Relationship among symptoms, quality of life, and complementary and alternative medicines use among patients undergoing hemodialysis in French-speaking Switzerland.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_483A28E751D3
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Relationship among symptoms, quality of life, and complementary and alternative medicines use among patients undergoing hemodialysis in French-speaking Switzerland.
Journal
BMC complementary medicine and therapies
ISSN
2662-7671 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
2662-7671
Publication state
Published
Issued date
31/05/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
23
Number
1
Pages
174
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: epublish
Publication Status: epublish
Abstract
Chronic renal disease is considered a main public health problem due to its high prevalence in the population. The solution of choice currently available is kidney transplantation but when this option is not available, blood purification treatments, notably haemodialysis (HD), are necessary. The presence of chronic renal disease combined with this demanding medical procedure leads to a hard symptomatology. To face this situation, HD patients often resort to complementary and alternative medicines (CAM) as they perceive that the healthcare professionals aren't paying enough attention to their quality of life. Given this background, we aim to describe the prevalence and the type of the CAM used among HD patients and their possible relations with patients' symptomatology and quality of life.
We interviewed 88 patients, undergoing hemodialysis in three hemodialysis centers in French-speaking Switzerland, about the presence of symptoms, their quality of life, and the possible use of CAM. Cluster analysis was used to create patients' profiles about CAM use and regression analysis to explore the links between symptoms' presence, patients' quality of life, and CAM use.
Our results show a large use of CAM: almost two HD patients out of three uses at least one CAM. Using cluster analysis, we were able to identify five patients' profiles: non-users (37.5% of our sample), users of herbal medicine (20.5%), users of prayer-based practices (18.2%), people mainly using massages (9.1%), and a residual group including the users of other CAMs, with a predominance of meditation (14.8%). As expected, we observe a negative relation between the number of declared symptoms and patients' quality of life. Contrarily, we observe no relation between the use of CAM and the presence of symptoms. Our results show a positive relationship between the use of CAM and patients' overall perception of health as well as the psychological dimension of their quality of life. No relationship is observed with other dimensions of quality of life, notably the physical dimension.
Our results suggests that CAMs aren't used as a substitute of official medicine but as a parallel support to HD patients' quality of life.
We interviewed 88 patients, undergoing hemodialysis in three hemodialysis centers in French-speaking Switzerland, about the presence of symptoms, their quality of life, and the possible use of CAM. Cluster analysis was used to create patients' profiles about CAM use and regression analysis to explore the links between symptoms' presence, patients' quality of life, and CAM use.
Our results show a large use of CAM: almost two HD patients out of three uses at least one CAM. Using cluster analysis, we were able to identify five patients' profiles: non-users (37.5% of our sample), users of herbal medicine (20.5%), users of prayer-based practices (18.2%), people mainly using massages (9.1%), and a residual group including the users of other CAMs, with a predominance of meditation (14.8%). As expected, we observe a negative relation between the number of declared symptoms and patients' quality of life. Contrarily, we observe no relation between the use of CAM and the presence of symptoms. Our results show a positive relationship between the use of CAM and patients' overall perception of health as well as the psychological dimension of their quality of life. No relationship is observed with other dimensions of quality of life, notably the physical dimension.
Our results suggests that CAMs aren't used as a substitute of official medicine but as a parallel support to HD patients' quality of life.
Keywords
Humans, Quality of Life, Switzerland, Complementary Therapies/methods, Renal Dialysis, Kidney Failure, Chronic/therapy, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic, Hemodialysis, Symptoms
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
07/06/2023 12:02
Last modification date
08/08/2024 6:32