Complementary therapies Flashcards

1
Q

Terms

A
  • Alternative therapy- Any therapy that is not accepted by the majority of mainstream doctors
  • Complementary therapy- complementary to mainstream medicine (basically the same as alternative)
  • Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM)- compounds used that is different to conventional medicine
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2
Q

Complementary and alternative medicine

A

-Other than those intrinsic to the politically deminent health system of a particular society or culture in a given historical period is known as a CAM
NB- this is not fixed medicines can interchange e.g. digoxin came from herbal medicine (CAM) but it worked and was synthesised became a conventional medicine

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3
Q

Alternative therapies- More common

A
  • Acupuncture (chi lines)
  • Homeopathy
  • Chiropractic (not just back pain but treating things like asthma from back manipulation)
  • Osteopathy (cure medicine from bone manipulation)
  • Herbal medicine
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4
Q

Alternative therapy- less common

A
  • Crystal therapy (placing crystals on the body to cure illness)
  • Cupping (Brusing of the skin using suction from a hot cup)
  • Leech therapy
  • Reflexology (touch feet in certain places which will cure certain areas of the body)
  • Spiritual healing (Channel energy through the body and pass it to the patient)
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5
Q

Do the public use CAM

A

-In many countries over half the population use alternative therapies
+USA 32-34%
+UK-20-28%
-In both US and UK, use is more likely in higher income groups
-Estimated annual expenditure on CAM in UK estimated at £1.6 billion
-A survey has shown that 52% of CAM users do not inform their GP of their use- this can lead to interactions with conventional medicine

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6
Q

Why do people use CAM: push factors

A
  • People are dis-satisfied
  • Rejection of conventional medicine due to anti-science or anti-establishment attitude
  • Desperation, especially with a patient who has been given a life-threatening diagnosis
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7
Q

Why do people use CAM: pull factors

A
  • Hope for increased well-being and other positive outcomes
  • Philosophical congruence e.g. with spiritual dimension of CAM, it’s emphasis on holism or the more active role patients play
  • Personal control over treatment- NHS is guideline driven, not alot of time with GP
  • Good relationship with practitioner e.g. interaction on equal terms, time for discusion, emotional factors allowed for
  • Accessibility and seeing the same practitioner over the course of treatment
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8
Q

Hierarchy of evidence

A

1) Systematic reviews (Team of stick together many randomised controlled trials to generate a causality)
2)Randomised controlled trials
3)Cohort studies
4)Case-control studies (observational lots of people but it is not random therefore is bias e,g, one group has more elderly people which will effect result; correlation not causation)
5)Case series, Case report (Case of 10 people, not enough people)
6)Editorial expert opion (Just because someone is a leader in a Field doesn’t mean there right)
NB- 1 is the best because this establishes causality, then progressively worse
-Anything lower than randomised controlled trials must have further tests to prove causality

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9
Q

Aromatherapy

A
  • Based on healing properties of essential plant oils
  • The oils are diluted in a carrier oil and are usually massaged into the body
  • They can also be inhaled, used in a bath or cold compress next to the skin
  • The basisof action is similar to modern pharmacology with active principlkes entering the biochemical pathways, albeit in much smaller doses. It is thought to work at psychological, physiological and cellular levels via olfactory stimulation and dermal action (works by smelling and absorb through skin)
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10
Q

Aromatherapy- evidence base

A
  • Clamied to help a number of conditions including eczema, digestive problems and muscular aches and pains
  • No evidence that aromatherapy can treat specific diseases
  • There is some evidence (poor quality) that it reduces anxiety scores (probably the massage itself as opposed to the oil effecting the patient), in the short term, in settings, which include intensive care, cardiac surgery and palliative care
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11
Q

Bach flower recipes

A
  • Bach believed that he could ascertain (Make sure) the properties of healing flowers by waving his hands over them
  • He then attempted to develop the mental and physical symptoms corresponding to a plants properties and would be drawn to particular flower, which would ease those symptoms
  • He was able to relate this to certain emotions and believed that he had been led divinely towards a new method of healing
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12
Q

Bach flower recipes- Preparation

A
  • For flowers that bloom during late spring and summer, when the sun is at its strongest, the sun method is used to prepare mother tinctures
  • Starting at around 9AM on a calm day, at the place where the plant material had been gathered
  • Fifty parts of pure spring water are added to a glsas container until the level reaches just below the brim
  • One part of the flow heads is floated on the water; this is left in the sunshine for 3 hours
  • The flower heads are then removed; the remaining solution is strained into a glass bottle and mixed with equal quantity grape brandy. This is shaken and cooled
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13
Q

Evidence

A
  • There are numerous anecdotal report that flower remedies are beneficial, but there is no rigorous clinical trial evidence that they are assoviated with effects beyond a placebo reponse
  • Bach flower remedies mechasnism of action is highly implausible, with highly dilute solutions meanin that no pharmacological action is conceivable. They are therefore suggested to work by subtle energies, which are neither measurable nor definable
  • This is a placebo response
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14
Q

Herbal medicine

A
  • Herbal medicine is the use of plant remedies in the treatment of disease
  • Many currently used conventional medicines have their origins in herbal products and plant materials (Aspirin form willow bark)
  • Increasingly common (Market worth- £10 billion worldwide)
  • Very little evidence to support the use of the vast majority of herbal remedies
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15
Q

Problems associated with herbal medicine

A
  • Herbs can have potent pharmacological effects and toxicity
  • Black Cohosh- used to treat ssymptoms of menopause- causes liver failure and need transplant
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16
Q

Problems associated with herbal medicines

A

-Herbs can interact with prescribed medicines
-St Johns Wort
+cP450 inducers
+Increases metabolism of other drugs and can prevent them working
-Anti-retrovirals, some anti-cancer drugs, warfarin, OCPs
-Contamination and product variation
+Aristolochic acid contamination of herbal slimming regime suplpied by clinics in Belgium
+Nephrotic, carcinogenic, mutagenic
+>70 cases of renal failure attributed to this contamination

17
Q

Homeopathy

A

-Christian Friedrich Samuel Hanhnemann 1755-1843
-Homeopathy from Greek Homios and Pathos- similar suffering
-A system for treating illness based on the premise that like causes like
HOMEOPATHS
+Treat symptoms by administering minute or non-existent doses of a substance which, in large amounts, produces the same symptoms in healthy individuals
-Focus on treating patients as individuals
-Claim to be able to treat virtually any ailment

18
Q

History of homeopathy

A

-Emerged at a time when doctors used a variety of methods that subsequently turned out to be harmful
e.g. blood letting
-Survival rate for homeopathy better than conventional care at that time
+1854 cholera epidemic in lodon
+Homeopathic hospital 84% survival rate; 47% in conventional hospital
+Incorretly attributed to effectiveness of homeopathy rather than inadequacy of conventional medicine/ differences between the 2 populations

19
Q

History continued

A

-Seemed destined to become extinct in 1920s
-Remained popular throughout in India
+Seen as being in opposition to British imperialist medicine
+India exported homeopathy back to the west in 1970s
+India has 300,000 qualified homeopaths and 300 homeopathic hospitals
-Risen in popularity over last 50 years
+However, use remains relatively low in US/UK
+Annual sales in US of $1.5 billion in 2000

20
Q

Homeopathic remedies

A

-The more dilute a remedy the more powerful it is
-Remedies also shaken (sucussion)
+Dilution + Sucussion= potentization
-Remedies based on:
+Plants
+Animal sources (ground honeybee, wolf milk)
+Mineral sources (Salt and gold)
+Diseased material/causative agents (Pus, tumours, faeces)
+Others (Berlin wall)

21
Q

Homeopathic remeides

A
  • item e.g. plant left to sit in a jar of solvent (alcohol or water)
  • Solvent absorbs some of the plant’s molecules
  • Plant removed after several weeks- ‘mother tincture’- this is what dilution comes from
22
Q

Dilution

A

-Homeopathic treatments are created from mother tinctures. Dilution is by factors 10, 100, 1,000
-The potency is expressed by a code that indicates the number of dilutions and the factor by which they have been diluted
+X= 1 in 10
+C= 1 in 100
+M= 1 in 1000
-So a 30c preparation has been diluted by a factor of 1 in 100 30x
-6c or 30c are the strengths you will most commonly come across within a pharmacy setting
-The odds of having one molecule in a 30c solution are one in a billion, billion, billion

23
Q

Administration

A

-Diluted solution can be administered directly or drops of the solution can be added to tablets, ointments or other suitable delivery forms
+One drop might be used to wet 12 sugar tablets= 12 homeopathic tablets

24
Q

So how can homeopathy works

A

-Dosing is by rule of thumn
+6c potency medicines given TDS
+30 c remedies OD or BD
+200c OD
-Homeopaths hope to see a response within a week, and patients should be warned not to expect immediate effects
-Homeopathic water had memory
+Remembers the active ingredient that it once contained
-Hundreds of studies by physicists have failed to find any evidence to support hypothesis

25
Q

Does homeopathy work

A

-100s of trials have failed to deliver any convinving evidence to support the use of homeopathy for any particular ailment
+Indeed, huge amount of evidence to suggest it doe not work
+Given the lack of clinical and scientific evidence to support homeopathy, the RPS does not endorse homeopathy as a form of treatment
-Scientifically implausible

26
Q

Is using homeopathy harmless

A

-Sugar pills- no side effects such as

BUT- when recommended for use in conditions that are not minor and self-limiting, can cause major problems

27
Q

Homeopathy for malaria prophylaxiis

A
  • Simon singh, in collaboration with sense about science
  • The first 10 homeopathic clinics and pharmacies selected from an Internet searcg and consulted were willing to break public health protocols by providing unproven homeopathic pills to protect against malaria
  • In all ten consultations, Their researcher was advised to use homeopathic products instead of being referred to GP or conventional travel clinics where effective medicines are available
28
Q

Homeopathy- reputational damage

A

-For as long as it remains unresolved many of us will continue to suspect that, beneath your veneer of health professectionalism there lurks a shaman

29
Q

The role of pharmacist RPS guidance

A
  • To ensure that stocks of homeopathic or herbal medicines or other complementary therapies are obtained from a reputable source of supply
  • Not recommend any remedy where they have reason to doubt its saftey or quality
  • Assist patients in making informed decisions about homeopathic products by providing the necessary and relavent information, particularlary the lack of clinical evidence to support the efficacy of homeopathic produts