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More Than 70 Percent Of Adults With Cancer Use Alternative Therapies
SEATTLE - More than 70 percent of adult cancer patients in western
Washington use alternative therapies and almost all report substantial
improvements in well-being as a result of using alternative medicine,
according to a Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center survey.
The results of this survey - the first population-based study
of its kind to look at predictors, motivators and costs of different
types of alternative-medicine use in adults with cancer - appear
today in The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine:
Research on Paradigm, Practice and Policy.
Ruth E. Patterson, Ph.D., R.D., and colleagues in Fred Hutchinson's
Public Health Sciences Division led the study, which was supported
by grants from the National Cancer Institute and funds from Fred
Hutchinson.
Researchers at Bastyr University in Kenmore, Wash.,
and Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, Ore., also
consulted on the project.
"This is the first study to specifically inquire about patients'
attitudes regarding the effectiveness of alternative treatments,"
Patterson said. Patients were considered users of alternative
medicine if they received care from an alternative provider within
the past year or had used at least one alternative supplement
or therapy.
Depending on the type of therapy, 83 percent to 97
percent of patients surveyed said they used alternative medicine
for general health and nearly all reported that use of these
therapies improved their well-being.
A smaller number of those surveyed, between 8 percent and 56 percent,
turned to alternative interventions to treat their cancer. Patients
who underwent multiple medical therapies (chemotherapy, radiation,
surgery) were twice as likely to use alternative medicine for
cancer treatment or symptom management as compared to those who'd
had surgery alone.
Seventeen percent of the patients received care from an alternative
provider such as a naturopathic doctor, spiritual advisor or
massage therapist, and 20 percent used some form of mental or
energy-based therapy such as biofeedback, hypnotism, guided imagery,
or use of crystals, chelation therapy or magnets.
The most common form of alternative treatment among those surveyed
was the use of dietary supplements, which were taken by 65 percent
of the patients, many of whom used several such products simultaneously.
The investigators classified all types of individual supplements
(vitamins, minerals, herbals and botanicals) as alternative,
with the exception of one-a-day-type multivitamins because these
generally are accepted by mainstream medicine.
While the use
of alternative medicine is well known among adult cancer patients,
until now little has been known about which patients are most
likely to use such therapies.
[09/05/2002; ScienceDaily]
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