What motivates new, established and long-term users of herbal medicine: is there more than push and pull?

Abstract Background The use of herbal medicine (HM) has become an essential form of treatment and it is more and more common around the world. Little is known about the reasons that drive people to initially use HM or to maintain their behaviour, and whether the so-called “push and pull factors” kno...

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Main Authors: Alexandra N. Welz, Agnes Emberger-Klein, Klaus Menrad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-07-01
Series:BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine
Subjects:
CAM
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12906-019-2584-7
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spelling doaj-8048b556c76e40ab8d6c773f2487f6cd2020-11-25T04:04:36ZengBMCBMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine1472-68822019-07-011911910.1186/s12906-019-2584-7What motivates new, established and long-term users of herbal medicine: is there more than push and pull?Alexandra N. Welz0Agnes Emberger-Klein1Klaus Menrad2TUM Campus Straubing for Biotechnology and Sustainability, Weihenstephan-Triesdorf University of Applied SciencesTUM Campus Straubing for Biotechnology and Sustainability, Weihenstephan-Triesdorf University of Applied SciencesTUM Campus Straubing for Biotechnology and Sustainability, Weihenstephan-Triesdorf University of Applied SciencesAbstract Background The use of herbal medicine (HM) has become an essential form of treatment and it is more and more common around the world. Little is known about the reasons that drive people to initially use HM or to maintain their behaviour, and whether the so-called “push and pull factors” known in the context of decision making for complementary and alternative medicine, also play a role for HM use. Here, our goal was to provide answers to these open questions and to analyse the reasons that motivate new, established and long-term HM consumers in detail. Methods Thirteen reasons for HM usage, which were previously identified within a qualitative approach, were analysed quantitatively in a nationwide online survey in Germany. Data of 2,192 German HM users from the general population were grouped into new, established and long-term users. We performed a factor analysis in order to identify factors underlying the set of reasons. Results We discovered a reliable factor associated with longstanding family traditions and cultural importance of HM in Germany. This finding shows that the reasons for HM use require a three-factor structure going beyond the well-known push and pull factors that explain the use of complementary and alternative medicine. In using the identified factors for further calculations, we were able to reveal important group differences and test how the factor scores perform as predictors for the new, established and long-term choice of HM. Our results showed that a high score on the push factor is associated more with initial HM usage, while long-term HM usage is impacted more by high scores on the pull and traditional factors. Conclusions Our exploratory survey and analysis of the reasons that underlie HM usage aimed at providing a better understanding of the decision for this treatment form. The findings of our work deliver insights for medical practitioners and health-care providers, including the role of family traditions for HM usage and the finding that new HM users are driven to use this treatment form in part because of negative aspects they associate with conventional medicine.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12906-019-2584-7Herbal medicineCAMReasons for useOnline surveyFactor analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexandra N. Welz
Agnes Emberger-Klein
Klaus Menrad
spellingShingle Alexandra N. Welz
Agnes Emberger-Klein
Klaus Menrad
What motivates new, established and long-term users of herbal medicine: is there more than push and pull?
BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine
Herbal medicine
CAM
Reasons for use
Online survey
Factor analysis
author_facet Alexandra N. Welz
Agnes Emberger-Klein
Klaus Menrad
author_sort Alexandra N. Welz
title What motivates new, established and long-term users of herbal medicine: is there more than push and pull?
title_short What motivates new, established and long-term users of herbal medicine: is there more than push and pull?
title_full What motivates new, established and long-term users of herbal medicine: is there more than push and pull?
title_fullStr What motivates new, established and long-term users of herbal medicine: is there more than push and pull?
title_full_unstemmed What motivates new, established and long-term users of herbal medicine: is there more than push and pull?
title_sort what motivates new, established and long-term users of herbal medicine: is there more than push and pull?
publisher BMC
series BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine
issn 1472-6882
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Abstract Background The use of herbal medicine (HM) has become an essential form of treatment and it is more and more common around the world. Little is known about the reasons that drive people to initially use HM or to maintain their behaviour, and whether the so-called “push and pull factors” known in the context of decision making for complementary and alternative medicine, also play a role for HM use. Here, our goal was to provide answers to these open questions and to analyse the reasons that motivate new, established and long-term HM consumers in detail. Methods Thirteen reasons for HM usage, which were previously identified within a qualitative approach, were analysed quantitatively in a nationwide online survey in Germany. Data of 2,192 German HM users from the general population were grouped into new, established and long-term users. We performed a factor analysis in order to identify factors underlying the set of reasons. Results We discovered a reliable factor associated with longstanding family traditions and cultural importance of HM in Germany. This finding shows that the reasons for HM use require a three-factor structure going beyond the well-known push and pull factors that explain the use of complementary and alternative medicine. In using the identified factors for further calculations, we were able to reveal important group differences and test how the factor scores perform as predictors for the new, established and long-term choice of HM. Our results showed that a high score on the push factor is associated more with initial HM usage, while long-term HM usage is impacted more by high scores on the pull and traditional factors. Conclusions Our exploratory survey and analysis of the reasons that underlie HM usage aimed at providing a better understanding of the decision for this treatment form. The findings of our work deliver insights for medical practitioners and health-care providers, including the role of family traditions for HM usage and the finding that new HM users are driven to use this treatment form in part because of negative aspects they associate with conventional medicine.
topic Herbal medicine
CAM
Reasons for use
Online survey
Factor analysis
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12906-019-2584-7
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