Evidence for the use of complementary and alternative medicines during fertility treatment: a scoping review

Abstract Background Complementary and alternative medicines (CAM) are sometimes used by individuals who desire to improve the outcomes of their fertility treatment and/or mental health during fertility treatment. However, there is little comprehensive information available that analyzes various CAM...

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Main Authors: Skye A. Miner, Stephanie Robins, Yu Jia Zhu, Kathelijne Keeren, Vivian Gu, Suzanne C. Read, Phyllis Zelkowitz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-05-01
Series:BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12906-018-2224-7
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spelling doaj-4910905e738a41b9921be39a1d0a25d22020-11-25T02:11:23ZengBMCBMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine1472-68822018-05-0118111210.1186/s12906-018-2224-7Evidence for the use of complementary and alternative medicines during fertility treatment: a scoping reviewSkye A. Miner0Stephanie Robins1Yu Jia Zhu2Kathelijne Keeren3Vivian Gu4Suzanne C. Read5Phyllis Zelkowitz6Department of Sociology, McGill UniversityDepartment of Psychiatry, Jewish General HospitalDepartment of Psychiatry, Jewish General HospitalDepartment of Psychiatry, Jewish General HospitalDepartment of Psychiatry, Jewish General HospitalDepartment of Psychiatry, Jewish General HospitalDepartment of Psychiatry, Jewish General HospitalAbstract Background Complementary and alternative medicines (CAM) are sometimes used by individuals who desire to improve the outcomes of their fertility treatment and/or mental health during fertility treatment. However, there is little comprehensive information available that analyzes various CAM methods across treatment outcomes and includes information that is published in languages other than English. Method This scoping review examines the evidence for 12 different CAM methods used to improve female and male fertility outcomes as well as their association with improving mental health outcomes during fertility treatment. Using predefined key words, online medical databases were searched for articles (n = 270). After exclusion criteria were applied, 148 articles were analyzed in terms of their level of evidence and the potential for methodological and author bias. Results Surveying the literature on a range of techniques, this scoping review finds a lack of high quality evidence that complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) improves fertility or mental health outcomes for men or women. Acupuncture has the highest level of evidence for its use in improving male and female fertility outcomes although this evidence is inconclusive. Conclusion Overall, the quality of the evidence across CAM methods was poor not only because of the use of research designs that do not yield conclusive results, but also because results were contradictory. There is a need for more research using strong methods such as randomized controlled trials to determine the effectiveness of CAM in relation to fertility treatment, and to help physicians and patients make evidence-based decisions about CAM use during fertility treatment.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12906-018-2224-7Complementary and alternative medicineInfertility treatmentMental healthAcupunctureReproductive healthScoping review
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Skye A. Miner
Stephanie Robins
Yu Jia Zhu
Kathelijne Keeren
Vivian Gu
Suzanne C. Read
Phyllis Zelkowitz
spellingShingle Skye A. Miner
Stephanie Robins
Yu Jia Zhu
Kathelijne Keeren
Vivian Gu
Suzanne C. Read
Phyllis Zelkowitz
Evidence for the use of complementary and alternative medicines during fertility treatment: a scoping review
BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine
Complementary and alternative medicine
Infertility treatment
Mental health
Acupuncture
Reproductive health
Scoping review
author_facet Skye A. Miner
Stephanie Robins
Yu Jia Zhu
Kathelijne Keeren
Vivian Gu
Suzanne C. Read
Phyllis Zelkowitz
author_sort Skye A. Miner
title Evidence for the use of complementary and alternative medicines during fertility treatment: a scoping review
title_short Evidence for the use of complementary and alternative medicines during fertility treatment: a scoping review
title_full Evidence for the use of complementary and alternative medicines during fertility treatment: a scoping review
title_fullStr Evidence for the use of complementary and alternative medicines during fertility treatment: a scoping review
title_full_unstemmed Evidence for the use of complementary and alternative medicines during fertility treatment: a scoping review
title_sort evidence for the use of complementary and alternative medicines during fertility treatment: a scoping review
publisher BMC
series BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine
issn 1472-6882
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Abstract Background Complementary and alternative medicines (CAM) are sometimes used by individuals who desire to improve the outcomes of their fertility treatment and/or mental health during fertility treatment. However, there is little comprehensive information available that analyzes various CAM methods across treatment outcomes and includes information that is published in languages other than English. Method This scoping review examines the evidence for 12 different CAM methods used to improve female and male fertility outcomes as well as their association with improving mental health outcomes during fertility treatment. Using predefined key words, online medical databases were searched for articles (n = 270). After exclusion criteria were applied, 148 articles were analyzed in terms of their level of evidence and the potential for methodological and author bias. Results Surveying the literature on a range of techniques, this scoping review finds a lack of high quality evidence that complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) improves fertility or mental health outcomes for men or women. Acupuncture has the highest level of evidence for its use in improving male and female fertility outcomes although this evidence is inconclusive. Conclusion Overall, the quality of the evidence across CAM methods was poor not only because of the use of research designs that do not yield conclusive results, but also because results were contradictory. There is a need for more research using strong methods such as randomized controlled trials to determine the effectiveness of CAM in relation to fertility treatment, and to help physicians and patients make evidence-based decisions about CAM use during fertility treatment.
topic Complementary and alternative medicine
Infertility treatment
Mental health
Acupuncture
Reproductive health
Scoping review
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12906-018-2224-7
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