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Why Patients Use Alternative Medicine: Results
of a National Study.
JAMA
1998 May 20;279(19):1548-53,
Astin JA.
Stanford Center for Research in Disease Prevention, Stanford University School
of Medicine, Palo Alto, Calif 94304-1583, USA. astin@scrdp.stanford.edu
CONTEXT: Research both in the United States and abroad
suggests that significant numbers of people are involved with various forms
of alternative medicine.
However, the reasons for such use are, at present, poorly understood. OBJECTIVE:
To investigate
possible predictors of alternative health care use. METHODS: Three primary
hypotheses were tested. People seek out these alternatives because
- they
are dissatisfied
in some way with conventional treatment;
- they see alternative treatments
as offering more personal autonomy and control over health care decisions;
and
- the alternatives are seen as more compatible with
the patients' values, worldview,
or beliefs regarding the nature and meaning of health and illness.
Additional predictor variables explored included demographics and health
status.
DESIGN: A written survey examining use of alternative
health care, health status,
values, and attitudes toward conventional medicine. Multiple logistic
regression analyses
were used in an effort to identify predictors of alternative health
care use.
SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: A total of 1035 individuals
randomly selected from
a panel who had agreed to participate in mail surveys and who live
throughout
the United States.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Use of alternative medicine
within
the previous year.
RESULTS: The response rate was 69%.The following
variables emerged
as predictors of alternative health care use: more education
(odds ratio [OR], 1.2; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.1-1.3); poorer health
status (OR, 1.3;
95% CI, 1.1-1.5); a holistic orientation to health (OR, 1.4;
95%
CI, 1.1-1.9); having
had a transformational experience that changed the person's
worldview (OR, 1 .8; 95% CI, 1 .3-2.5); any of the following health problems:
anxiety (OR, 3.1;
95% CI, 1.6-6.0); back problems (OR, 2.3; 95% CI, 1 .7-3.2);
chronic pain
(OR, 2.0; 95% CI, 1.1 -3.5); urinarytract problems (OR, 2.2;
95%
CI, 1.3-3.5);
and
classification in a cultural group identifiable by their commitment
to environmentalism, commitment to feminism, and interest in spirituality
and personal growth
psychology (OR, 2.0; 95% CI, 1.4-2.7). Dissatisfaction with conventional
medicine did
not predict use of alternative medicine. Only 4.4% of those
surveyed reported relying
primarily on alternative therapies. CONCLUSION: Along with
being more educated and reporting poorer health status, the majority of alternative
medicine
users appear to be doing so not so much as a result of being
dissatisfied
with conventional
medicine but largely because they find these health care alternatives
to
be more congruent with their own values, beliefs, and philosophical
orientations
toward
health and life.
PMID: 9605899 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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