| Literature DB >> 18955339 |
Abstract
A growing number of physicians study complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). Limited data are available on perspectives of physicians with dual training in conventional medicine and CAM, on issues of communication and collaboration with CAM practitioners (CAMPs). Questionnaires were administered to primary care physicians employed in the largest health maintenance organization (HMO) in Israel and to MD and non-MD CAM practitioners employed by a CAM-related agency of the same HMO. Data for statistical analysis were available from 333 primary care physicians (PCPs) and 241 CAM practitioners. Thirty-one of the 241 CAMPs were dual-trained physicians employed in a CAM-related agency as practitioners and/or triage-consultants. Dual trained physicians and CAMPs shared similar attitudes and supported, more so than PCPs, collaborative physician-CAM practitioner teamwork in clinical practice, medical education and research. Nevertheless, dual trained physicians supported a physician-dominant teamwork model (similar to the PCPs' approach) in contrast to non-MD CAM practitioners who mainly supported a co-directed teamwork model. Compared to PCPs and non-MD CAM practitioners, dual trained physicians supported significantly more a medical/referral letter as the preferred means of doctor-CAM practitioner communication. Dual trained physicians have a unique outlook toward CAM integration and physician-practitioner collaboration, compared to non-MD CAM practitioners and PCPs. More studies are warranted to explore the role of dual trained physicians as mediators of integration.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18955339 PMCID: PMC2892352 DOI: 10.1093/ecam/nen033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Demographic and characteristics of participants
| CAM practitioners | Dual trained physicians subgroup | Primary care physicians | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 241 | 31 | 333 | |
| Sex—male : female (%) | 95 : 137 (41 : 59) | 20 : 10 (67 : 33) | 187 : 134 (58 : 42) |
| Mean age in years ± SD (median) | 40 ± 9.4 (38) | 46.8 ± 7.15 (46) | 47.7 ± 7.2 (48) |
| Medical specialty or CAM modality, | Movement/Manual healing 124 (51%) Traditional Chinese medicine 88 (37%) Naturopathy 29 (12%) Homeopathy 10 (4%) Herbal medicine 9 (4%) Chiropractice 8 (3%) Healing 4 (2%) Meditation 3 (1%) | Several CAM modalities 15 Homeopathy 7 Traditional Chinese medicine 3 Meditation 3 Herbal medicine 1 Naturopathy 1 | 265 specialists (86%) |
aEighty-seven (27%) of PCPs had studied various also undergone CAM training. Twenty-four (7%) of PCPs had studied various CAM courses.
Figure 1.In which areas are you interested in conventional–CAM collaborative teamwork?
Figure 2.If CAM was provided in a primary care clinic, who should offer CAM treatment?
Figure 3.How do you perceive conjoint physician-CAM practitioner teamwork?