| Literature DB >> 17118197 |
Marja J Verhoef1, Laura C Vanderheyden, Trish Dryden, Devon Mallory, Mark A Ware.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Central to the development of a sound evidence base for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) interventions is the need for valid, reliable and relevant outcome measures to assess whether the interventions work. We assessed the specific needs for a database that would cover a wide range of outcomes measures for CAM research and considered a framework for such a database.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17118197 PMCID: PMC1661594 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6882-6-38
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Complement Altern Med ISSN: 1472-6882 Impact factor: 3.659
Sample Questions Asked on Electronic Questionnaire
| 1. | Many outcome domains have been identified as important for CAM research that fall into the broad categories of |
| Are there any OTHER outcomes of CAM interventions you feel are important and should be included in CAM research (please describe)? | |
| 2. | What CAM outcome measures would you like to use but have not been able to find (please describe)? |
| 3. | Common assessment criteria that are used when selecting outcome assessment tools include validity, reliability, responsiveness, relevance, burden and cost. |
| Are there any OTHER assessment criteria that you use to assess measurement tools (please describe)? | |
| 4. | What do you perceive to be barriers to finding outcome measures for CAM research (please describe)? |
Characteristics of Survey Respondents
| n | % | |
| Primary Role*: | ||
| Practitioner | 53 | 32.3 |
| Researcher or Research Staff | 46 | 28.0 |
| Educator | 21 | 12.8 |
| Student | 16 | 9.8 |
| Administrator | 8 | 4.9 |
| Other | 16 | 9.8 |
| Actively involved in CAM research*: | ||
| Yes | 79 | 48.2 |
| No | 81 | 49.4 |
| Currently use outcome measures in research: | ||
| Yes | 62 | 78.5 |
| No | 17 | 21.5 |
* 4 respondents did not answer this question
Preliminary Framework of Outcome Domains Important for CAM Research
| Biological markers | Absorption | Adjustment | Awareness |
| Disability | Anger | Advocacy | Balance |
| Energy | Anxiety | Economic | Enablement |
| Fatigue | Attitudes and Beliefs | Health care utilization | Energy |
| Function/Activities of Daily Living | Awareness | Cost-effectiveness | Harmony |
| Pain | Coping | Relationships | Hope |
| Pathology | Depression | Role function in daily life and work | Peace |
| Sleep | Empathy | Social support | Relaxation |
| Symptom management | Enablement | Socioeconomic | Spirituality |
| Energy | Social Strain | Transformation | |
| Patient expectations | Religiosity | ||
| General | |||
| Hope | |||
| Introversion | |||
| Locus of control | |||
| Mood | |||
| Openness to experience | |||
| Optimism/Pessimism | |||
| Patient knowledge | |||
| Patient motivation | |||
| Patient perceived self-efficacy | |||
| Patient perceptions of care | |||
| Patient perceptions of risk | |||
| Patient preference for control | |||
| Patient Satisfaction | |||
| Readiness | |||
| Relaxation | |||
| Resilience | |||
| Self-Esteem | |||
| Sense of Coherence | |||
| Stress | |||
| Trust | |||
| Global | |||
| Multidimensional | |||
| e.g. Measure Your Medical Outcome Profile, Measure Your Concerns and Well-being, Goal Attainment Scaling | |||
| Healing environment | |||
| Negotiations between patients and practitioners | |||
| Patient-centeredness of healing | |||
| Patient expectations | |||
| Patient-practitioner relationship | |||
| Practitioner attitudes towards integration | |||
| Practitioner attributes | |||
| Practitioner expectations | |||
| Practitioner experience | |||
| Attunement | |||
| Therapeutic Intent | |||
| Adjustment | |||
| Engagement with intervention experience | |||
| Personal growth | |||
| Transformation | |||
| Unstuckness | |||
Figure 1Framework of Outcome Domains.