| Literature DB >> 30185182 |
Melvin T Donaldson1,2, Melissa A Polusny3,4, Rich F MacLehose5, Elizabeth S Goldsmith3,5, Emily M Hagel Campbell3, Lynsey R Miron3, Paul D Thuras3, Erin E Krebs3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Non-pharmacological therapies and practices are commonly used for both health maintenance and management of chronic disease. Patterns and reasons for use of health practices may identify clinically meaningful subgroups of users. The objectives of this study were to identify classes of self-reported use of conventional and complementary non-pharmacological health practices using latent class analysis and estimate associations of participant characteristics with class membership.Entities:
Keywords: Alternative medicine; Complementary integrative health; Latent class analysis; Non-pharmacological therapies; Veterans
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30185182 PMCID: PMC6125945 DOI: 10.1186/s12906-018-2313-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Complement Altern Med ISSN: 1472-6882 Impact factor: 3.659
Characteristics of Minnesota National Guard Veterans who responded to the mailed survey conducted from October 2015 to September 2016 (N = 1850)
| Characteristic | Mean (SD) or % (N) |
|---|---|
| Male, % (N) | 90.3% (1668) |
| Age, Mean (SD) | 38.7 (9.2) |
| White, % (N) | 90.1% (1656) |
| Obtained 4-year degree, % (N) | 42.6% (772) |
| Injured on deployment, % (N) | 27.0% (493) |
| Pain | |
| Chronic pain, % (N) | 41.2% (749) |
| Intensity and interference (PEG), Mean (SD) | 2.4 (2.4) |
| Self-rated health | |
| Current health excellent/very gooda, % (N) | 43.1% (796) |
| Mental health | |
| Anxiety at least moderate (PROMIS-Anxiety 8a ≥ 22), % (N) | 21.8% (400) |
| Depression (PHQ-8 ≥ 10), % (N) | 21.7% (392) |
| Probable PTSD (PCL-5 ≥ 33), % (N) | 19.5% (339) |
| Problem alcohol use (AUDIT ≥8), % (N) | 21.6% (394) |
| Past year illicit drug use (DAST > 0), % (N) | 10.3% (184) |
| Absorption (MPQ-BF Absorption, T-scores), Mean (SD) | 47.6 (10.8) |
Abbreviations: PEG 3-item PEG scale, VR-12 Veterans RAND 12-Item Health Survey
aCurrent health excellent/very good vs good/fair/poor; VR-12 overall health item
Self-reported past-year use of Health Practices Inventory approaches by Minnesota National Guard Veterans (N = 1825), who participated in the mailed survey conducted from October 2015 to September 2016
| Health practicea | % |
| Reason for useb | Past month frequency of usec | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Well-being/ general health | Treat pain | Treat another condition | None | Several days | More | |||||||||
| % |
| % |
| % |
| % |
| % |
| % |
| |||
| Acupuncture | 5% | 86 | 37% | 32 | 72% | 62 | 22% | 19 | 69% | 59 | 28% | 24 | 0% | 0 |
| Biofeedback | 2% | 30 | 70% | 21 | 13% | 4 | 17% | 5 | 47% | 14 | 33% | 10 | 13% | 4 |
| Chiropractic | 32% | 578 | 31% | 179 | 83% | 477 | 8% | 47 | 46% | 268 | 46% | 266 | 2% | 14 |
| Massage | 24% | 431 | 52% | 226 | 63% | 272 | 8% | 35 | 56% | 242 | 33% | 144 | 2% | 9 |
| Manual physical therapy | 13% | 242 | 15% | 37 | 80% | 193 | 12% | 30 | 41% | 100 | 43% | 105 | 8% | 20 |
| Healing Touch/Reiki | 1% | 21 | 52% | 11 | 52% | 11 | 38% | 8 | 48% | 10 | 43% | 9 | 5% | 1 |
| Hypnotherapy | 1% | 9 | 33% | 3 | 22% | 2 | 44% | 4 | 67% | 6 | 0% | 0 | 22% | 2 |
| Psychotherapy | 13% | 233 | 54% | 125 | 9% | 22 | 50% | 116 | 39% | 91 | 46% | 107 | 5% | 12 |
| Support groups | 4% | 79 | 62% | 49 | 8% | 6 | 39% | 31 | 30% | 24 | 46% | 36 | 13% | 10 |
| Spiritual/traditional healing system | 6% | 115 | 78% | 90 | 14% | 16 | 29% | 33 | 10% | 11 | 39% | 45 | 44% | 51 |
| Relaxation | 18% | 335 | 63% | 212 | 19% | 65 | 37% | 125 | 13% | 42 | 54% | 182 | 25% | 84 |
| Meditation/Mindfulness | 10% | 190 | 74% | 140 | 12% | 22 | 32% | 60 | 10% | 19 | 52% | 99 | 25% | 47 |
| Yoga | 10% | 174 | 85% | 148 | 33% | 58 | 14% | 24 | 31% | 54 | 50% | 87 | 8% | 14 |
| Tai Chi/Qi Gong | 1% | 15 | 87% | 13 | 33% | 5 | 7% | 1 | 27% | 4 | 33% | 5 | 13% | 2 |
| Strength/stretch exercise | 44% | 799 | 76% | 604 | 34% | 269 | 10% | 78 | 9% | 69 | 37% | 296 | 45% | 360 |
| Aerobic exercise | 36% | 661 | 88% | 580 | 12% | 80 | 9% | 56 | 4% | 28 | 42% | 278 | 45% | 300 |
| Diet | 7% | 120 | 77% | 92 | 21% | 25 | 19% | 23 | 9% | 11 | 18% | 21 | 63% | 76 |
| Herbal supplement | 10% | 175 | 80% | 140 | 15% | 27 | 19% | 34 | 5% | 8 | 26% | 46 | 60% | 105 |
| Homeopathy | 1% | 25 | 60% | 15 | 44% | 11 | 40% | 10 | 36% | 9 | 32% | 8 | 28% | 7 |
The practices are listed in the order they appear in the survey (Additional file 1: Figure S1, for full text of the Health Practices Inventory)
aThe Health Practices Inventory approaches are grouped based on the a priori categorization described in the text; a summary variable was created for each of the groupings indicating use of any of the modalities in that group
bParticipants who reported using a Health Practices Inventory modality were asked to identify their reason(s) for using it; the reasons are not mutually exclusive and they could pick any combination of the 3 reasons listed or none at all
cParticipants who reported using a Health Practices Inventory modality were asked to identify the frequency they used it in the past month; these frequencies are mutually exclusive but do not always add up to 100% because of missingness
Probability of use of Health Practices Inventory approaches within latent classes of 1850 Minnesota National Guard Veterans who participated in a mailed survey conducted from October 2015 to September 2016.
Health practices were listed in an order that maximized the visual clustering of modalities with similar use within classes
*Bolding added to highlight proportions that distinguish classes; all proportions that represent an odds ratio greater than 5 compared to use among all responders were considered much higher use than in the total sample and were bolded; all proportions that represent an odd ratio less than 0.2 compared to use among all responders were considered much lower use than in the total sample and were
†Total use represents the proportion of use of modalities in the total sample. This is not a latent class
Fig. 1Prevalence differences of class membership due to covariates; results of multinomial logistic regression from Minnesota National Guard Veterans who participated in the mailed survey conducted from October 2015 to September 2016. Interpreted as the difference in risk (probability) of membership in this latent class between levels of the covariate where a negative value means lower probability of membership in this class compared to probability at the reference level of the covariate; other covariates are standardized to their distribution among all responder. All covariates are dichotomous except for absorption, which is continuous. For absorption, a one-unit change represents a 2-point change on the absorption scale, equivalently a 7-point change on the T-score