| Literature DB >> 36131271 |
J Pinto1, K Bradbury2, D Newell3,4, F L Bishop2.
Abstract
AIMS: Complementary medicine therapists such as traditional acupuncturists are a large resource for supporting public health targets to improve health behaviours. Our objectives were to determine the prevalence and patterns of UK acupuncturists' provision of lifestyle change support, test theory-based hypotheses about facilitators and barriers to supporting lifestyle changes and to explore associated characteristics and attitudes.Entities:
Keywords: Acupuncture; Behaviour change; Health Promotion; Health behaviour; Lifestyle; Self-care
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36131271 PMCID: PMC9490899 DOI: 10.1186/s12906-022-03719-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Complement Med Ther ISSN: 2662-7671
Participant characteristics
| Age | 352 | 26 | 74 | 51.46 | 9.86 |
| Treatments p/week | 352 | 2 | 80 | 17.93 | 10.24 |
| Years in Practice | 352 | 0 | 42 | 13.08 | 9.46 |
| Gender/Sex | |||||
| Female | 288 (81.8%) | ||||
| Male | 57 (16.2%) | ||||
| Other/Prefer not to say | 7 (2%) | ||||
| Clinical Settings (not mutually exclusive) | 352 | ||||
| Have premises at home | 142 (40.3%) | ||||
| Multidisciplinary clinic | 135 (38.4%) | ||||
| Rent a treatment room | 120 (34.1%) | ||||
| Provide home visits | 73 (20.7%) | ||||
| Acupuncture clinic | 66 (18.8%) | ||||
| Multi-bed clinic | 32 (9.1%) | ||||
| Volunteer | 17 (4.8%) | ||||
| NHS | 7 (2%) | ||||
| Other | 23 (6.5%) | ||||
| Main style of practice | 352 | ||||
| TCM | 164 (46.6%) | ||||
| 5 Element | 79 (22.4%) | ||||
| Mix of Styles | 59 (16.8%) | ||||
| Stems and Branches | 7 (2%) | ||||
| Classical | 7 (2%) | ||||
| Japanese | 6 (1.7%) | ||||
| 8 Principles | 5 (1.4%) | ||||
| Tan | 3 (0.9%) | ||||
| Six Channels | 3 (0.9%) | ||||
| Other | 6 (1.7%) | ||||
Fig. 1Pattern of Typical Support for Patients with Chronic and Acute Conditions. Legend: Self-reported frequency of typical support for lifestyle and health behaviour changes for patients presenting with chronic or acute conditions
Additional areas of lifestyle/health behaviour change supported by acupuncturists (content analysis of open text responses)
| Main Areas | Sub-categories | Quote |
|---|---|---|
Emotional/Cognitive Regulation. Many of the additional areas of lifestyle change were related to methods of emotional/cognitive regulation. Some of these can clearly be considered as lifestyle behaviours (e.g. adopting a regular meditation practice) but some were specific cognitive strategies (e.g. changing mind-set) | Relaxation/Stress Reduction techniques. Specific practices which aim to reduce the individuals’ perception or experience of stress (distinct from avoiding stress or generally relaxing). | |
| Meditation/Mindfulness | ||
| Qigong, breathing or yoga practices | ||
| Mind-set/Cognitive strategies | ||
Stress Management through Daily Life Patterns Another set of lifestyle changes related to making adjustments to everyday life, such as work, relationships and rest, in order to reduce psychosocial stress. | Work (or work/life balance) | |
Relationships Change to social life/difficult personal relationships | ||
Rest General time for self, for rest and relaxation | ||
| Hobbies | ||
| Time outdoors/in nature | ||
| Reduce use of tech/screens | ||
Self-Care Treatments This set of lifestyle changes were very specific self-care practices which were often adopted as methods for treating a condition (likely temporarily). | Postural exercise, rehabilitation exercises and repetitive strain corrections | |
| Products and other treatments (e.g. herbal teas, supplements, self-massage) | ||
| Temperature regulation (protection from cold/wind/heat/damp) |
Participants Attitudes, PBC, Norms, Use of BCTs and Personal Lifestyle Habit Scores (Descriptive Statistics)
| Predictor Variables | N | Min | Max (Max Possible) | Mean | SD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Attitudes to clinical role | 352 | 1.0 | 4.4 (7.0) | 1.8 | 0.62 |
| Attitudes to behaviours | 352 | 1.0 | 5.0 (5.0) | 1.68 | 0.56 |
| Perceived Behavioural Control | 352 | 1.0 | 7.0 (7.0) | 2.60 | 1.01 |
| Norms | 352 | 1.0 | 5.3 (7.0) | 2.35 | 0.88 |
| BCT usage (total) | 352 | 0.0 | 20.0 (20.0) | 12.09 | 4.58 |
Personal lifestyle habits (optional section original data only) | 236 | 2.0 | 8.0 (8.0) | 6.47 | 1.18 |
Predictors of Support for Lifestyle/Health Behaviour Change Support (acute presentations): Univariate Linear Regression
| Predictor Variables | B | SE | β | t | Sig |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Attitudes to clinical role | 0.592 | 0.062 | 0.339 | 9.523 | 0.000 |
| Attitudes to behaviours | 0.643 | 0.070 | 0.331 | 9.225 | 0.000 |
| Perceived Behavioural Control | 0.405 | 0.038 | 0.377 | 10.786 | 0.000 |
| Social Norms | 0.271 | 0.045 | 0.221 | 5.972 | 0.000 |
| BCT usage (total) | −0.069 | 0.009 | −0.290 | −8.038 | 0.000 |
| Treatments p/week | − 0.013 | 0.004 | − 0.125 | −3.293 | 0.001 |
| Age | −0.006 | 0.004 | − 0.051 | −1.333 | 0.183 |
| Years in practice | −0.003 | 0.004 | −0.030 | −0.791 | 0.429 |
| Setting: | |||||
| Multidisciplinary clinic | −0.067 | 0.084 | −0.030 | −0.799 | 0.424 |
| Have own premises at home | −0.039 | 0.083 | −0.018 | −0.465 | 0.642 |
| Provide home visits | 0.093 | 0.101 | 0.035 | 0.920 | 0.358 |
| Rent a room | −0.164 | 0.086 | −0.072 | −1.904 | 0.057 |
| Acupuncture clinic | 0.113 | 0.105 | 0.041 | 1.078 | 0.281 |
| Multibed clinic | −0.059 | 0.142 | −0.016 | − 0.417 | 0.677 |
| NHS | 0.337 | 0.293 | 0.043 | 1.149 | 0.251 |
| Volunteer | −0.377 | 0.190 | −0.075 | −1.981 | 0.048 |
| Other | 0.160 | 0.166 | 0.037 | 0.968 | 0.333 |
| Main style of practice: | |||||
| TCM | 0.084 | 0.082 | 0.039 | 1.029 | 0.304 |
| Eight Principles | 1.175 | 0.343 | 0.128 | 3.424 | 0.001 |
| Five Element | −0.230 | 0.098 | −0.088 | −2.350 | 0.019 |
| Japanese | −0.415 | 0.316 | −0.050 | −1.314 | 0.189 |
| Other | 0.093 | 0.316 | 0.011 | 0.295 | 0.768 |
| Mix | −0.025 | 0.110 | −0.009 | − 0.232 | 0.817 |
| Tan | 0.093 | 0.446 | 0.008 | 0.208 | 0.835 |
| Stems & Branches | 0.337 | 0.293 | 0.043 | 1.149 | 0.251 |
| Classical | −0.101 | 0.293 | −0.013 | −0.343 | 0.732 |
| Six Channel | 0.429 | 0.445 | 0.036 | 0.963 | 0.336 |
| Personal lifestyle score | −0.034 | 0.042 | −0.037 | − 0.797 | 0.426 |
Table 4 Legend: Results of univariate linear regressions assessing relationships between each predictor alone and the outcome variable (providing support for LHBC to patient presenting with acute conditions). Scores with a negative figure indicate a reverse correlation, i.e. higher score predicted less frequent support
Predictors of lifestyle/health behaviour change support in acute presentations - multivariate regression analysis
| Predictor Variables | Co-efficient (standardised) | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Attitudes to health behaviours | 0.197 | 0.193;0.605 | 0.000 |
| Attitudes to clinical role | 0.095 | −0.032;0.366 | 0.100 |
| Perceived Behavioural Control (PBC) | 0.229 | 0.132;0.356 | 0.000 |
| Norms | 0.099 | −0.004;0.249 | 0.057 |
| Volunteer setting | −0.043 | −0.690;0.261 | 0.375 |
| Five Element style acupuncture | −0.052 | −0.375;0.108 | 0.276 |
| BCT usage total | −0.117 | −0.052;-0.004 | 0.021 |
| Treatments p/week | −0.050 | −0.017;0.005 | 0.306 |
Table 5 Legend: Results of multivariate linear regression assessing relationships between eight predictors and the outcome variable (providing support for LHBC to patients presenting with acute conditions). Scores with a negative figure indicate a reverse correlation, i.e. higher score predicted less frequent support.
Acupuncturist’s reasons for deciding when to first offer support for lifestyle/health behaviour changes
| Reason | Definition | Frequencies | % |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patient Receptiveness | Responds to the patient’s readiness for change (openness/commitment/request) | 129 | 36.6 |
| Depends on Diagnosis | Depends on the diagnosis/condition including the cause of the condition (aetiology) or likely impact of behaviour change on the condition | 77 | 21.9 |
| After Relationship Established | Forming a good relationship and rapport with the patient needs to be established first. | 76 | 21.6 |
| Standard Practice | Always gives support for lifestyle change as standard part of practice (usually comes up in initial case history or traditional diagnosis) | 60 | 17 |
| Gentle Approach | Introduces support for lifestyle change in a step by step, gentle way starting with small changes | 34 | 9.7 |
| Patient Capability | Patient’s capability to make appropriate lifestyle changes/how difficult the changes will be to make (more than just readiness or openness – indicates something about whether the patient actually can make changes) | 23 | 6.5 |
| Guided by Conversation | Guided by a two-way discussion and conversation with patient | 20 | 5.7 |
Wait Treatment Response (sub-categories a, b, c below): | Waits to see how well acupuncture treatment is working | 16 | 4.5 |
| a) not working | if condition not improving with acupuncture | 4 | 1.1 |
| b) after working | after condition has improved with acupuncture | 10 | 2.8 |
| c) general | unspecified wait for treatment response | 2 | 0.6 |
| Receptive at First | Believes patients are generally looking for change when they come or believes patients are usually most receptive to making changes on their first visit. | 13 | 3.7 |
| First Treatment Full | Feels the first appointment is too soon to offer lifestyle change support (already full of information, too overwhelming at first). | 11 | 3.1 |
| Intuition | Spontaneous gut feeling or whenever the idea comes to them (Intuition/Experience/Right moment /When I think) | 9 | 2.6 |
| General Health Behaviours | Whether health behaviour needs general improvement (not for specific condition) | 8 | 2.3 |
| If Patient Long-term | Offers support if patient is long term | 4 | 1.1 |
| After Time to Consider | Needs enough time to gather information and consider diagnosis/appropriate recommendations before offering any lifestyle change support | 3 | 9 |
| Time Available | Offers support if there is time available | 2 | 0.6 |