| Literature DB >> 24194778 |
Abdul Rouf Pallivalappila1, Derek Stewart, Ashalatha Shetty, Binita Pande, James S McLay.
Abstract
Aims. To undertake a systematic review of the recent (2008-2013) primary literature, describing views and experiences of CAM use during pregnancy by women and healthcare professionals. Method. Medline, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Cochrane Database of Systematic Review Library and Allied, and Complementary Medicine Database were searched. Studies reporting systemic CAM products (homeopathic preparations, herbal medicines, Vitamins and minerals, homeopathy, and special diets) alone or in combination with other nonsystemic CAM modalities (e.g., acupuncture) were included. Results. Database searches retrieved 2,549 citations. Removal of duplicates followed by review of titles and abstracts yielded 32 relevant studies. Twenty-two reported the perspectives of women and their CAM use during pregnancy, while 10 focused on healthcare professionals. The majority of studies had significant flaws in study design and reporting, including a lack of appropriate definitions of CAM and associated modalities, absence of detailed checklists provided to participants, the use of convenience sampling, and a general lack of scientific robustness in terms of data validity and reliability. Conclusion. To permit generalisability of study findings, there is an urgent need to expand the evidence base assessing CAMs use during pregnancy using appropriately designed studies.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24194778 PMCID: PMC3806151 DOI: 10.1155/2013/205639
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Criteria for critical appraisal.
| (1) Is a definition of CAMs/herbals given? | |
| (2) Is a description of CAMs/herbals checklist given? | |
| (3) Is the information about the ethics given (approved/not required)? | |
| (4) Are study inclusion and exclusion criteria fully described? | |
| (5) Is the sample size fully justified? | |
| (6) Is development of questionnaire (validity, reliability, and piloting) fully described? | |
| (7) Are study strengths and limitations fully discussed? | |
| (8) Is generalisability fully discussed? |
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart, *after removal of duplicates.
Quality assessment of reviewed studies.
| Authors, year | Is a definition of CAM/herbal given? | Is a description of CAM/herbal checklist given? | Is information about the ethical/study approval given? | Are study inclusion/exclusion criteria fully described? | Is the sample size fully justified? | Is development of questionnaire (validity, reliability, and piloting) fully described? | Are study strengths and limitations fully discussed? | Is generalisability fully discussed? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studies of women | ||||||||
| Adams et al., 2011 [ | N | Y | N | P | N | N | P | N |
| Bishop et al., 2011 [ | N | Y | Y | P | N | N | P | N |
|
Al-Riyami et al., 2011 [ | N | N | U | P | Y | N | P | Y |
| Kalder et al., 2011 [ | Y | N | Y | Y | N | N | P | P |
|
Khresheh, 2011 [ | N | N | Y | P | N | N | N | N |
| Nordeng et al., 2011 [ | Y | Y | U | P | N | N | P | N |
|
Tabatabaee, 2011 [ | Y | N | Y | P | N | N | P | N |
| Bercaw et al., 2010 [ | N | N | U | N | Y | N | Y | Y |
| Broussard et al., 2010 [ | Y | N | U | P | N | N | P | N |
|
Cuzzolin and Benoni, 2009 [ | N | Y | Y | P | N | P | P | Y |
| Kochhar et al., 2010 [ | N | N | U | N | N | N | P | N |
| Lapi et al., 2010 [ | Y | Y | U | P | N | Y | Y | P |
| Leppee et al., 2010 [ | N | N | Y | P | N | N | N | N |
| Louik et al., 2010 [ | N | N | U | P | N | N | P | N |
| Mohamed et al., 2010 [ | Y | Y | N | P | Y | P | P | Y |
| Chuang et al., 2009 [ | Y | N | Y | P | N | N | P | Y |
| Fakeye et al., 2009 [ | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N |
| Forster et al., 2009 [ | N | N | Y | Y | Y | P | N | N |
| Holst et al., 2009 [ | Y | Y | Y | P | N | N | P | Y |
| Moussally et al., 2009 [ | Y | Y | Y | P | N | N | P | Y |
| Rahman et al., 2009 [ | Y | Y | Y | P | N | N | P | P |
| Skouteris et al., 2008 [ | Y | Y | Y | P | Y | N | Y | Y |
|
| ||||||||
| Studies of professionals | ||||||||
| Koc et al., 2012 [ | Y | Y | N | P | N | P | P | Y |
| Dennehy et al., 2010 [ | N | N | N | P | N | P | Y | P |
|
Hrgovic et al., 2010 [ | N | N | Y | N | N | N | N | N |
| Samuels et al., 2010 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | P | Y |
| Harding and Foureur, 2009 [ | Y | Y | Y | P | N | N | P | Y |
| Hastings-Tolsm and Terada, 2009 [ | N | Y | N | P | N | Y | Y | P |
| Münstedt et al., 2009 [ | N | Y | Y | Y | N | P | P | P |
| Münstedt et al., 2009 [ | N | Y | N | Y | N | P | P | Y |
| Wiebelitz et al., 2009 [ | N | Y | N | P | N | P | P | Y |
| Furlow et al., 2008 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y |
Y: yes; N: no; U: unclear; P: partly.
Figure 2Stacked bar chart representing quality assessment of reviewed studies (n = 32).
Data extraction relating to studies of women (n = 22).
| Authors, year, country | CAM studied | Stage of pregnancy at point of data collection | Mode of data collection | Response rate (RR, %) | Prevalence in pregnancy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adams et al., 2011 [ | CAM | Pregnant | Questionnaire | 897 (RR not given) | 81% used vitamins and minerals, 16% aromatherapy, and 15% herbal medicines. |
| Bishop et al., 2011 [ | CAM | Antenatal (weeks 8, 12, 18, 32) | Questionnaire | Total response of 14,115/14,541 (97.1) but varied at each point of data collection | 26.7% used a CAM at least once. |
|
Al-Riyami et al., 2011 [ | CAM | Antenatal | Interview | 139 but varied at each data collection point | Compared to prenatal, vitamin used increased from 12% to 84–95% across three semesters ( |
| Kalder et al., 2011 [ | CAM | Postnatal | Questionnaire | 205/475 (43.2) | 50.7% used CAM (including CAM practices). Homeopathy (18.5%), aromatherapy (4.4%). |
|
Khresheh, 2011 [ | CAM used in treatment of nausea and vomiting | Currently pregnant or at least one full term pregnancy | Questionnaire | 235/290 (81.0) | 9.4% used herbal medicines. |
| Nordeng et al., 2011 [ | Herbal | Postnatal, within 5 days | Interview | 600 | 39.7% used herbal medicines, 4.3% homeopathy. |
| Tabatabaee, 2011 [ | Herbal | Postnatal, 2 days | Interview | 513 | 30.8% used herbal medicines. |
| Bercaw et al., 2010 [ | Herbal and vitamins | Postnatal, immediately | Questionnaire | 485 Hispanic women (RR not given) | 19% used herbal medicines, 47% vitamins. |
| Broussard et al., 2010 [ | Herbal | Postnatal, 6 weeks–2 years | Interview | 4239 | 9.4% used herbal medicines, the highest for first trimester (6.4% v 5.1 and 5.2%) (no |
|
Cuzzolin and Benoni, 2009 [ | Herbal | Postnatal, within 3 days | Interview | 392 | 27.8% used one or more herbal medicines. Prevalence increased slightly with trimester (no details or |
| Kochhar et al., 2010 [ | Herbal | Not stated | Questionnaire | 461 Hispanic women (RR not given) | 74.2% used herbal medicines. |
| Lapi et al., 2010 [ | CAM | Antenatal, trimester 3 | Interview | 150 | 48% used CAM. |
| Leppee et al., 2010 [ | Vitamins, minerals and iron | Antenatal | Interview | 6,992 | 56.6% used vitamins and minerals in Croatia, 20.3% in Serbia. |
| Louik et al., 2010 [ | Herbal or natural treatments | Postnatal, within 6 months | Interview | 4,866 | 5.8% used herbal or natural treatments. |
| Mohamed et al., 2010 [ | CAM | Antenatal | Interview | 393 | 67.5% used CAM in first trimester, 37.7% in second, and 28.9% in third (no |
| Chuang et al., 2009 [ | Chinese herbal | Postnatal | Interview | 21,248 | 33.6% used Chinese herbal medicines. |
| Fakeye et al., 2009 [ | Herbal | Antenatal | Questionnaire | 560/600 (99.0) | 67.5% used herbal medicines. |
| Forster et al., 2009 [ | Folic acid and other vitamin supplements | Antenatal, ~38 weeks | Questionnaire | 588/705 (83.4) | 91% took at least one vitamin supplement (mainly folic acid) during pregnancy. |
| Holst et al., 2009 [ | Herbal | Antenatal, more than 20 weeks | Questionnaire | 578/1,037 (55.7) | 57.8% used herbal medicines. |
| Moussally et al., 2009 [ | Herbal | Postnatal, 3–8 years after birth | Questionnaire | 3,354/8,505 (39.0) | 9% used herbal medicines. |
| Rahman et al., 2009 [ | Herbal | Postnatal | Interview | 210 | 52.4% used herbal medicines. |
| Skouteris et al., 2008 [ | CAM | Antenatal, 24–31 weeks | Questionnaire | 321 (RR not given) | 73.2% used at least one CAM, mostly massage (49.5%), and vitamins/minerals (49.5%). |
Data extraction relating to studies of professionals (n = 10).
| Authors year, country | Professional group | CAMs studied (authors' terms) | Mode of data collection | Response rate (RR, %) | Prevalence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Koc et al., 2012 [ | Midwives | CAM | Questionnaire | 129/159 (81.1) | 58.9% used CAM in their practice, mostly herbal medicines, diets, and exercises (32.6%, 27.9%, and 28.7%). |
| Dennehy et al., 2010 [ | Midwives | Herbal medicines | Questionnaire | 139/460 (30.2) | 66.9% used herbal medicines in their practice. |
|
Hrgovic et al., 2010 [ | Heads of obstetrics | CAM | Questionnaire | 36/36 (100) | Homeopathy, aromatherapy, massage, moxibustion, phytotherapy, acupressure, reflexology, and Reiki were not used at all (no data on herbal). Acupuncture used at two centres only. |
| Samuels et al., 2010 [ | Midwives | CAM | Questionnaire | 173/238 (72.7) | 70% used CAM in their practice (49.1% massage, 37.0% herbals, and 33.5% homeopathy). |
| Harding and Foureur, 2009 [ | Midwives | CAM | Questionnaire | 343/648 (52.9) | 71.95% recommended or offered CAM often (31%), very frequently (28%) or always (13%). Most common homeopathy, followed by herbal medicines, aromatherapy, and acupuncture (given as frequencies for different patient numbers, e.g., 50% of midwives recommend for 70–100% of their patients). |
| Hastings-Tolsm and Terada, 2009 [ | Midwives | CAM | Questionnaire | 227/500 (45.0) | 78% used CAM in their practice mostly herbal medicines (85%), pharmacologic/biologic treatments (82%), and mind-body interventions (80%). |
| Münstedt et al., 2009 [ | Heads of obstetrics | CAM | Questionnaire | 138/187 (73.4) | 100% offered acupuncture, 95.7% homoeopathy, and 50.7% aromatherapy. Decisions to provide CAM were largely made by midwives. |
| Münstedt et al., 2009 [ | Head of obstetrics | CAM | Questionnaire | 381/946 (40.3) | 97.3% offered acupuncture, 93.4% homeopathy, and 76.6% aromatherapy. Decisions to provide CAM were largely made by midwives. |
| Wiebelitz et al., 2009 [ | Midwives (lecturers, students) | CAM | Questionnaire | 309/309 (100) | 63.1% estimated CAM to be “applied frequently” (defined as >25% of their pregnant patients) by midwives. 50–75% estimated homeopathy used “regularly”, 20–40% phytotherapy, and 28-27% hydrotherapy. |
| Furlow et al., 2008 [ | Obstetric, gynaecology physicians | CAM | Questionnaire | 401/1,009 (41.0) | 97.6% routinely endorsed, provided or referred patients for at least one CAM modality. 86.4% movement therapies, 80.3% biofeedback etc. 61.4% herbal, and 41.7% homeopathy. |