Prevalence and perceived outcomes of complementary and alternative medicine use in hospitalized British patients

Objectives: This study aimed to investigate the prevalence and perceived outcomes of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) use in secondary care patients and to find out determinants for CAM utilization and perceived effectiveness and side-effects. Materials and Methods: Patients who met the...

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Main Authors: Win Winit-Watjana, Nusirat Bello, Wasim Baqir, Alan Worsley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Archives of Global Professionals 2012-01-01
Series:Archives of Pharmacy Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.archivepp.com/article.asp?issn=2045-080X;year=2012;volume=3;issue=4;spage=265;epage=273;aulast=Winit-Watjana
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spelling doaj-b100107f8dbf4f9badde50a3e90ff4bd2020-11-25T02:08:32ZengArchives of Global ProfessionalsArchives of Pharmacy Practice2045-080X2012-01-013426527310.4103/2045-080X.106242Prevalence and perceived outcomes of complementary and alternative medicine use in hospitalized British patientsWin Winit-WatjanaNusirat BelloWasim BaqirAlan WorsleyObjectives: This study aimed to investigate the prevalence and perceived outcomes of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) use in secondary care patients and to find out determinants for CAM utilization and perceived effectiveness and side-effects. Materials and Methods: Patients who met the eligibility criteria in this cross-sectional study were interviewed using a semi-structured questionnaire. Patients′ medications and relevant details were verified from the medical notes. A logistic regression analysis was performed and the significance level set at α = 0.05. Results: A total of 240 in-patients were interviewed. The prevalence of CAM use during admission, within 1 month, within 1 year, and at some point in life was 90.4%, 68.8%, 37.9%, and 8.3%, respectively. Diverse reasons for CAM use or non-use were cited. Nearly two-thirds of patients (63.1%) perceived CAM effectiveness and approximately half (57.6%) were aware of its side-effects. The determinants for CAM use at some point in life and perceived effectiveness could be predicted approximately 20% by two models: Logit P use = 3.404 − 1.044 × Educ + 1.314 × Ward − 1.539 × Consider and Logit P eff = 3.244-0.995 × Gender-0.025 × Age − 1.503 × Consider. Conclusion: Patients decided to use CAM for various reasons and perceived different outcomes. The specific CAM use and its outcomes warrant further studies.http://www.archivepp.com/article.asp?issn=2045-080X;year=2012;volume=3;issue=4;spage=265;epage=273;aulast=Winit-WatjanaComplementary therapieshospitalized patientsprevalenceperceived outcomesthe UK
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Win Winit-Watjana
Nusirat Bello
Wasim Baqir
Alan Worsley
spellingShingle Win Winit-Watjana
Nusirat Bello
Wasim Baqir
Alan Worsley
Prevalence and perceived outcomes of complementary and alternative medicine use in hospitalized British patients
Archives of Pharmacy Practice
Complementary therapies
hospitalized patients
prevalence
perceived outcomes
the UK
author_facet Win Winit-Watjana
Nusirat Bello
Wasim Baqir
Alan Worsley
author_sort Win Winit-Watjana
title Prevalence and perceived outcomes of complementary and alternative medicine use in hospitalized British patients
title_short Prevalence and perceived outcomes of complementary and alternative medicine use in hospitalized British patients
title_full Prevalence and perceived outcomes of complementary and alternative medicine use in hospitalized British patients
title_fullStr Prevalence and perceived outcomes of complementary and alternative medicine use in hospitalized British patients
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence and perceived outcomes of complementary and alternative medicine use in hospitalized British patients
title_sort prevalence and perceived outcomes of complementary and alternative medicine use in hospitalized british patients
publisher Archives of Global Professionals
series Archives of Pharmacy Practice
issn 2045-080X
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Objectives: This study aimed to investigate the prevalence and perceived outcomes of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) use in secondary care patients and to find out determinants for CAM utilization and perceived effectiveness and side-effects. Materials and Methods: Patients who met the eligibility criteria in this cross-sectional study were interviewed using a semi-structured questionnaire. Patients′ medications and relevant details were verified from the medical notes. A logistic regression analysis was performed and the significance level set at α = 0.05. Results: A total of 240 in-patients were interviewed. The prevalence of CAM use during admission, within 1 month, within 1 year, and at some point in life was 90.4%, 68.8%, 37.9%, and 8.3%, respectively. Diverse reasons for CAM use or non-use were cited. Nearly two-thirds of patients (63.1%) perceived CAM effectiveness and approximately half (57.6%) were aware of its side-effects. The determinants for CAM use at some point in life and perceived effectiveness could be predicted approximately 20% by two models: Logit P use = 3.404 − 1.044 × Educ + 1.314 × Ward − 1.539 × Consider and Logit P eff = 3.244-0.995 × Gender-0.025 × Age − 1.503 × Consider. Conclusion: Patients decided to use CAM for various reasons and perceived different outcomes. The specific CAM use and its outcomes warrant further studies.
topic Complementary therapies
hospitalized patients
prevalence
perceived outcomes
the UK
url http://www.archivepp.com/article.asp?issn=2045-080X;year=2012;volume=3;issue=4;spage=265;epage=273;aulast=Winit-Watjana
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AT wasimbaqir prevalenceandperceivedoutcomesofcomplementaryandalternativemedicineuseinhospitalizedbritishpatients
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