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Overview of the Publications From the Anthroposophic Medicine Outcomes Study (AMOS): A Whole System Evaluation Study
Anthroposophic medicine is a physician-provided complementary therapy system that was founded by Rudolf Steiner and Ita Wegman. Anthroposophic therapy includes special medicinal products, artistic therapies, eurythmy movement exercises, and special physical therapies. The Anthroposophic Medicine Out...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Global Advances in Health and Medicine
2014
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3921612/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24753995 http://dx.doi.org/10.7453/gahmj.2013.010 |
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author | Hamre, Harald Johan Kiene, Helmut Ziegler, Renatus Tröger, Wilfried Meinecke, Christoph Schnürer, Christof Vögler, Hendrik Glockmann, Anja Kienle, Gunver Sophia |
author_facet | Hamre, Harald Johan Kiene, Helmut Ziegler, Renatus Tröger, Wilfried Meinecke, Christoph Schnürer, Christof Vögler, Hendrik Glockmann, Anja Kienle, Gunver Sophia |
author_sort | Hamre, Harald Johan |
collection | PubMed |
description | Anthroposophic medicine is a physician-provided complementary therapy system that was founded by Rudolf Steiner and Ita Wegman. Anthroposophic therapy includes special medicinal products, artistic therapies, eurythmy movement exercises, and special physical therapies. The Anthroposophic Medicine Outcomes Study (AMOS) was a prospective observational multicenter study of 1631 outpatients starting anthroposophic therapy for anxiety disorders, asthma, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, depression, low back pain, migraine, and other chronic indications under routine conditions in Germany. AMOS incorporated two features proposed for the evaluation of integrative therapy systems: (1) a sequential approach, starting with the whole therapy system (use, safety, outcomes, perceived benefit), addressing comparative effectiveness and proceeding to the major system components (physician counseling, anthroposophic medicinal products, art therapy, eurythmy therapy, rhythmical massage therapy) and (2) a mix of different research methods to build an information synthesis, including pre-post analyses, prospective comparative analyses, economic analyses, and safety analyses of individual patient data. AMOS fostered two methodological innovations for the analysis of single-arm therapy studies (combined bias suppression, systematic outcome comparison with corresponding cohorts in other studies) and the first depression cost analysis worldwide comparing primary care patients treated for depression vs depressed patients treated for another disorder vs nondepressed patients. A total of 21 peer-reviewed publications from AMOS have resulted. This article provides an overview of the main research questions, methods, and findings from these publications: anthroposophic treatment was safe and was associated with clinically relevant improvements in symptoms and quality of life without cost increase; improvements were found in all age, diagnosis, and therapy modality groups and were retained at 48-month follow-up; nonrespondent bias, natural recovery, regression to the mean, and adjunctive therapies together could explain a maximum of 37% of the improvement. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-3921612 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2014 |
publisher | Global Advances in Health and Medicine |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-39216122015-01-01 Overview of the Publications From the Anthroposophic Medicine Outcomes Study (AMOS): A Whole System Evaluation Study Hamre, Harald Johan Kiene, Helmut Ziegler, Renatus Tröger, Wilfried Meinecke, Christoph Schnürer, Christof Vögler, Hendrik Glockmann, Anja Kienle, Gunver Sophia Glob Adv Health Med Review Anthroposophic medicine is a physician-provided complementary therapy system that was founded by Rudolf Steiner and Ita Wegman. Anthroposophic therapy includes special medicinal products, artistic therapies, eurythmy movement exercises, and special physical therapies. The Anthroposophic Medicine Outcomes Study (AMOS) was a prospective observational multicenter study of 1631 outpatients starting anthroposophic therapy for anxiety disorders, asthma, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, depression, low back pain, migraine, and other chronic indications under routine conditions in Germany. AMOS incorporated two features proposed for the evaluation of integrative therapy systems: (1) a sequential approach, starting with the whole therapy system (use, safety, outcomes, perceived benefit), addressing comparative effectiveness and proceeding to the major system components (physician counseling, anthroposophic medicinal products, art therapy, eurythmy therapy, rhythmical massage therapy) and (2) a mix of different research methods to build an information synthesis, including pre-post analyses, prospective comparative analyses, economic analyses, and safety analyses of individual patient data. AMOS fostered two methodological innovations for the analysis of single-arm therapy studies (combined bias suppression, systematic outcome comparison with corresponding cohorts in other studies) and the first depression cost analysis worldwide comparing primary care patients treated for depression vs depressed patients treated for another disorder vs nondepressed patients. A total of 21 peer-reviewed publications from AMOS have resulted. This article provides an overview of the main research questions, methods, and findings from these publications: anthroposophic treatment was safe and was associated with clinically relevant improvements in symptoms and quality of life without cost increase; improvements were found in all age, diagnosis, and therapy modality groups and were retained at 48-month follow-up; nonrespondent bias, natural recovery, regression to the mean, and adjunctive therapies together could explain a maximum of 37% of the improvement. Global Advances in Health and Medicine 2014-01 2014-01-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3921612/ /pubmed/24753995 http://dx.doi.org/10.7453/gahmj.2013.010 Text en © 2014 GAHM LLC. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial- No Derivative 3.0 License, which permits rights to copy, distribute and transmit the work for noncommercial purposes only, provided the original work is properly cited. |
spellingShingle | Review Hamre, Harald Johan Kiene, Helmut Ziegler, Renatus Tröger, Wilfried Meinecke, Christoph Schnürer, Christof Vögler, Hendrik Glockmann, Anja Kienle, Gunver Sophia Overview of the Publications From the Anthroposophic Medicine Outcomes Study (AMOS): A Whole System Evaluation Study |
title | Overview of the Publications From the Anthroposophic Medicine Outcomes Study (AMOS): A Whole System Evaluation Study |
title_full | Overview of the Publications From the Anthroposophic Medicine Outcomes Study (AMOS): A Whole System Evaluation Study |
title_fullStr | Overview of the Publications From the Anthroposophic Medicine Outcomes Study (AMOS): A Whole System Evaluation Study |
title_full_unstemmed | Overview of the Publications From the Anthroposophic Medicine Outcomes Study (AMOS): A Whole System Evaluation Study |
title_short | Overview of the Publications From the Anthroposophic Medicine Outcomes Study (AMOS): A Whole System Evaluation Study |
title_sort | overview of the publications from the anthroposophic medicine outcomes study (amos): a whole system evaluation study |
topic | Review |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3921612/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24753995 http://dx.doi.org/10.7453/gahmj.2013.010 |
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