| Literature DB >> 28274213 |
Alexandra Jocham1, Levente Kriston2, Pascal O Berberat3, Antonius Schneider1, Klaus Linde4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We aimed to investigate whether students at German medical schools participating in elective courses on acupuncture and homeopathy differ from an unselected group of students regarding attitudes and personality traits.Entities:
Keywords: Attitudes; Complementary and alternative medicine; Medical education; Personality traits
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28274213 PMCID: PMC5343393 DOI: 10.1186/s12906-017-1653-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Complement Altern Med ISSN: 1472-6882 Impact factor: 3.659
Characteristics of participants. Values are absolute frequencies (percentages) or medians (25th and 75th percentile)
| Variable (n missing) | Acupuncture | Homeopathy | Control |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female (9) | 161 (73%) | 87 (77%) | 202 (66%) | .05 (−/*/-) |
| Age (12) | 24 (23, 27) | 24 (22, 28) | 23 (22, 25) | .005 (**/−/−) |
| Half-years at medical school (12) | 7 (5, 9) | 7 (3, 9) | 7 (7, 8) | .04 (−/*/*/) |
| Score secondary schoola (28) | 1.7 (1.3, 2.3) | 1.6 (1.3, 2.0) | 1.4 (1.2, 1.6) | <.001 (**/**/-) |
| Professional training before medical school (9) | 69 (31%) | 40 (35%) | 53 (17%) | <.001 (**/**/-) |
| Knows planned type of specialization (10) | 115 (52%) | 63 (56%) | 130 (43%) | .015 (*/*/-) |
| - family medicine | 29 (25%) | 30 (48%) | 19 (15%) | <.001 (−/**/*) |
| - surgery | 13 (11%) | 3 (5%) | 33 (25%) | .001 (*/*/-) |
| - internal medicine | 13 (11%) | 6 (10%) | 23 (18%) | .19 (−/−/-) |
p-values for three-group comparisons from Kruskal-Wallis-tests and Pearson-Chi2-tests; p-values for pairwise comparisons from Fisher’s exact tests and Mann–Whitney-U-tests: − p ≥ .05 ; * p = .002 to p = .049 ; ** p ≤ .001 (order: first position - acupuncture vs. control, second position - homeopathy vs. control; third position - acupuncture vs. homeopathy)
scores for final examinations at German secondary schools qualifying for university can vary between 0.7 (best score) and 6 (worst score)
Fig. 1Means (95% confidence intervals) for the four main factors CAM orientation, science orientation, care orientation and status orientation. Higher values indicated stronger agreement. p-values for three-group comparisons from ANOVA (significance levels for pairwise comparisons from Student t-tests: − p ≥ 0.05; * p =0.002 to p =0.049; ** p ≤ 0.001; order: first position - acupuncture vs. control, second position - homeopathy vs. control; third position - acupuncture vs. homeopathy)
Fig. 2Means (95% confidence intervals) for the four factors CAM interest, acupuncture, homeopathy, and beyond science contributing to the main factor CAM orientation. Higher values indicated stronger agreement. See legend of Fig. 1 for further details
Results of the latent profile analysis per group. Values are absolute frequencies (percentages)
| Class – class characteristics (compared to other classes) | Acupuncture | Homeopathy | Control | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 – CAM negative, science high, care low, status high | 2 (1%) | - |
| 91 (14%) |
| 2 – CAM neutral, science high & care & status moderate | 25 (11%) | 22 (19%) |
| 161 (25%) |
| 3 – CAM interest strong/Acupuncture moderate/Homeopathy positive, science low, care high, status low | 24 (11%) |
| 28 (9%) | 101 (16%) |
| 4 – CAM interest strong/Acupuncture positive/Homeopathy neutral, science & care and status moderate |
| 13 (12%) | 26 (8%) | 130 (20%) |
| 5 – CAM interest strong, science low, care high, status low |
|
| 18 (6%) | 100 (15%) |
| 6 – CAM interest neutral/Acupuncture positive/Homeopathy negative, science moderate, care low, status high | 25 (11%) | - | 40 (13%) | 65 (10%) |
Bold data indicate the two most frequent classes per group, respectively
Fig. 3Means (95% confidence intervals) for attitudes according to classes (class number in boxes) identified by latent profile analysis. Note that some scales have been reversed for better graphical separation of classes. The scales CAM interest, Acupuncture, Homeopathy, Beyond Science and Status (orientation) were reversed with positive values now indicating attitudes traditionally conform with conventional medicine academically and negative values attitudes traditionally not conform with conventional medicine