1 / 111

Complementary and Alternative Medicine, Dietary Supplements, and Medications

Complementary and Alternative Medicine, Dietary Supplements, and Medications. Learning Objectives. To define complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) in relationship to conventional medicine.

raquel
Télécharger la présentation

Complementary and Alternative Medicine, Dietary Supplements, and Medications

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Complementary and Alternative Medicine, Dietary Supplements, and Medications 1

  2. LearningObjectives • To define complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) in relationship to conventional medicine. • To discuss characteristics of CAM users and practitioners and their implications for primary care clinicians. 2

  3. Learning Objectives • To review research in progress on CAM modalities for common problems. • To discuss issues CAM use raises for primary care clinicians related to communication and liability. 3

  4. Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) • a group of diverse medical and health care systems, practices, and products that are not presently considered to be part of conventional medicine (1) • healing therapies that typically fall outside the Western biomedical model of disease, diagnosis, and treatment (2) (1) Eisenberg 1993; (2) Drivdahl 1998 4

  5. Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) The list of what is considered to be CAM changes continually as those therapies that are proven to be safe and effective become adopted into conventional health care and as new approaches to health care emerge. NCCAM 2003 5

  6. Major Domains of CAM • Alternative medical systems • Mind-body interventions • Biologically-based treatments • Manipulative and body-based methods • Energy therapies NCAAM 2003 6

  7. Who uses CAM? • Surveys show marked increase in past 50 years in US and other industrialized countries (1). • Between 1990 to 1997, increase from 34% to 42% of US households reporting CAM use (2). • In 1997 in US, more visits to CAM practitioners than to all primary care providers (2). (1) Kessler 2001; (2)Eisenberg 1998 7

  8. Who uses CAM? • Surveys of primary care clinic populations show 28-47% utilization of CAM. • 21% of patients in primary care practices reported using CAM for the same health problem for which they sought conventional care on that visit. Palinkas 2000 8

  9. Who uses CAM? • Herbal therapy is used by 12-14% of the US population, up from 2.5% in 1990. • 16-18% of patients taking prescription medications also take herbal remedies. Kaufman 2002 9

  10. Why do people use CAM? • Desire for health and wellness (1) • Prevention • Pain • Musculoskeletal pain accounted for 1/3 of all CAM use among primary care patients (2). • Between 60 and 94% of rheumatic disease patients use CAM (3). • Wolsko 2002; (2) Palinkas 2000; • (3) Ramos-Remus 1999 10

  11. Why do people use CAM? • Very few individuals rely exclusively upon alternative modalities (1). • Most individuals who use CAM do so because of preference, related to the perception that the combination of CAM and conventional treatments are superior to either alone (2). (1) Astin 1998; (2) Eisenberg 2001 11

  12. Who practices CAM? • Wide variation in background and approach • Diversity in training programs Barrett 2000 12

  13. Who practices CAM? • No standardization of approach to accreditation and licensure • Controversies about regulation Chez 1999 13

  14. Who practices CAM? Some common beliefs and values • The body has self-healing potential. • Body mind and spirit are all important. • Therapy must be individualized. • People are responsible for their own healing. Curtis 2003 14

  15. Who practices CAM? • More nonphysicians than physicians practice CAM • Increasing numbers of dual-trained MDs • American Board of Medical Acupuncture • American Board of Holistic Medicine 15

  16. Who practices CAM? How did I get to be a “dual-trained MD”? 16

  17. What about communication? • Between 40 and 70% of CAM users do notdisclose their use to their physician. WHY? • Patients usually say that they do not report because they are not asked. Eisenberg 2001 17

  18. Why does this matter? • The substantial overlap between use of prescription medications and herbal supplements raises concerns about unintended interactions. • Patient use of CAM is often a clue to values and preferences that need to be acknowledged. Kaufman 2002 18

  19. How can we communicate? • Always ask! “What else are you doing for your health?” • Be open and nonjudgmental. • Consider patient preferences and values. • Encourage self-monitoring of results. Eisenberg 1997 19

  20. How can we communicate? 5. Coordinate care as appropriate. 6. Be honest about your lack of knowledge and open to education. 7. Monitor safety and efficacy, arrange follow-up. 8. Document all discussions and advice. Eisenberg 1997 20

  21. EBM and CAM While some scientific evidence exists regarding some CAM therapies, for most there are key questions that are yet to be answered through well-designed scientific studies— questions such as whether they are safe and whether they work for the diseases or medical conditions for which they are used. NCCAM 2003 21

  22. Where are we now? There is an urgent need for more and better trials of CAM therapies! There may be hope: • OAM funding FY 1992: $2 M • NCCAM funding FY 2003: $113.2 M . 22

  23. Research in Progress NCCAM funded Research Centers Program • 12 Centers for CAM Research, each with focus on a particular condition • 4 Centers for Dietary Supplements Research • Many clinical trials in progress, for example • 18 on acupuncture • 16 on cancer www.nccam.nih.gov/clinicaltrials 23

  24. Research in Progress Biologically-based therapies • Safety of “natural” products • Efficacy of glucosamine and/or chondroitin for pain of osteoarthritis • NIH-GAIT www.nihgait.org www.nccam.nih.gov/clinicaltrials 24

  25. Research in Progress Mind-body approaches • Some now mainstream • Clinical hypnosis • Cognitive therapy • Biofeedback • Meditation for fibromyalgia • Transcendental meditation • Mindfulness meditation • Relaxation response Hadhazy 2000 25

  26. Research in Progress Manipulative therapies: chiropractic • Most accepted professional therapy • Good review of safety • Current trials of effectiveness for • Chronic neck pain • Low back pain Stevinson 2002 26

  27. Research in Progress Manipulative therapies: massage Low back pain • Comparison with acupuncture & self-care (1) • Combined with education and exercise (2) (1) Cherkin 2001; (2) Furlan 2002 27

  28. Research in Progress Alternative medical systems: Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) Current trials of acupuncture for • Fibromyalgia • Knee osteoarthritis • Repetitive stress disorder • TMJ pain www.nccam.nih.gov/clinicaltrials 28

  29. Research in Progress “Frontier Medicine Program” NCCAM initiative to encourage research on widely used CAM practices for which there is “no plausible biomedical explanation” • Energy therapies • Homeopathy • Prayer • Spiritual healing www.nccam.nih.gov/clinicaltrials 29

  30. Where does this leave us? Many conventional treatments • have been adopted without good quality research • are costly • are invasive • are likely to have adverse effects • AND often provide inadequate relief. 30

  31. Where does this leave us? CAM interventions generally • are low cost • are low-risk • are free of serious side effects • AND are widely used. 31

  32. Advising patients about CAM Use evidence for • efficacy • safety to place therapy on continuum recommend accept discourage Weiger 2002 32

  33. Towards Integration Liability Risks Based on Evidence • Support for safety and efficacy • Support for safety, inconclusive for efficacy • Support for efficacy, inconclusive for safety • Indication of serious risk or inefficacy Cohen 2002 33

  34. Framework for approaching CAMin clinical situations • Protect against dangerous practices. • Permit practices that are harmless and that may help. • Promote and use practices that are safe and effective. • Partner with patients and encourage communication about CAM. Jonas 2000 34

  35. Framework for approaching CAMin clinical situations Question: Is “permit” the right word here? Do physicians have the power to “permit” practices that their patients choose? 35

  36. Integrative Medicine a combination of mainstream medical therapies and CAM therapies for which there is high-quality scientific evidence of safety and effectiveness NCCAM 2003 36

  37. Integrative Medicine requires a paradigm shift from • the disease-centered approach of conventional biomedicine to • an approach in which patient values and participation of patients are central. Maizes 1999 37

  38. Towards Integration The satisfaction that patients report from relationship-centered and individualized CAM therapies serves to remind us: We can never know with certainty what therapy- alternative or otherwise- will work for an particular patient, no matter what randomized controlled clinical trials indicate. 38

  39. Towards Integration Our patients’ use of CAM invites us • to ask and listen to our patients, • to contribute what evidence based medicine offers, • to advocate for better evidence-based research, and at the same time • to acknowledge the existence of other types of information that may be more relevant to a given individual or for a particular situation. 39

  40. Framework for approaching CAMin clinical situations • Protect against dangerous practices. • Permit practices that are harmless and that may help. • Promote and use practices that are safe and effective. • Partner with patients and encourage communication about CAM. Jonas 2000 40

  41. Partner with patients and communicate about CAM • ASK! • “Build” a history that includes CAM use. (Don’t “take” one.) • When patients tell, LISTEN! Haidet 2003 41

  42. Integrative Medicine • an opportunity to bring together strengths and balance weaknesses of different systems of health care • “a coming together of heart, head, and hand” Owen 2001 42

  43. Integrative Medicine “Could this be a healing process in itself”? Owen 2001 43

  44. An Integrative Approach to Complementary and AlternativeMedicine in Primary Care Settings Maureen A. Flannery MD, MPH Department of Family Practice University of Kentucky College of Medicine 44

  45. Sports Supplements Andrew Gregory, MD Assistant Professor, Orthopedics/ Pediatrics Team Physician, Vanderbilt University Jan. 10, 2002

  46. Definition: Ergogenic Aids • Ergo = work • Gennan = to produce • Any substance or method used to enhance performance through increased energy utilization: • production • control • efficiency

  47. Drugs: Hormones Stimulants Narcotics Diuretics B-Blockers Supplements: Prohormones? Amino Acids Metals Antioxidants Herbs Classification

  48. Prevalence: • Estimated 11% of HS athletes, college, and professional. • Majority of Olympic swimmers, cyclists, sprinters, & weight lifters • 2/3 of the 1998 Tour de France teams • Billion Dollar Industry

  49. Reasons: • Have to use them to be competitive • Need the edge • Not genetically gifted • Dissatisfaction with size/ weight • Peer/ Team Pressure

  50. Hormones • HGH • EPO • BHCG • Steroids

More Related