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Unconventional Medicine in the United States.
Prevalence, Costs, and Patterns of Use.
Eisenberg DM, Kessler RC, Foster C, Norlock FE, Calkins DR, Delbanco TL.
N Engl J Med 1993 Jan 28;328(4):246-52
Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, MA 02215.
BACKGROUND. Many people use unconventional therapies for health problems,
but the extent of this use and the costs are not known. We conducted a
national survey
to determine the prevalence, costs, and patterns of use of unconventional therapies,
such as acupuncture and chiropractic.
METHODS. We limited the therapies studied
to 16 commonly used interventions neither taught widely in U.S. medical schools
nor generally available in U.S. hospitals. We completed telephone interviews
with 1539 adults (response rate, 67 percent) in a national sample of adults
18 years of age or older in 1990. We asked respondents to report any
serious or
bothersome medical conditions and details of their use of conventional medical
services; we then inquired about their use of unconventional therapy.
RESULTS. One in three respondents (34 percent) reported using at least one unconventional
therapy in the past year, and a third of these saw providers for unconventional
therapy. The latter group had made an average of 19 visits to such providers
during the preceding year, with an average charge per visit of $27.60.
The frequency of use of unconventional therapy varied somewhat among socio-demographic
groups,
with the highest use reported by nonblack persons from 25 to 49 years of
age who had relatively more education and higher incomes.
The majority used
unconventional
therapy for chronic, as opposed to life-threatening, medical conditions.
Among those who used unconventional therapy for serious medical conditions,
the vast
majority (83 percent) also sought treatment for the same condition from
a
medical doctor; however, 72 percent of the respondents who used unconventional
therapy
did not inform their medical doctor that they had done so. Extrapolation
to the U.S. population suggests that in 1990 Americans made an estimated
425 million
visits to providers of unconventional therapy.
This number exceeds the
number of visits to all U.S. primary care physicians (388 million). Expenditures
associated
with use of unconventional therapy in 1990 amounted to approximately
$13.7 billion, three quarters of which ($10.3 billion) was paid out of pocket.
This figure is
comparable to the $12.8 billion spent out of pocket annually for all
hospitalizations
in the United States.
CONCLUSIONS. The frequency of use of unconventional
therapy in the United States is far higher than previously reported. Medical
doctors
should ask about their patients' use of unconventional therapy whenever
they
obtain a medical history.
PMID: 8418405 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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