Lay etiology concepts of cancer patients do not correlate with their usage of complementary and/or alternative medicine

被引:0
|
作者
Huebner, J. [1 ]
Muecke, R. [2 ]
Micke, O. [3 ]
Prott, F. -J [4 ]
Josfeld, L. [1 ]
Buentzel, J. [5 ,6 ]
Buentzel, J. [5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Klinikum Jena, Klin Innere Med 2, Klinikum 1, D-07747 Jena, Germany
[2] Strahlentherapie RheinMain, Russelsheim, Germany
[3] Franziskus Hosp, Klin Strahlentherapie & Radioonkol, Bielefeld, Germany
[4] RNS Praxisgemeinschaft, Radiol & Strahlentherapie, Wiesbaden, Germany
[5] Sudharz Klinikum Nordhausen, Klin HNO Erkrankungen, Kopf Hals Chirurg Interdisziplinare Palliat Stn, Nordhausen, Germany
[6] Univ Klinikum Gottingen, Klin Hamatol & Onkol, Gottingen, Germany
关键词
Neoplasm; Cancer patients; Carcinogenesis; Lay etiology; Complementary medicine; Alternative medicine; BREAST-CANCER; SELF-EFFICACY; INFORMATION; CARE;
D O I
10.1007/s00432-022-04528-7
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
BackgroundThe usage of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) is widespread among cancer patients. While reasons for and aims of using CAM have been evaluated in many studies, less is known about whether patients' concepts of how and why cancer develops has an influence on the choice of the CAM method.MethodsWe pooled the data from all studies of our working group containing questions on lay etiological concepts and CAM usage and reanalyzed them with respect to the associations between these parameters.ResultsThe pooled dataset from 12 studies included 4792 patients. A third (1645 patients) reported using CAM. Most often used were supplements (55.9%), relaxation techniques (43.6%), and homeopathy (37.9%). Regarding perceived causes, patients most often marked stress (35.4%) followed by genes (31.9%). While all lay etiological beliefs were highly significantly associated with usage of CAM in general, there was no association between single lay etiological concepts and types of CAM used. Yet, in a network analysis, we found two associations: one comprising trauma, mistletoe, genes, and nutritional supplements, the other yoga, vitamin C, nutritional supplements, and TCM herbs. In the correlation heatmap, one cluster comprises etiological concepts of personality, immune system and trauma, and two clusters of CAM methods emerged: one comprising praying, yoga, meditation, and relaxation procedures, the other nutritional supplements, selenium, vitamins A and C.ConclusionWhile physicians are trained to derive treatment strategies from etiological concepts, lay people choosing CAM do not follow these rules, which may point to other needs of patients addressed by CAM.
引用
收藏
页码:6067 / 6074
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Lay etiology concepts of cancer patients do not correlate with their usage of complementary and/or alternative medicine
    J. Huebner
    R. Muecke
    O. Micke
    F.-J. Prott
    L. Josfeld
    J. Büntzel
    J. Büntzel
    [J]. Journal of Cancer Research and Clinical Oncology, 2023, 149 : 6067 - 6074
  • [2] Patients with advanced cancer and their usage of complementary and alternative medicine
    Magda Paul
    B. Davey
    B. Senf
    C. Stoll
    K. Münstedt
    R. Mücke
    Oliver Micke
    F. J. Prott
    J. Buentzel
    Jutta Hübner
    [J]. Journal of Cancer Research and Clinical Oncology, 2013, 139 : 1515 - 1522
  • [3] Patients with advanced cancer and their usage of complementary and alternative medicine
    Paul, Magda
    Davey, B.
    Senf, B.
    Stoll, C.
    Muenstedt, K.
    Muecke, R.
    Micke, Oliver
    Prott, F. J.
    Buentzel, J.
    Huebner, Jutta
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CANCER RESEARCH AND CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2013, 139 (09) : 1515 - 1522
  • [4] COMPLEMENTARY AND ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE USAGE IN CANCER PATIENTS IN SOUTHEAST OF TURKEY
    Kucukoner, Mehmet
    Bilge, Zulfikar
    Isikdogan, Abdurrahman
    Kaplan, M. Ali
    Inal, Ali
    Urakci, Zuhat
    [J]. AFRICAN JOURNAL OF TRADITIONAL COMPLEMENTARY AND ALTERNATIVE MEDICINES, 2013, 10 (01) : 21 - 25
  • [5] Factors influencing the usage of complementary and alternative medicine by patients with cancer
    Ciarlo, G.
    Ahmadi, E.
    Welter, S.
    Hubner, J.
    [J]. COMPLEMENTARY THERAPIES IN CLINICAL PRACTICE, 2021, 44
  • [6] Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) usage in Singaporean adult cancer patients
    Shih, V.
    Chiang, J. Y. L.
    Chan, A.
    [J]. ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY, 2009, 20 (04) : 752 - 757
  • [7] Usage pattern of Complementary and alternative medicine in Cancer Patients: An Indian perspective
    Pattanaik, J.
    Pareek, V.
    Barthwal, M.
    Sanyal, S.
    Pandey, S.
    Shyam, G.
    Nirala, S.
    Praveen, D. V. S.
    Samala, S. K.
    Bora, D.
    Mandal, S.
    Ghosh, V.
    Ravi, A.
    Solanki, A. P.
    Sisodiya, R.
    Tanwar, M. S.
    Sharma, D. N.
    Mallick, S.
    [J]. RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY, 2022, 170 : S1243 - S1243
  • [8] Consider lay etilogy and wellbeing, or - what else could influence patients' usage of complementary and alternative medicine?
    Liebholz, M. -C
    Buentzel, J.
    [J]. ONCOLOGY RESEARCH AND TREATMENT, 2023, 46 : 256 - 256
  • [9] Use of complementary and alternative medicine in patients with gynecologic cancer: Is this usage more prevalent?
    Kav, Sultan
    Pinar, Gul
    Gullu, Fatma
    Turker, Tulay
    Elibol, Sibel
    Dogan, Nevin
    Algier, Lale
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ALTERNATIVE AND COMPLEMENTARY MEDICINE, 2008, 14 (04) : 347 - 349
  • [10] To what extent do cancer patients use complementary and alternative medicine?
    Gary Deng
    Barrie R Cassileth
    [J]. Nature Clinical Practice Oncology, 2005, 2 : 496 - 497