Complementary, Alternative, Holistic, Integrative

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Complementary, Alternative, Holistic, Integrative

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Complementary, Alternative, Holistic, Integrative Medicine: Meeting Patient Needs Sara Warber, MD Co-Director, Michigan Integrative Medicine and CAM Research Center – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Complementary, Alternative, Holistic, Integrative


1
Complementary, Alternative, Holistic, Integrative
Medicine
  • Meeting Patient Needs

Sara Warber, MD Co-Director, Michigan Integrative
Medicine and CAM Research Center Assist
Professor, Dept of Family Medicine University of
Michigan
2
CAM - Whats in a Name?
  • Alternative, unconventional
  • Complementary
  • Holistic
  • Integrative

3
Objectives
  • Why CAM is important
  • What patients are using
  • Introduction to broad categories of CAM
  • How to evaluate the evidence

4
Importance
  • Prevalence of use
  • Potential application when effective
  • Potential risks
  • Doctor-Patient Relationship

5
Early Indicators
  • 1990 national telephone survey
  • 1/3 of patients use alternative methods
  • 72 of users did NOT inform their physician

Eisenberg, et al. NEJM 1993 328246-52.
6
Follow-up Study
  • 1997 study of 2055 households
  • 42 used at least 1 of 16 therapies
  • Disclosure rates did not improve

Eisenberg DM, et al. JAMA 1998 280(18)1569-75.
7
CAM Spending
  • 36 - 47 billion in 1997
  • 12 - 20 billion for the services of
    professional CAM health care providers
  • 5 billion on herbal products
  • gt out-of-pocket for all hospitalizations

Eisenberg DM, et al. JAMA 1998 280(18)1569-75
8
CAM Use 2002 (n31,044)
9
Why do patients use CAM?
  • National survey 1035/1500 responses
  • 40 had used CAM in past year
  • 4.4 primarily relied on CAM
  • Perceived benefits
  • Relief of symptoms
  • Treatment works better than standard therapy

Austin JA. JAMA 1997279(19)1548-53.
10
Predictors of CAM Use
  • Cultural creative
  • Transformational experience
  • Holistic philosophy
  • Poorer health
  • More educated
  • Specific health problems
  • Anxiety
  • Back problems
  • Urinary tract problems
  • Chronic pain

Austin JA. JAMA 1997279(19)1548-53.
11
What are patients goals?
  • 30 Prevention
  • 44 Wellness
  • 79 Specific Problems
  • Back Pain
  • Headache
  • Anxiety
  • Etc

Elder NC, et al Arch Fam Med 1997
12
(No Transcript)
13
What do Michiganders use? (n3764)
Rafferty et al, AJPH 200292(10)1598-9
14
Alternative Medical Systems
  • Traditional Chinese
  • Ayurvedic
  • Native American
  • Homeopathy
  • Naturopathy
  • Anthroposophic

15
Alternative Medical Systems
  • Different views of body, illness
  • Different basis for knowing
  • Different diagnoses
  • Different treatments

16
Meta-analysis of Homeopathy
  • Like cures like
  • 89/186 trials met quality criteria
  • Homeopathic remedy vs. placebo
  • Odds ratio 2.45 (2.05-2.93) for homeopathy
  • Homeopathic effects not completely due to placebo

Linde K, et al. Lancet 1997350834-843
17
Manipulative Body-based Methods
  • Chiropractic
  • Massage
  • Acupuncture
  • Acupressure

18
Manipulative Body-based Methods
  • Different understanding of the body
  • Meridian system
  • Physical methods of treatment

19
Acupuncture
  • 1996 FDA approves single-use needles
  • 1997 NIH Consensus Conference
  • Safety
  • adverse effects substantially lower than many
    drugs
  • Nausea
  • chemotherapy
  • surgical anesthesia
  • pregnancy
  • Pain
  • post surgical
  • musculoskeletal

Http//altmed.od.nih.gov/oam/cam/1998/jan/acupunc
ture
20
Mind-body Interventions
  • Hypnosis
  • Meditation
  • Biofeedback
  • Imagery
  • Yoga
  • Tai Chi
  • Prayer/mental healing
  • Art, Music, Dance

21
Mind-body Interventions
  • Engages mind and body in healing process
  • Emphasis on healing rather than curing
  • Emphasis on meaning of illness
  • Relaxation response
  • Psycho-neuro-immunology

22
Meditation for Stress Reduction
  • Animal studies chronic stress Ăž Ăť basal
    cortisol, Ăź response to stress Ăž disease
  • Prospective, randomized study TM vs. stress
    education
  • Ăź basal cortisol, Ăť response to stress
  • TM technique reverses effects of chronic stress
    significant for health

MacLean CR, et al. Psychoneuroendo.
199722(4)277-95.
23
Biologically Based Therapies
  • Herbal Medicine
  • Nutritional Approaches
  • Pharmacological Therapies

24
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25
Herbal Medicine
  • Indigenous medicine
  • European phytomedicine
  • German Commission E
  • Historical use as evidence
  • Scientific evidence

26
Nutritional Approaches
  • Diet-based therapies
  • Megavitamins
  • Food intolerance

27
Vitamin E Coronary Artery Ds
  • 20 of population taking Vit E.
  • Anti-oxidant highly associated with LDL
  • Epidemiologic evidence
  • Nurses Health Study
  • Health Professionals Follow-up Study
  • Prospective secondary prevention
  • CHAOS 800 IU Vit E Ăź MI by 77
  • HOPE trial - no effect
  • Safety do not use with warfarin
  • Dose 100 - 1000 IU daily

Sorrentino M. Alt Med Alert 19981(2)20-22.
28
Pharmacological Therapies
  • Alternative drugs or vaccines
  • Chelation
  • Cartilage products
  • Apitherapy

29
Long term effects of Glucosamine on
Osteoarthritis
  • RCT 1500 mg glucosamine vs. placebo daily
  • 212 subjects x 3 years duration
  • Joint space narrowing -0.06 mm (-0.22 to 0.09)
    vs. -0.31 mm (-0.48 to -0.13)
  • WOMAC symptom scale glucosamine improved
    symptoms, placebo worsened

Reginster, et al. Lancet 2001 357 251-6
30
Energy Therapies
  • Pulsed EM fields / DC fields
  • Magnetic fields
  • Therapeutic Touch
  • Polarity therapy
  • Reiki

31
TT worse than Mimic TT TT better than
Mimic TT
1
2
3
4
5
8
9
All
-10
-20
0
10
20
Difference in Mean Improvement Therapeutic
Touch minus Mimic TT
32
Evidence Based Medicine
  • Nov, 1992 A new paradigm emerges
  • Randomized controlled trials, meta-analysis
  • Clinical experience misleading
  • Mechanisms insufficient
  • Apply rules of evidence
  • Produce better outcomes

EBM Working Group. JAMA 1992268(17)2420-2425
33
Evaluating the Evidence
  • Ask a question
  • Exposure ?? patient ?? outcome
  • Glucosamine ? my pt ? better??
  • Search the literature
  • Evaluate the evidence

34
Levels of Evidence
Clinical Practice Guidelines
Meta-analysis
Prospective clinical trial
Retrospective report
Case report Case series
35
When Evidence is Incomplete
  • Evaluating harm
  • Risk/benefit ratio
  • n of 1 trial

36
Evaluating Harm
  • Randomized controlled trial
  • Be wary of case reports

37
Risk/Benefit Ratio
  • Risk
  • Side effects
  • Toxic effects
  • Withholding other treatment
  • Cost
  • Time
  • Environmental
  • Benefit
  • Physical
  • Mental
  • Emotional
  • Spiritual
  • Social
  • Environmental

38
n of 1 Trial
  • You your patient become the scientists
  • Decide what symptoms to address
  • Decide what outcomes are important
  • Document test
  • Apply intervention
  • Re-document test
  • Discuss together

39
What to look for in your career
  • More patient demand for Integrated care
  • Access to discounted CAM services
  • Bilingual colleagues
  • More educational opportunities
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