More Than Ever

Why Integrative Medicine Matters

Some health problems are refreshingly straightforward. A cavity? Head to the dentist. A broken finger? A quick trip to the ER sends you out with a cast, an ice pack, and an eye-catching wave. But then there are the issues that refuse to follow a simple script. They’re common, disruptive, and somehow immune to prescriptive solutions. Despite all the marvels of modern medicine, chronic conditions like migraines result in the same routine: pop a pill, wait it out, and cross your fingers.

Then there are issues like fibromyalgia, where the pain is real but the answers are not. Characterized by widespread body pain, sleep disruption, and brain fog, this common condition has no single test, no clear cause, and no definitive treatment. Injury, infection, or prolonged stress may play a role, but for many people, the diagnosis comes with more questions than clarity. And sometimes those questions are directed at the patient, about whether the problem is all in their head.

If trying to keep up with changing health guidelines, conflicting headlines, and a flood of wellness advice online is enough to make your head spin, you’re not alone. Add shifting CDC recommendations, political polarization around public health, and a healthcare system stretched thin, and it’s no wonder many people feel confused, let down, and increasingly disconnected from their most valuable resource, their own inner wisdom.

This is where integrative medicine steps in.

Integrative medicine isn’t “alternative.” It’s not anti–Western medicine or anti-science. At its core, integrative medicine blends the best of modern medical care with time-tested approaches. Nutrition, movement, mind-body practices, and relationship-centered care are tailored to the individual. It asks a simple but radical question: What does this person need right now to heal?

Santa Cruz has long been a hub for this kind of thinking, and three local practitioners exemplify why integrative medicine feels especially relevant today.

Elizabeth Esalen, The Lotus Collaborative

Elizabeth Esalen’s work sits at the intersection of trauma recovery, mental health, and embodiment. Founder of The Lotus Collaborative, Esalen created her practice after navigating her own recovery from an eating disorder and PTSD, experiences that revealed the limits of traditional talk therapy alone.

“The body holds what the mind can’t always articulate,” she says. Lotus was founded to address exactly that gap, integrating skill-based and body-based practices into mental health care. Meditation, yoga, breathwork, and mindfulness are not add-ons here; they’re central tools for healing trauma stored in the nervous system.

The lotus flower, growing through mud toward the light, serves as both metaphor and mission. Healing, Esalen emphasizes, is non-linear and deeply personal. Lotus operates as a collaborative model, where clients actively participate in shaping their recovery path, supported by a multidisciplinary team.

Esalen also brings decades of experience, having founded an eating disorder treatment center more than 15 years ago. Her approach prioritizes both staff well-being and client care, recognizing that sustainable healing requires healthy systems, not just individual effort. In a time when burnout and disembodiment are widespread, her work reminds us that reclaiming a sense of sovereignty over our bodies is foundational to wellness.

Dr. Aimee Shunney, Santa Cruz Integrative Medicine

Dr. Aimee Shunney has been practicing integrative medicine long before it became a buzzword. A naturopathic doctor with 25 years of experience, Shunney co-owns Santa Cruz Integrative Medicine with Dr. Rachel Abrams and acupuncturist Dr. Adriana Gonzalez, a cooperative model that reflects their philosophy.

Shunney’s path began with frustration. In her early 20s, working in inpatient treatment facilities for traumatized teens, she saw a system heavy on medication and light on humanity, with no time outdoors, poor nutrition, little attention to root causes. Searching for something better, she discovered naturopathic medicine in a Portland bookstore in the 1990s.

What drew her in was the “both/and” approach: the same rigorous training in anatomy and diagnostics as conventional medicine, paired with nutrition, lifestyle counseling, herbal medicine, and prevention. “Why wouldn’t you want all of it?” she asks.

Over the years, Shunney has watched integrative practices move into the mainstream. Probiotics once dismissed are now recommended by gastroenterologists. Diet, a topic long considered irrelevant by some specialists, is finally part of the conversation.

Still, she sees growing confusion as patients arrive overwhelmed by online information and conflicting guidance from authorities. Integrative practitioners, she believes, can serve as translators, helping patients discern what’s appropriate, safe, and individualized. “It’s not either/or,” she says. “It’s asking what combination of tools makes sense for this person at this time.”

Dr. Rachel Hollander, Hollander Holistic Health

Dr. Rachel Hollander’s work focuses on patients who often fall through the cracks of conventional medicine, those with chronic pain, fatigue, long COVID, and other symptoms that don’t show up neatly on tests.

A former family physician in Aptos, Hollander saw firsthand how 40 percent of patient complaints were rooted in mind-body interactions, yet were rarely addressed due to time constraints and limited training. Many of her current patients come to her after years of specialist visits without answers.

Now practicing virtually through Hollander Holistic Health, she offers one-hour sessions that integrate health coaching, brain retraining, pain reprocessing therapy, and emotional awareness. Her approach reframes chronic symptoms not as imagined, but as real experiences driven by nervous system patterns often shaped by stress or early childhood adversity.

Hollander’s work is also personal. After developing debilitating repetitive motion pain herself, she avoided surgery by discovering mind-body medicine. That recovery reshaped her understanding of healing and her practice, which now serves patients nationwide.

In a world where healthcare feels increasingly confusing and fragmented, integrative medicine offers something more comprehensive. In Santa Cruz, these practitioners remind us that healing isn’t about choosing sides, it’s about reconnecting the dots between mind, body, and spirit.

And in moments like this, that reconnection may be the medicine we need most.

To learn more about the work of these local expert practitioners or to schedule a consultation, visit:

Dr. Aimee Shunney, www.drshunney.com

Dr. Rachel Hollander, Hollander Holistic Health, www.hollanderholistichealth.com

Liz Esalen, The Lotus Collaborative, www.thelotuscollaborative.com

Elizabeth Borelli is a Mediterranean Diet and Lifestyle expert, teaching regular workshops and hosting events. Learn more at www.ElizabethBorelli.com.

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