Cargando…

The usage of complementary and alternative medicine in gastrointestinal patients visiting the outpatients’ department of a large tertiary care centre-views from Pakistan

INTRODUCTION: The use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) has increased over the last few years, and an emergent data suggests that some CAM modalities may be helpful in addressing gastrointestinal (GI) conditions. Our aim was to find out the prevalence of such practices for GI condition...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lail, Ghulamullah, Luck, Nasir, Tasneem, Abbas Ali, Rai, AyeshaAslam, Laeeq, Syed Mudasir, Majid, Zain
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The African Field Epidemiology Network 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5075463/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27800102
http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2016.24.247.9559
_version_ 1782461869747863552
author Lail, Ghulamullah
Luck, Nasir
Tasneem, Abbas Ali
Rai, AyeshaAslam
Laeeq, Syed Mudasir
Majid, Zain
author_facet Lail, Ghulamullah
Luck, Nasir
Tasneem, Abbas Ali
Rai, AyeshaAslam
Laeeq, Syed Mudasir
Majid, Zain
author_sort Lail, Ghulamullah
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: The use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) has increased over the last few years, and an emergent data suggests that some CAM modalities may be helpful in addressing gastrointestinal (GI) conditions. Our aim was to find out the prevalence of such practices for GI condition amongst patients visiting an OPD of a large tertiary care centre of Karachi, Pakistan. METHODS: Patients visiting outpatient department of Hepatogastroenterology department at SIUT, Pakistan from March 2014 to March 2015, were included in this cross sectional study. A pre designed questionnaire was used that included the demographic data, primary disease of the patient, CAM modality used, reason for the use of CAM therapy and reasons for stopping it. Frequencies of different variables were computed using SPSS version 18. RESULTS: 906 patients were interviewed, out of which 52% (471) were males. The mean age at presentation was 39.81±12.4 years. 234 (25.8%) of the participants used one of the CAM modalities; Herbal medicine being most common one, seen in 122 (52.13%) followed by spiritual 61 (26%), and homeopathy 33 (14%). The duration of therapy was limited to six months in 161(68%), whereas 7 patients (2.9%) had prolonged duration of use of more than five years. Reasons for using CAM therapy included advice by family and friends in 66 patients (28%), personal will in 42 (17.94%), no benefit from allopathic treatment in 34 (14.5%), while high cost was the reason of use in 3(5%) of the patients. The most common reason for discontinuation of CAM was no benefit, seen in 113 patients (48.30%), followed by physician's advice in 32 (17%) patients, and side effects in 19 (8%). On the other hand 44 patients (18.80%) reported benefit from the therapy while 14 (5.9%) were still continuing with CAM modality. Among the CAM users 140 (60.09%) were un-educated or had primary education while CAM nonusers had 328 (47%) were either uneducated or had primary education only correlation reveals P value 0.004. CONCLUSION: Significant numbers of patients used CAM therapy. A lower level of education was associated with increased usage of CAM while cost had no major impact on its usage.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5075463
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2016
publisher The African Field Epidemiology Network
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-50754632016-10-31 The usage of complementary and alternative medicine in gastrointestinal patients visiting the outpatients’ department of a large tertiary care centre-views from Pakistan Lail, Ghulamullah Luck, Nasir Tasneem, Abbas Ali Rai, AyeshaAslam Laeeq, Syed Mudasir Majid, Zain Pan Afr Med J Research INTRODUCTION: The use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) has increased over the last few years, and an emergent data suggests that some CAM modalities may be helpful in addressing gastrointestinal (GI) conditions. Our aim was to find out the prevalence of such practices for GI condition amongst patients visiting an OPD of a large tertiary care centre of Karachi, Pakistan. METHODS: Patients visiting outpatient department of Hepatogastroenterology department at SIUT, Pakistan from March 2014 to March 2015, were included in this cross sectional study. A pre designed questionnaire was used that included the demographic data, primary disease of the patient, CAM modality used, reason for the use of CAM therapy and reasons for stopping it. Frequencies of different variables were computed using SPSS version 18. RESULTS: 906 patients were interviewed, out of which 52% (471) were males. The mean age at presentation was 39.81±12.4 years. 234 (25.8%) of the participants used one of the CAM modalities; Herbal medicine being most common one, seen in 122 (52.13%) followed by spiritual 61 (26%), and homeopathy 33 (14%). The duration of therapy was limited to six months in 161(68%), whereas 7 patients (2.9%) had prolonged duration of use of more than five years. Reasons for using CAM therapy included advice by family and friends in 66 patients (28%), personal will in 42 (17.94%), no benefit from allopathic treatment in 34 (14.5%), while high cost was the reason of use in 3(5%) of the patients. The most common reason for discontinuation of CAM was no benefit, seen in 113 patients (48.30%), followed by physician's advice in 32 (17%) patients, and side effects in 19 (8%). On the other hand 44 patients (18.80%) reported benefit from the therapy while 14 (5.9%) were still continuing with CAM modality. Among the CAM users 140 (60.09%) were un-educated or had primary education while CAM nonusers had 328 (47%) were either uneducated or had primary education only correlation reveals P value 0.004. CONCLUSION: Significant numbers of patients used CAM therapy. A lower level of education was associated with increased usage of CAM while cost had no major impact on its usage. The African Field Epidemiology Network 2016-07-15 /pmc/articles/PMC5075463/ /pubmed/27800102 http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2016.24.247.9559 Text en © Ghulamullah Lail et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ The Pan African Medical Journal - ISSN 1937-8688. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Lail, Ghulamullah
Luck, Nasir
Tasneem, Abbas Ali
Rai, AyeshaAslam
Laeeq, Syed Mudasir
Majid, Zain
The usage of complementary and alternative medicine in gastrointestinal patients visiting the outpatients’ department of a large tertiary care centre-views from Pakistan
title The usage of complementary and alternative medicine in gastrointestinal patients visiting the outpatients’ department of a large tertiary care centre-views from Pakistan
title_full The usage of complementary and alternative medicine in gastrointestinal patients visiting the outpatients’ department of a large tertiary care centre-views from Pakistan
title_fullStr The usage of complementary and alternative medicine in gastrointestinal patients visiting the outpatients’ department of a large tertiary care centre-views from Pakistan
title_full_unstemmed The usage of complementary and alternative medicine in gastrointestinal patients visiting the outpatients’ department of a large tertiary care centre-views from Pakistan
title_short The usage of complementary and alternative medicine in gastrointestinal patients visiting the outpatients’ department of a large tertiary care centre-views from Pakistan
title_sort usage of complementary and alternative medicine in gastrointestinal patients visiting the outpatients’ department of a large tertiary care centre-views from pakistan
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5075463/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27800102
http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2016.24.247.9559
work_keys_str_mv AT lailghulamullah theusageofcomplementaryandalternativemedicineingastrointestinalpatientsvisitingtheoutpatientsdepartmentofalargetertiarycarecentreviewsfrompakistan
AT lucknasir theusageofcomplementaryandalternativemedicineingastrointestinalpatientsvisitingtheoutpatientsdepartmentofalargetertiarycarecentreviewsfrompakistan
AT tasneemabbasali theusageofcomplementaryandalternativemedicineingastrointestinalpatientsvisitingtheoutpatientsdepartmentofalargetertiarycarecentreviewsfrompakistan
AT raiayeshaaslam theusageofcomplementaryandalternativemedicineingastrointestinalpatientsvisitingtheoutpatientsdepartmentofalargetertiarycarecentreviewsfrompakistan
AT laeeqsyedmudasir theusageofcomplementaryandalternativemedicineingastrointestinalpatientsvisitingtheoutpatientsdepartmentofalargetertiarycarecentreviewsfrompakistan
AT majidzain theusageofcomplementaryandalternativemedicineingastrointestinalpatientsvisitingtheoutpatientsdepartmentofalargetertiarycarecentreviewsfrompakistan
AT lailghulamullah usageofcomplementaryandalternativemedicineingastrointestinalpatientsvisitingtheoutpatientsdepartmentofalargetertiarycarecentreviewsfrompakistan
AT lucknasir usageofcomplementaryandalternativemedicineingastrointestinalpatientsvisitingtheoutpatientsdepartmentofalargetertiarycarecentreviewsfrompakistan
AT tasneemabbasali usageofcomplementaryandalternativemedicineingastrointestinalpatientsvisitingtheoutpatientsdepartmentofalargetertiarycarecentreviewsfrompakistan
AT raiayeshaaslam usageofcomplementaryandalternativemedicineingastrointestinalpatientsvisitingtheoutpatientsdepartmentofalargetertiarycarecentreviewsfrompakistan
AT laeeqsyedmudasir usageofcomplementaryandalternativemedicineingastrointestinalpatientsvisitingtheoutpatientsdepartmentofalargetertiarycarecentreviewsfrompakistan
AT majidzain usageofcomplementaryandalternativemedicineingastrointestinalpatientsvisitingtheoutpatientsdepartmentofalargetertiarycarecentreviewsfrompakistan