Allergy Sufferers Keen
to Try Alternative Therapy
In a survey of allergy and asthma patients
seen at a private allergy practice, 62 percent expressed an interest
in also being treated with complementary and alternative medicine,
such as acupuncture or vitamin therapy.
In addition, the percentage of
patients actually using alternative therapies, although small,
appears to be growing rapidly, according to a report at the annual
meeting of the American College of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology.
"To my knowledge, nobody has done
an epidemiologic study looking at complementary and alternative
medicine trends among allergy and asthma patients in the US,"
Dr. William S. Silvers, from Allergy Asthma Colorado in Englewood,
stated. "In Europe, it has been done, but not in the States."
The findings are based on surveys
conducted in Silvers' practice in 1998 and 2004. A total of 113
patients who completed questionnaires in 1998 and another 103
who filled out questionnaires in 2004 were included in the analysis.
At both time points, the percentage
of respondents interested in discussing complementary and alternative
therapies held steady at around 67 percent. Likewise, the percentage
of patients who discussed CAM with a primary care physician was
identical in each survey -- 18 percent.
A slight increase from 16 percent
to 19 percent was noted in the proportion of subjects who visited
an alternative medicine practitioner for a general medical need.
A more pronounced rise was seen in the percentage who sought such
a provider for allergy or asthma, 4 percent to 10 percent -- a
finding Silvers called "striking."
The favored alternative therapy
also changed between the two survey points. In 1998, the most
popular was vitamin/mineral therapy, whereas in 2004 acupuncture
won that distinction.
Rather than advising his patients
against complementary or alternative medicine, Silvers opts for
an integrative approach. He explained that this involves allowing
the patient to try various alternative options, "but then following
and scrutinizing their outcomes within a conventional medical
framework."
He concluded, "The most important
thing is to track with the patient what their goals are and whether
they are being met in a cost-effective fashion."
Reference
Source 89
November 16, 2004
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