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Quality of life assessment in clinical research on Chinese medicine: Early experience and outlook

Patients’ own account of the clinical progress is particularly important in situations of pain control, mental disturbances, and chronic problems. Chinese medicine does not directly target against a symptom or pathology, but emphasizes the maintenance of harmony between the vital forces of an indivi...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wong, Lai Yi Eliza, Leung, Ping Chung
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2770405/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19920969
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author Wong, Lai Yi Eliza
Leung, Ping Chung
author_facet Wong, Lai Yi Eliza
Leung, Ping Chung
author_sort Wong, Lai Yi Eliza
collection PubMed
description Patients’ own account of the clinical progress is particularly important in situations of pain control, mental disturbances, and chronic problems. Chinese medicine does not directly target against a symptom or pathology, but emphasizes the maintenance of harmony between the vital forces of an individual. To achieve the harmony, usually long-termed treatment is required by consideration of the changing seasons and subject’s constitution nature. With such unique requirements in Chinese medicine, the assessment of the quality of life becomes most important. There are obvious similarities between different systems of medical care. Hence the general domains of the quality of life should fit all patients, whether they are receiving conventional, modern medical care on alternative, Chinese medical care. Like different clinical research categories, specific areas (eg, cancer, women’s problems) would need special additions of assessment. Chinese medicine is based on a uniquely different philosophy and the approach is not deductive, but individualized treatment is an essential requirement. The symptom/syndrome descriptions and interpretation are different from modern western medicine. Health-related quality of life is not sufficient for clinical trials using Chinese medicine, especially when Chinese medicine experts serve as chief investigators. Early attempts to develop an additional system to cover the need for Chinese medicine have been scanty. A lot of effort needs to be given before a practical instrument taking care of both the general domains of common interests and special feelings on health, relevant to Chinese medicine, could be established and made available. Users of Chinese medicine have to rely on generally acceptable yard-sticks with the addition of self-reporting symptoms unique to Chinese medicine.
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spelling pubmed-27704052009-11-17 Quality of life assessment in clinical research on Chinese medicine: Early experience and outlook Wong, Lai Yi Eliza Leung, Ping Chung Patient Prefer Adherence Expert Opinion Patients’ own account of the clinical progress is particularly important in situations of pain control, mental disturbances, and chronic problems. Chinese medicine does not directly target against a symptom or pathology, but emphasizes the maintenance of harmony between the vital forces of an individual. To achieve the harmony, usually long-termed treatment is required by consideration of the changing seasons and subject’s constitution nature. With such unique requirements in Chinese medicine, the assessment of the quality of life becomes most important. There are obvious similarities between different systems of medical care. Hence the general domains of the quality of life should fit all patients, whether they are receiving conventional, modern medical care on alternative, Chinese medical care. Like different clinical research categories, specific areas (eg, cancer, women’s problems) would need special additions of assessment. Chinese medicine is based on a uniquely different philosophy and the approach is not deductive, but individualized treatment is an essential requirement. The symptom/syndrome descriptions and interpretation are different from modern western medicine. Health-related quality of life is not sufficient for clinical trials using Chinese medicine, especially when Chinese medicine experts serve as chief investigators. Early attempts to develop an additional system to cover the need for Chinese medicine have been scanty. A lot of effort needs to be given before a practical instrument taking care of both the general domains of common interests and special feelings on health, relevant to Chinese medicine, could be established and made available. Users of Chinese medicine have to rely on generally acceptable yard-sticks with the addition of self-reporting symptoms unique to Chinese medicine. Dove Medical Press 2008-02-02 /pmc/articles/PMC2770405/ /pubmed/19920969 Text en © 2008 Leung and Wong publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd. This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Expert Opinion
Wong, Lai Yi Eliza
Leung, Ping Chung
Quality of life assessment in clinical research on Chinese medicine: Early experience and outlook
title Quality of life assessment in clinical research on Chinese medicine: Early experience and outlook
title_full Quality of life assessment in clinical research on Chinese medicine: Early experience and outlook
title_fullStr Quality of life assessment in clinical research on Chinese medicine: Early experience and outlook
title_full_unstemmed Quality of life assessment in clinical research on Chinese medicine: Early experience and outlook
title_short Quality of life assessment in clinical research on Chinese medicine: Early experience and outlook
title_sort quality of life assessment in clinical research on chinese medicine: early experience and outlook
topic Expert Opinion
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2770405/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19920969
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