Literature DB >> 16401248

The use of alternative medicine among Taiwanese psychiatric outpatients.

Jan-Jhy Pan1, Bhi-Yuh Chen, Hui-Wen Teng, Mong-Liang Lu, Winston W Shen.   

Abstract

The present study is intended to examine the use of alternative therapy and their help-behavior among patients who first visited psychiatric clinic in Taiwan. We recruited 150 patients from three general hospital psychiatric clinics. We collected the information of their demographic data, help-seeking behavior, and the use of alternative therapy, then screened them using Beck's Depression Inventory, Beck Anxiety Inventory, and World Health Organization's Quality of Life assessment. We found that 53 (35.3%) of 150 psychiatric outpatients visited an alternative therapists or received some type of alternative therapy at least once. Alternative medicine users were more likely to be married (P=0.004), to suffer from more intensive anxiety symptoms (P=0.018), to have visited more psychiatrists (P=0.006), to have visited more clinics (P=0.001), and to have taken longer between onset of the symptoms and their first visit to the psychiatric clinic (P=0.028). Based on these findings we suggest that alternative therapy plays important roles in the help-seeking behavior of Taiwanese psychiatric patients, and that alternative medicine users tend to delay proper psychiatric care. Clinicians should inquire about patients' past history of seeking alternative therapy, build a firm trust in the doctor-patient relationship, and increase the compliance of psychiatric treatment in alternative therapy users.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16401248     DOI: 10.1111/j.1440-1819.2005.01441.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychiatry Clin Neurosci        ISSN: 1323-1316            Impact factor:   5.188


  2 in total

1.  Twelve-month use of herbal medicines as a remedy for mental health problems in Japan: A cross-national analysis of World Mental Health Survey data.

Authors:  Mai Iwanaga; Hiroo Iwanaga; Norito Kawakami
Journal:  Asia Pac Psychiatry       Date:  2017-06-19       Impact factor: 2.538

2.  Influences of attribution and stigma on working relationships with providers practicing Western psychiatry in the Taiwanese context.

Authors:  Fang-Pei Chen; Hui-Ching Wu; Chun-Jen Huang
Journal:  Psychiatr Q       Date:  2014-12
  2 in total

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