By
Rachel Champeau January 19, 2010
In
the largest national survey of its kind,
researchers from UCLA and the University
of California, San Diego, measured medical
students' attitudes and beliefs about complementary
and alternative medicine (CAM) and found
that three-quarters of them felt conventional
Western medicine would benefit by integrating
more CAM therapies and ideas.
The findings appear Jan. 20 in the online
edition of the peer-reviewed journal Evidence-based
Complementary and Alternative Medicine
(eCAM).
"Complementary and alternative
medicine, or CAM, is receiving increased
attention in light of the global health
crisis and the significant role of traditional
medicine in meeting public health needs
in developing countries,"
said study author Ryan Abbott, a researcher
at the UCLA Center for East-West Medicine.
"Integrating CAM into mainstream health
care is now a global phenomenon, with policymakers
at the highest levels endorsing the importance
of a historically marginalized form of health
care."
CAM, which includes therapies such as massage,
yoga, herbal medicine and acupuncture, is
characterized by a holistic and highly individualized
approach to patient care. Its emphasis is
on maximizing the body's inherent healing
ability; getting patients involved as active
participants in their own care; addressing
the physical, mental and spiritual attributes
of a disease; and preventive care. While
interest in these fields has increased dramatically
in the United States in recent years, information
about such therapies has not yet been widely
integrated into medical education.
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article at: http://www.newsroom.ucla.edu