Perceived Behavioral Control as a Key to Integrative Medicine

The purpose of the present study was to identify the factors that are the strongest predictors of intentions and use of integrative medicine approaches in clinical practice. Ajzen’s theory of planned behavior was used to guide our examination of these questions. Health care professionals exposed to...

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Main Authors: Stephen R. Shamblen PhD, Katharine Atwood ScD, William Scarbrough PhD, David A. Collins PhD, Adam Rindfleisch MD, Benjamin Kligler MD, Tracy Gaudet MD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2018-10-01
Series:Journal of Evidence-Based Integrative Medicine
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2515690X18801581
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spelling doaj-54767724c87348cd860f5400cb37caee2020-11-25T03:41:16ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Evidence-Based Integrative Medicine2515-690X2018-10-012310.1177/2515690X18801581Perceived Behavioral Control as a Key to Integrative MedicineStephen R. Shamblen PhD0Katharine Atwood ScD1William Scarbrough PhD2David A. Collins PhD3Adam Rindfleisch MD4Benjamin Kligler MD5Tracy Gaudet MD6 Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, Louisville, KY, USA Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, Louisville, KY, USA Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, Louisville, KY, USA Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, Louisville, KY, USA University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, WI, USA Veterans Health Administration, Washington, DC, USA Veterans Health Administration, Washington, DC, USAThe purpose of the present study was to identify the factors that are the strongest predictors of intentions and use of integrative medicine approaches in clinical practice. Ajzen’s theory of planned behavior was used to guide our examination of these questions. Health care professionals exposed to a Veterans Health Administration program (N = 288) who completed survey instruments prior to and immediately after the program and 3 months later were the participants for this study. Findings suggest that the theory of planned behavior performs reasonably well in explaining our data showing the integration of integrative medicine approaches into clinical practice. We found that self-efficacy to use integrative health approaches and perceived preparedness to discuss nonpharmaceutical approaches with patients were the strongest predictors of intentions to use integrative health approaches and self-reported change in clinical practice. The implications of these findings are discussed.https://doi.org/10.1177/2515690X18801581
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stephen R. Shamblen PhD
Katharine Atwood ScD
William Scarbrough PhD
David A. Collins PhD
Adam Rindfleisch MD
Benjamin Kligler MD
Tracy Gaudet MD
spellingShingle Stephen R. Shamblen PhD
Katharine Atwood ScD
William Scarbrough PhD
David A. Collins PhD
Adam Rindfleisch MD
Benjamin Kligler MD
Tracy Gaudet MD
Perceived Behavioral Control as a Key to Integrative Medicine
Journal of Evidence-Based Integrative Medicine
author_facet Stephen R. Shamblen PhD
Katharine Atwood ScD
William Scarbrough PhD
David A. Collins PhD
Adam Rindfleisch MD
Benjamin Kligler MD
Tracy Gaudet MD
author_sort Stephen R. Shamblen PhD
title Perceived Behavioral Control as a Key to Integrative Medicine
title_short Perceived Behavioral Control as a Key to Integrative Medicine
title_full Perceived Behavioral Control as a Key to Integrative Medicine
title_fullStr Perceived Behavioral Control as a Key to Integrative Medicine
title_full_unstemmed Perceived Behavioral Control as a Key to Integrative Medicine
title_sort perceived behavioral control as a key to integrative medicine
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Evidence-Based Integrative Medicine
issn 2515-690X
publishDate 2018-10-01
description The purpose of the present study was to identify the factors that are the strongest predictors of intentions and use of integrative medicine approaches in clinical practice. Ajzen’s theory of planned behavior was used to guide our examination of these questions. Health care professionals exposed to a Veterans Health Administration program (N = 288) who completed survey instruments prior to and immediately after the program and 3 months later were the participants for this study. Findings suggest that the theory of planned behavior performs reasonably well in explaining our data showing the integration of integrative medicine approaches into clinical practice. We found that self-efficacy to use integrative health approaches and perceived preparedness to discuss nonpharmaceutical approaches with patients were the strongest predictors of intentions to use integrative health approaches and self-reported change in clinical practice. The implications of these findings are discussed.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2515690X18801581
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