Literature DB >> 18237071

Clinical significance of common cold treatment: professionals' opinions.

Bruce Barrett1, Sarah Endrizzi, Philip Andreoli, Shari Barlow, Zhengjun Zhang.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Little is known about professionals' knowledge and attitudes regarding the clinical significance of treatments for common cold (upper respiratory infection, presumed viral).
METHODS: We surveyed university-associated family physicians and published common cold researchers ("experts") regarding evidence-of-benefit and magnitude-of-benefit for 8 treatments: antihistamine, oral decongestant, nasal decongestant, nasal steroid, zinc lozenge, zinc nasal spray, vitamin C, and the herbal echinacea.
RESULTS: Responding family physicians (N = 89) and experts (N = 45) agreed that cold remedies do not reduce illness duration. There was substantial disagreement, however, regarding the evidence for severity reduction. Decongestants were rated most favorably. Alternative therapies (zinc, vitamin C, and echinacea) were rated approximately as favorably as the other conventional treatments (antihistamine, decongestant, nasal steroid). Published experts and family physicians responded similarly, as did men (N = 84) and women (N = 49). Older respondents (age > or = 45; N = 67) were less likely to rate treatments as justifiable than were their younger counterparts (P-values ranged from 0.001 to 0.078).
CONCLUSIONS: Family physicians and common cold experts tend to agree that available cold remedies offer limited benefit, with conventional and alternative therapies rated similarly. Substantive disagreements exist, however, regarding strength-of-evidence, and over whether current evidence justifies treatment. Older professionals appear more skeptical.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18237071

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  WMJ        ISSN: 1098-1861


  7 in total

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2.  Management of respiratory tract infections in young children-A qualitative study of primary care providers' perspectives.

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4.  Validation of a short form Wisconsin Upper Respiratory Symptom Survey (WURSS-21).

Authors:  Bruce Barrett; Roger L Brown; Marlon P Mundt; Gay R Thomas; Shari K Barlow; Alex D Highstrom; Mozhdeh Bahrainian
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5.  The effects of vitamins C and B12 on human nasal ciliary beat frequency.

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6.  Comparative Study of Novel Ratio Spectra and Isoabsorptive Point Based Spectrophotometric Methods: Application on a Binary Mixture of Ascorbic Acid and Rutin.

Authors:  Hany W Darwish; Ahmed H Bakheit; Ibrahim A Naguib
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7.  Meditation or exercise for preventing acute respiratory infection (MEPARI-2): A randomized controlled trial.

Authors:  Bruce Barrett; Mary S Hayney; Daniel Muller; David Rakel; Roger Brown; Aleksandra E Zgierska; Shari Barlow; Supriya Hayer; Jodi H Barnet; Elisa R Torres; Christopher L Coe
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-06-22       Impact factor: 3.240

  7 in total

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