The prevalence of natural health product use in patients with acute cardiovascular disease.

BACKGROUND: Natural health products (NHP) use may have implications with respect to adverse effects, drug interactions and adherence yet the prevalence of NHP use by patients with acute cardiovascular disease and the best method to ascertain this information is unknown. OBJECTIVE: To identify the be...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Aws Alherbish, Theresa L Charrois, Margaret L Ackman, Ross T Tsuyuki, Justin A Ezekowitz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3090400?pdf=render
id doaj-79b1adf407ca49428041e80ab91d2b70
record_format Article
spelling doaj-79b1adf407ca49428041e80ab91d2b702020-11-25T02:27:10ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0165e1962310.1371/journal.pone.0019623The prevalence of natural health product use in patients with acute cardiovascular disease.Aws AlherbishTheresa L CharroisMargaret L AckmanRoss T TsuyukiJustin A EzekowitzBACKGROUND: Natural health products (NHP) use may have implications with respect to adverse effects, drug interactions and adherence yet the prevalence of NHP use by patients with acute cardiovascular disease and the best method to ascertain this information is unknown. OBJECTIVE: To identify the best method to ascertain information on NHP, and the prevalence of use in a population with acute cardiovascular disease. METHODS: Structured interviews were conducted with a convenience sample of consecutive patients admitted with acute cardiovascular disease to the University of Alberta Hospital during January 2009. NHP use was explored using structured and open-ended questions based on Health Canada's definition of NHP. The medical record was reviewed, and documentation of NHP use by physicians, nurses, and pharmacists, compared against the gold-standard structured interview. RESULTS: 88 patients were interviewed (mean age 62 years, standard deviation [SD 14]; 80% male; 41% admitted for acute coronary syndromes). Common co-morbidities included hypertension (59%), diabetes (26%) and renal impairment (19%). NHP use was common (78% of patients) and 75% of NHP users reported daily use. The category of NHP most commonly used was vitamins and minerals (73%) followed by herbal products (20%), traditional medicines including Chinese medicines (9%), homeopathic preparations (1%) and other products including amino acids, essential fatty acids and probiotics (35%). In a multivariable model, only older age was associated with increased NHP use (OR 1.5 per age decile [95%CI 1.03 to 2.2]). When compared to the interview, the highest rate of NHP documentation was the pharmacist history (41%). NHP were documented in 22% of patients by the physician and 19% by the nurse. CONCLUSIONS: NHP use is common in patients admitted with acute cardiovascular disease. However, health professionals do not commonly identify NHP as part of the medication profile despite its potential importance. Structured interview appears to be the best method to accurately identify patient use of NHP.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3090400?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aws Alherbish
Theresa L Charrois
Margaret L Ackman
Ross T Tsuyuki
Justin A Ezekowitz
spellingShingle Aws Alherbish
Theresa L Charrois
Margaret L Ackman
Ross T Tsuyuki
Justin A Ezekowitz
The prevalence of natural health product use in patients with acute cardiovascular disease.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Aws Alherbish
Theresa L Charrois
Margaret L Ackman
Ross T Tsuyuki
Justin A Ezekowitz
author_sort Aws Alherbish
title The prevalence of natural health product use in patients with acute cardiovascular disease.
title_short The prevalence of natural health product use in patients with acute cardiovascular disease.
title_full The prevalence of natural health product use in patients with acute cardiovascular disease.
title_fullStr The prevalence of natural health product use in patients with acute cardiovascular disease.
title_full_unstemmed The prevalence of natural health product use in patients with acute cardiovascular disease.
title_sort prevalence of natural health product use in patients with acute cardiovascular disease.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description BACKGROUND: Natural health products (NHP) use may have implications with respect to adverse effects, drug interactions and adherence yet the prevalence of NHP use by patients with acute cardiovascular disease and the best method to ascertain this information is unknown. OBJECTIVE: To identify the best method to ascertain information on NHP, and the prevalence of use in a population with acute cardiovascular disease. METHODS: Structured interviews were conducted with a convenience sample of consecutive patients admitted with acute cardiovascular disease to the University of Alberta Hospital during January 2009. NHP use was explored using structured and open-ended questions based on Health Canada's definition of NHP. The medical record was reviewed, and documentation of NHP use by physicians, nurses, and pharmacists, compared against the gold-standard structured interview. RESULTS: 88 patients were interviewed (mean age 62 years, standard deviation [SD 14]; 80% male; 41% admitted for acute coronary syndromes). Common co-morbidities included hypertension (59%), diabetes (26%) and renal impairment (19%). NHP use was common (78% of patients) and 75% of NHP users reported daily use. The category of NHP most commonly used was vitamins and minerals (73%) followed by herbal products (20%), traditional medicines including Chinese medicines (9%), homeopathic preparations (1%) and other products including amino acids, essential fatty acids and probiotics (35%). In a multivariable model, only older age was associated with increased NHP use (OR 1.5 per age decile [95%CI 1.03 to 2.2]). When compared to the interview, the highest rate of NHP documentation was the pharmacist history (41%). NHP were documented in 22% of patients by the physician and 19% by the nurse. CONCLUSIONS: NHP use is common in patients admitted with acute cardiovascular disease. However, health professionals do not commonly identify NHP as part of the medication profile despite its potential importance. Structured interview appears to be the best method to accurately identify patient use of NHP.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3090400?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT awsalherbish theprevalenceofnaturalhealthproductuseinpatientswithacutecardiovasculardisease
AT theresalcharrois theprevalenceofnaturalhealthproductuseinpatientswithacutecardiovasculardisease
AT margaretlackman theprevalenceofnaturalhealthproductuseinpatientswithacutecardiovasculardisease
AT rossttsuyuki theprevalenceofnaturalhealthproductuseinpatientswithacutecardiovasculardisease
AT justinaezekowitz theprevalenceofnaturalhealthproductuseinpatientswithacutecardiovasculardisease
AT awsalherbish prevalenceofnaturalhealthproductuseinpatientswithacutecardiovasculardisease
AT theresalcharrois prevalenceofnaturalhealthproductuseinpatientswithacutecardiovasculardisease
AT margaretlackman prevalenceofnaturalhealthproductuseinpatientswithacutecardiovasculardisease
AT rossttsuyuki prevalenceofnaturalhealthproductuseinpatientswithacutecardiovasculardisease
AT justinaezekowitz prevalenceofnaturalhealthproductuseinpatientswithacutecardiovasculardisease
_version_ 1724843895515250688