clinical care | Licensed providers; may use limited allopathic therapies depending on state law; strong natural medicine training | Scope varies by state; not all practice integratively; diagnostic and prescriptive authority differs from MD/DO |
| Alternative Medicine | Non-conventional therapies | Offers additional options outside mainstream care | Often used instead of conventional medicine; may lack evidence or integration |
| Conventional (Allopathic) Medicine | Disease diagnosis & management | Essential for diagnosis, acute care, imaging, medications, and procedures | Often time-limited; does not address lifestyle, root causes, whole-person wellness etc. |
Why Integrative Medicine Stands Apart
Integrative Medicine doesn’t ask patients to choose between approaches.
It asks: What combination of therapies best supports this unique person—right now?
That’s why nothing is left out.
To learn why Dr. Harman chose Integrative Medicine as her main focus visit “Why Dr. Hartman Practices Integrative Medicine“