
Complementary & Alternative Medicine Use By One Third Of
U.S. Adults Unchanged From 1997
Steady
Five-Year Prevalence Points To Need For More Rigorous
Evaluation
BOSTON,
MA--January 12, 2005--In a comparison of complementary and
alternative medicine (CAM) use by adults in 1997 and 2002,
researchers from Harvard Medical School found more than one
in three U.S. adults (36.5 and 35.0 percent, respectively)
used at least one form of CAM.
The continued widespread use of individual and multiple CAM
therapies underscores the need to rigorously evaluate the
safety, efficacy, and cost-effectiveness of these approaches,
according to the study's lead author Hilary Tindle, Harvard
Medical School (HMS) research fellow, and co-author David
Eisenberg, director of the Division for Research and
Education in Complementary and Integrative Medical Therapies
and the Osher Institute at HMS.
The study results appear in the January/February issue of the
medical journal Alternative
Therapies in Health and Medicine.
The study compared results of the National Health Interview
Survey in 2002 and a survey conducted by researchers at HMS
(Eisenberg et al.) in 1997. The two surveys were similar but
not identical. Prior to this study, there had been no
head-to-head comparison using a common definition of CAM.
"Our research over the past 14 years has shown a consistent
level of usage by adult Americans," said Dr. Eisenberg.
"While there have been a few notable changes in which CAM
therapies people are using, the overall number of adults
employing some type of CAM has remained remarkably consistent
since we began our surveys in 1990. This says to us that
these therapies are part of the fabric of modern day health
care, and that we need to do more research on their safety
and effectiveness just as we would with any other
therapeutic options," concludes Eisenberg.
Over the five-year period between the two most recent
surveys, the total number of Americans using any CAM therapy
remained fairly stable at 72 million. However, there were
changes in the choice of CAM therapies used.
The largest change was a 50 percent jump in the use of herbal
supplements, growing over the five years from 12.1 percent of
adults reporting usage in 1997 to 18.6 percent -- or 38
million adults -- in 2002. The practice of yoga increased 40
percent over the same period, growing from 3.7 percent in
1997 to 5.1 percent-- over 10 million adults-- in 2002.
Use of CAM therapies such as acupuncture, biofeedback, energy
healing, and hypnosis remained essentially unchanged between
1997 and 2002, while the use of homeopathy, high-dose
vitamins, chiropractic, and massage therapy declined
slightly. Since many CAM therapies are paid out-of-pocket by
consumers, the authors suggest that some of these declines
may be due, at least in part, to a downturn in the U.S.
economy from 1997 to 2002.
The ways in which several CAM therapies are used also appear
to have changed. For example, only 5 percent of people who
used herbs saw a practitioner of herbal medicine in 2002,
compared to 15 percent in 1997. "Such changes are important
considering that other research has shown that 60 to 70
percent of patients who use CAM therapies do not disclose it
to their physician," says lead author Dr. Tindle. "This is
especially critical as more becomes known about the adverse
effects associated with individual dietary supplements as
well as their interactions with prescription drugs".
Despite variability seen in previously published reports
about overall CAM use, the authors conclude the use of CAM by
one third of U.S. adults from 1997 to 2002 appears to have
been steady, reconfirming results from the first national
survey in 1990.
This work was made possible in part by grants from the
National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine
and by private foundation grants: Horton Family Fund; Seattle
Foundation; John E. Fetzer Institute; American Society of
Actuaries; Friends of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center;
Kenneth J. Germeshausen Foundation; and the J.E. and Z.B.
Butler Foundation.