@DoctorGyno, I don't want start an argument, so I won't, but I'm not at all put off by the conflicts or the lack of interest. If you are not aware, Coloplast is a supplier of colostomy products, and also manufactures products for transanal irrigation, which is essentially an enema, but usable by people who have a difficult time with standard enema procedures (such as paraplegics). When I had my colostomy, I found their products excellent. I am also not put off by the association with someone who advocates colon hydrotherapy. I found the article while I was doing a search for my own issue, which is self diagnosed LARS. I didn't bother to consult my surgeon about LARS, since the diagnosis is primarily symptomatic anyway. He asks me the "five questions," and I answer. I didn't see the point.
Anyway, I imagine that the whole "enema" thing is a "movement of the pendulum," and it's welcome, given many doctors' opposition to alternatives of all kinds, and the heavy handed approach some have.
I was more interested in the material they noted about the problems that the new "standard care" creates. That bothered me, in part because it set me to wondering if my own care had been different that I might not have wound up with two surgeries, a colostomy and a reversal. Probably not, due to my diverticulitis, but it still made me think a bit. As it was, my first surgeon saved my life by doing the surgery, which was made necessary by a bowel perforation due to diverticulitis. The good news is that all the diverticuli but one are gone, and I'm headed back to good health--however, because of the LARS (Low AnterIor Resection Syndrome), I will probably need enemas for the rest of my life, daily or at least several times per week.
Here's a symposium speech by a Mayo Clinic doctor (Phoenix, but not my Doc) that discusses LARS, if you're interested.
https://youtu.be/toAI30sSGSE?si=wGgkIfJZB7UK_9dh