| Literature DB >> 23731970 |
Brigitte Franzel1, Martina Schwiegershausen, Peter Heusser, Bettina Berger.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Personalised (or individualised) medicine in the days of genetic research refers to molecular biologic specifications in individuals and not to a response to individual patient needs in the sense of person-centred medicine. Studies suggest that patients often wish for authentically person-centred care and personal physician-patient interactions, and that they therefore choose Complementary and Alternative medicine (CAM) as a possibility to complement standard care and ensure a patient-centred approach. Therefore, to build on the findings documented in these qualitative studies, we investigated the various concepts of individualised medicine inherent in patients' reasons for using CAM.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23731970 PMCID: PMC3679787 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6882-13-124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Complement Altern Med ISSN: 1472-6882 Impact factor: 3.659
Meta-ethnography steps according to Noblit and Hare[15]
| 1 | Getting started | “Getting started” meant to define the
objective or interest of the synthesis and the wording
of the research question [ |
| 2 | Deciding what is relevant to the initial interest | Sixty-seven databases, including medical, social science,
psychology, nutrition and complementary medicine
databases (i.e., API-on, CAMbase, CAM-QUEST, CINAHL,
Cochrane Library, DIMDI, GREENPILOT, Heclinet, MedPilot,
PubMed, Psyndex, PsynINFO, Sinbad, Somed), were searched
for the Boolean terms “complementary and
alternative medicine” OR “CAM” OR
“complementary medicine” OR
“alternative medicine” OR qualitative
research” OR “qualitative studies” OR
“interviews” OR “[exploratory OR
grounded theory OR content analysis OR focus groups OR
ethnography]” OR “reasons” OR
“[concepts OR patient expectations OR motivation
OR attitude to health OR patient communication OR health
knowledge OR patient acceptance of health care OR
patient participation OR physician-patient relations OR
professional-patient relations]”. The selection of
these terms followed predetermined inclusion criteria
and included qualitative research articles in English
and German about reasons for CAM use from a patient
perspective; all articles used in this analysis were
published between 1980 and 2011. Exclusion criteria were
qualitative studies with therapists, perspectives of
teaching personnel, review and theory papers and
articles devoted to study design and secondary analysis.
A detailed description of the literature search and
appraisal of the meta-ethnography will be published
separately and is also mentioned in Additional file
|
| 3 | Reading the studies | The studies were reviewed multiple times, while the
findings of the individual qualitative studies were
collected with extensive attention paid to the details
in the articles and the key themes from each article
were determined. Two members of the research team
extracted the themes of the individual qualitative
studies concerning patients’ reasons for CAM usage
and transferred them into a spreadsheet program as
primary themes with their related explanations. The
spreadsheet’s columns contained the original
authors and the key primary themes of reasons of
patients seeking CAM, and the rows displayed the main
explanations of the key themes or citations of the
patients. Key themes were juxtaposed, with the most
important interpretations of the authors focusing on
concepts of individualised medicine (mostly in the
discussion section of each article) in the last column;
our team worked diligently to always keep in mind the
research question, which was the expectation of patients
related to individualised medicine. After the extraction
of key themes with reasons of patients for CAM, the
spreadsheet data and personal notes were discussed in
regular meetings. This discussion revealed no important
differences in the extracted data. The consolidated
spreadsheet data were finally discussed with the entire
research team. |
| 4 | Determining how the studies are related | For the syntheses, we had to determine how the individual
studies were related. According to Noblit and Hare, the
metaphors, concepts or constructs used for this purpose
can be either (1) directly comparable as
“reciprocal” translations; (2) stand in
relative opposition to each other and are essentially
“refutational”; or (3) present a
“line-of-argument” rather than a reciprocal
or refutational translation [ |
| 5 | Translating the studies | Translation in a meta-ethnography such as ours means
comparing the metaphors and concepts in one article with
the metaphors in others. We first arranged all papers
chronologically and according to main indications.
Thereafter, we compared the key themes from paper one
with paper two, and the syntheses of these two papers
with paper three, and so on. The translation respected
the individual meaning and maintained the central
metaphors in relation to the studies’ other key
metaphors. We translated our key themes across all
articles in order to determine secondary key themes. All
secondary key themes contributed reasoning behind why
patients turn toward CAM. To perform the translation,
the research team members worked with grids or hand
cards. The relationship between the studies was
indicated by drawing arrows, lines and bubbles or by
clustering the hand cards. The emerging secondary key
themes were transferred into the head line of a
spreadsheet named “secondary key themes,”
and the applicable explanations were entered in the rows
below, the themes were juxtaposed with the
authors’ main secondary interpretations from the
discussion section of each article. We made analytical
and reflexive notes during the translation to be
prepared for the research group discussions. |
| 6 | Synthesizing translations | The secondary key themes of the reciprocal translation
were brought together by synthesizing them, starting
from the identified secondary key themes and matching
them with their respective patients’ quotations of
the primary studies. This process involved further
re-readings of the original studies. The findings from
the translation and the resulting spreadsheet data with
secondary themes, explanations, interpretations and
subthemes provided the foundation for a third order
analysis. In this phase it was possible to
re-conceptualize the findings, generating a new
interpretation of the secondary-order themes. Each
member of the research team independently developed an
overarching mind-map and his or her own synthesis model
that linked together the translated secondary key themes
and authors’ interpretations. These models were
merged and discussed. In this phase we also used hand
cards to pick apart the original explanations of the
authors and subsequently put them together again in
clusters. The clusters were compared to each other and
classified, resulting in our new third-order concepts
with dimensions and subthemes. This process was quite
similar to standard primary qualitative research in
terms of subjectivity of interpretation, and can be
compared to a grounded theory approach that puts the
similarities between studies into an interpretive order
according to Noblit and Hare a “line of
argument”. The line of argument synthesis involved
building up a picture of the whole from studies of its
parts. Our interpretation aimed to develop a model to
explain the overall concepts of patients about
individualised medicine. |
| 7 | Expressing the synthesis | According to Noblit and Hare, the synthesis is mostly
expressed in written words or in another presentable
form [ |
Main criteria of included studies
| Primary Care | 17 patients, semi structured in-depth interviews | To investigate knowledge, attitudes …of patients of
CAM. | Madison telephone listings, USA | |
| Primary Care | 204 patients, qualitative comments in health
questionnaire | To assess expectations of patients who use CAM | British NHS outpatient department | |
| Primary Care | 37 patients, focus group | To identify the motivations of people who choose IM | Integrative care clinic in Cambridge, MA | |
| Primary Care | 19 patients, telephone focus group | To explore the attributes of the therapy encounter | New Zealand, clients of massage therapist or practice | |
| Primary Care | 22 patients, hermeneutic phenomenology: case studies,
focus groups, key informant interviews | To understand the contribution integrative medicine can
make to the quality of care | 3 integrative medicine clinics in Sydney, Australia | |
| Primary Care | 12 patients, focus groups | To examine the family as a context for beliefs,
decision-making about CAM | Family Focus Clinics from Avon Longitudinal Study of
Parents and Children sub-study, UK | |
| Asthma | 50 patients, semi-structured interviews with 22 adults
and 28 children | To investigate why and how patients and parents of
children use CAM | 2 contrasting general practices, one in an affluent
suburb one in a deprived inner city area, Bristol,
UK | |
| Rheumatic Disease | 15 patients, in-depth interviews | To investigate patients’ experience and perceptions
of CAM | patient-driven rheumatic disease societies, Denmark | |
| Hepatitis C | 28 patients, semi-structured interviews | To describe reasons for the use of mind-body medicine | liver clinic, tertiary healthcare facility in the United
States | |
| MS | 2 patients, of 12 qualitative interviews, issue
(theme)-focused analysis on two cases | To obtain knowledge and understanding on MS patients'
experiences related to their CAM use | selection based on Registry of -exceptional Courses of
Disease, Norway and Denmark | |
| Breast Cancer | 36 patients, focus groups | To explore breast cancer survivors’ perceptions and
experiences of CAM | tertiary care allopathic medical centers, Canada | |
| Breast Cancer | 66 patients, focus groups | Specific reasons breast cancer surviviors reported for
using CAM | Vermont Mammography Registry, Vermont Canada | |
| Breast Cancer | 44 patients, semi structured interviews | To address older breast cancer patients’ seeking of
concurrent care | 1593 breast cancer case listings provided by the Northern
California Cancer Center | |
| Breast, Colon, Prostate, Lung and Throat Cancer | 11 patients, unstructured interviews | To identify features of the transformative experience
among people who are seeking integrative care | 3 integrative care facilities in Vancouver | |
| Breast, Kidney, NHL, Melanoma, Colon…. | 17 patients, semi structured interviews | How patients experience consultations with CAM
practitioners | outpatient clinic of oncology department at the
university hospital, Norway | |
| Prostate Cancer | 27 patients, semi structured interviews | To compare the perceptions, beliefs, ideas and
experiences that contribute to use CAM | part of a larger study, Hawaii Tumor Registry, USA | |
| Breast CA | 6 patients, semi structured interviews | To describe the attitudes, beliefs and utilization of
CAM | Komen Hawaii’s Race for a Cure | |
| Advanced cancer | 39 patients, semi structured interviews | To identify in detail the reasons for using CAM | records of state cancer registry, Queensland,
Australia | |
| Prostate cancer | 29 patients in-depth interviews?+?focus groups, then
secondary analysis from 10 of 29 patients with spiritual
practices | To assess decision making by men who use CAM | men with a confirmed diagnosis of prostate cancer in
British Columbia and Alberta, Canada | |
| Breast. Prostate, colon, lung, liver cancer | 19 patients, semi-structured in-depth interviews | To gain a greater understanding of CAM including
motivations | recruited via posters and study flyers placed in med.
waiting rooms, Australia | |
| Prostate, lung colorectal… | 34 patients, semi-structured interviews | To investigate why men with cancer choose to use CAM | National Health Service (NHS]oncology unit, NHS
homeopathic outpatient, private cancer charity | |
| Prostate Cancer | 14 patients, semi-structured interviews | To examine the cultural beliefs and attitudes of the use
of CAM | Prostate cancer center in central Virginia?+?referred by
other participants, USA | |
| multiple indication cancer | 20 patients, semi-structured interviews | To question how individuals make sense of diverse
treatment practices | two oncology departments in Australia | |
| Breast Cancer | 9 patients, in-depth interviews | What were the breast cancer survivors’ perceptions
about CAM | Cancer Center in the Midwestern region of USA | |
| HIV | 62 patients, qualitative interview, mostpart
conversational | To aid understanding why people us CAM for HIV | Core group of persons withHIV from personal networks and
contacts made through fieldwork, USA | |
| HIV | 29 patients, semi-structured, in-depth interview | To explore issues related to attitudes toward CAM | Ditan hospital in Beijing, China | |
| HIV | 9 patients, semi-structured interviews | To examine the sociocultural meaning and use of CAM | Referrals from CAM practitioners at community-based
health service for PLWHA, Melbourne, Australia | |
| Menopause | 36 patients, focus groups, and 4 semi-structured
interviews | To examine patients’ perspectives of risk
communication | two Cambridge practices from contrasting parts of the
city | |
| Primary Care | 13 patients, semi-structured interviews, adolescents
15–20 years | To explore adolescent CAM use | Canadian College of Naturopathic Medicine | |
| Endometriosis | 7 patients, semi-structured interviews, adolescents 13–22 years | To understand experiences of adolescents with acupuncture | primarilythrough the Division of Gynecology of Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA |
Figure 1Third-order concepts and their relationship: a model of how patients perceive individualised medicine.
Patients’ concepts of individualised medicine
| Personal growth | Emotional disease handling | | “I know that a cancer diagnosis is very dramatic. It
changes your life forever. It makes you realize that you are
mortal. It is only those people who have serious illnesses
early in their life who are forced to stop and look at the
fact that their life is so fragile. Nobody knows how much
time you have left. Somewhere along the line I decided that
I was going to use this as an opportunity to strengthen
myself. I guess to take charge and get rid of all of this
baggage I have been carrying around for the past 20 odd
years or so” [ |
| Biographical reassessment | “I don’t sweat the small stuff anymore. Life is
too short” [ | ||
| Correlation building | “For the first time I felt like the various and
seemingly disparate symptoms I was coming in with actually
made sense to my healthcare provider and fit within a
framework that that person understood, and also within a
treatment model that that person understood, and then could
be used to help make me better—which it is, and I
am” [ | ||
| Transformation | “kind of like an abstract thing if you feel within
yourself. How do you put that? I think I developed a
stronger love for nature and the world around me –
that kind of religious. Not, ‘oh – God saved
me.’ I got more in tuned with my environment” [ | ||
| Holism | Interdependencies of various treatments | | "It's time in the sense that they have got longer, but also
they appear to be more interested. I like our GPs enormously
and they're very talented individuals, but they don't have
the time to talk…(homeopaths) look at the whole thing
and they will say about diet, they will say what about your
bedding, what about this, have you changed that?" [ |
| Respect of the whole person’s state | Physical/Psychological holism | “When I am feeling good, I think it’s mental and
it’s physical and it’s spiritual; it’s all
of it together” [ | |
| “I think it’s healing emotionally, and when it
healed you emotionally, it healed you physically” [ | |||
| Spiritual holism | “And so preventative medicine, good, and I
mean,…I think a very holistic view is good, and so if
something helps you, even though it might seem rather mystic
or mystical and you know, I think try it, although I am from
a medical background and…on one hand I’m
thinking well, we need to see research,…and I work in
a very research-based kind of environment, but I’m
also a great believer in…these other kinds of
metaphysical or other kinds of therapy in any
situation” [ | ||
| Social holism | “…I go already relaxed knowing that it is going
to be a really useful hour, that she is interested not just
in what I might be feeling or the things I think could need
working on but interested in what has been going on in my
life [She] knows a bit about my family, my background she
knows where there might be problems areas outside of the
body and this will help to create al feeling of trust and
you can rely on it and rely on her. She does the things like
the glass of water and the personalised stuff and oils and
what have you. It’s just knowing that you will go away
feeling that you’ve had both physical and emotional
support” [ | ||
| Economical holism | “It’s not cheap, but I find I get benefit from
it. So, I spend my money for something like this” [ | ||
| Alliance | Time | Time to be listened to | “I think the biggest thing is that there is time. There
is individual, one-on-one time” [ |
| “I think the quality of listening is very important. My
experience [with IM] has been that the doctors listen, and
they make suggestions, and they listen back to how you feel
about the suggestions. I am beginning to think that
progressive medicine is finding a doctor who will
listen” [ | |||
| Time for transformation | “You know in retrospect, it all looks so obvious. Now I
see so many people who I feel are stagnant. It is a matter
of being ready to embrace all of this chaos. This kind of
self-involvement won’t happen unless you are 100% into
it. It has been my own personal journey, and looking back, I
don’t think it would have happened any sooner. You
truly need to be ready to take it on. Once you are I guess
maybe things just start to happen” [ | ||
| Time between and during visits | “The doctor sees you for certain periods of time and
they leave you alone in between” [ | ||
| Healing Relationship | Respectfulness | “And every time I bring it up they blow it off. So I
didn’t get very far when I voiced my concerns.” [ | |
| Wish for guidance, counselling and empowerment | “…it’s a partnership, they’ll look at
what can you do as well” [ | ||
| Emotional bonds | “My doctor here, she was funny, graceful, and loving
and so she empowered me. We make decisions here as equals.
She said, “Okay, so what do you want to do?” It
was like I was the doctor. And so I told her some things and
she said, “Yeah, okay, I agree with that.” She
was just so clear. She was always there for me too. In all
of my care experiences here, it was like, “Tell me
what is going on for you. Okay, well here are a few things
you might want to try and this is what you can expect” [ | ||
| Integrative Care | Tailored Care | | “Because people are individuals, it could suit some
people a lot better than like, mainstream medicine,
and…some people may just be more comfortable with
that.…I think homeopathic medicines are a
good…rather than just like the same thing for each
different illness sort of thing, something unique for each
person that suits them. I think…that works very well,
so yeah” [ |
| “I would consider one [risk information] that’s
more tailored to the individual, instead of being given
books that say ‘The risk is this, the risk is
that.’ It’s too general. Why isn’t it
tailored for the person who’s there? Instead
it’s blunderbuss approach really, it’s just kind
of so wide” [ | |||
| Integration of CAM and COM | “Making a decision about what treatment to go for is a
combination of belief, what you feel in your own body, and
whether others have had success. That’s what drives me
. . . if you rely on one doctor, or whoever, you only get
part of the picture. In the end only you can bring all the
elements necessary together to make a decision.” [ | ||
| Accessibility | “I expect it [CAM] to be provided on the NHS and [to
be] more widely available” [ | ||
| “I don’t think they [oncologists] were terribly
encouraging. I suppose . . . I know complementary medicines
work, but I had this horrible thing with my diet I was doing
with nuts and fruit. When I told him what I was doing all my
doctor said to me was, ‘What do monkeys eat?” [ | |||
| Legitimating alternatives | “It is just as sound as conventional medicine.
It’s just that there haven’t been enough studies
yet” [ | ||
| Self Activation | Personal autonomy | Empowerment through education and counselling | “I went to seminars where there was a group of people
that offered different thoughts about food as alternative
medicine. It was very interesting and very much an
education. I also read a lot and talked a lot to herbalists
and naturopaths” [ |
| Active control | “I know that my disease course is unusual. If I had
given away the responsibility and taken cortisone and let
myself be controlled, I would have been in a totally
different place.//If I hadn’t taken all these
alternative therapies and walked the road I have walked, I
would have been in a wheelchair a long time ago.//In the end
we are our own teachers and masters . . . I feel that
I’m starting to own more of my story even though a lot
is still too painful to relate to” [ | ||
| Activation of self healing power | Activation of physiological self healing | “I think that the two basic differences in approach
are: 1) attack the disease, the problem itself, or 2)
support the body to attack it. And those are the two
different approaches. I compare the medical approach at the
moment to the napalm bombing of Viet Nam. I think that is
the kind of mind set—we have a problem and we’re
going to eradicate it. . . . What are you aiming at: Do you
want to kill the cancer cell or do you want to strengthen my
body?” [ | |
| Healing power of mind | “I think your overall spiritual, psychological state
has a lot to do with [disease] progression. If you believe
the thing is more powerful than you are or somehow able to
inflict great damage, it’s like pointing the bone. But
if you can…get the thing into perspective and say
it’s just a chronic thing then I think it
doesn’t progress as fast” [ | ||
| Wellbeing | Physical wellbeing | “As I have had ankylosing spondylitis for over
30 years and angina for about 7 years, I do not
expect to be cured. But I hope that my back and pain from my
frozen shoulder which I had for 4 month since my
retirement at age 65 will be reduced enough to enable me to
enjoy my gardening and an occasional round of golf” [ | |
| Psychological wellbeing | “…feeling comfortable whether it’s the
physical state of the room or the, the welcome of the
therapist, all, all does something to lower those barriers
and make you feel more open and trusting” [ | ||
| Avoidance of adverse drug or treatment effects | “I’m sure you heard one time, ‘The
treatment is worse than disease,’ you know, before it
becomes an advanced disease. All the side effects that you
experienced from the Western medicine treatments. Oh, my
God, can there be a better way to treat?” [ | ||
| Wellbeing after emotional clearing | “For the first time I felt like the various and
seemingly disparate symptoms I was coming in with actually
made sense to my healthcare provider and fit within a
framework that that person understood, and also within a
treatment model that that person understood, and then could
be used to help make me better—which it is, and I
am” [ |