Feldmann Jennifer M, Wiemann Constance M, Sever Lowell, Hergenroeder Albert C
Section of Adolescent Medicine, University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, Texas 77030, United States of America.
Int J Adolesc Med Health. 2008 Jan-Mar;20(1):41-51. doi: 10.1515/ijamh.2008.20.1.41.
Rates of Folk and Traditional Medicine (FTM) use are high among Hispanic adults. No data have been published on FTM use among the rapidly growing Hispanic adolescent population.
To determine the prevalence of and personal factors associated with FTM use among Mexican-American adolescents.
182 Mexican-American adolescents (14-19 years) from community-based organizations.
We conducted a cross-sectional survey using a self-report instrument available in English and Spanish.
In the past year, 49 (26.9%) subjects reported FTM use, all prompted by illness: 43 (23.6%) used herbal remedies, and 8 (4.4%) used traditional healers. Five subjects reported using dangerous herbs. Among herbal users, 56.3% did not disclose FTM use to medical providers, largely due to the providers' lack of inquiry. Logistic regression comparing herbal users with non-FTM users found subjects dissatisfied with their most recent medical visit (AOR = 10.6; 95% CI = 2.8-40.7) and subjects endorsing family FTM use (AOR = 8.4; 95% CI = 4.0-30.2) were more likely to use herbal remedies. Acculturation, insurance status, socioeconomic status, and having a personal healthcare provider were not related to herbal use.
The use of practitioner-based FTM modalities was rare among this convenience sample of Mexican-American adolescents. Self-treatment with herbal use was common; harmful herbs were used infrequently. Access to care does not appear to motivate herb use. The high rates of herb use by dissatisfied patients, paired with high rates of non-disclosure and lack of provider inquiry, suggests that efforts to provide more culturally sensitive care, including routine inquiry about FTM use in Mexican-American adolescents, are needed. Patterns of complimentary and alternative medicine (CAM)/FTM use vary between age and ethnic cohorts.
西班牙裔成年人使用民间和传统医学(FTM)的比例很高。关于快速增长的西班牙裔青少年群体使用FTM的情况,尚无数据发表。
确定墨西哥裔美国青少年中FTM使用的患病率及与之相关的个人因素。
来自社区组织的182名墨西哥裔美国青少年(14 - 19岁)。
我们使用一份有英文和西班牙文版本的自我报告工具进行了横断面调查。
在过去一年中,49名(26.9%)受试者报告使用了FTM,均因患病而使用:43名(23.6%)使用了草药疗法,8名(4.4%)使用了传统治疗师的方法。5名受试者报告使用了危险草药。在使用草药的人群中,56.3%未向医疗服务提供者透露使用FTM的情况,主要原因是提供者未进行询问。将使用草药者与未使用FTM者进行逻辑回归分析发现,对最近一次就诊不满意的受试者(优势比[AOR]=10.6;95%置信区间[CI]=2.8 - 40.7)以及支持家庭使用FTM的受试者(AOR = 8.4;95% CI = 4.0 - 30.2)更有可能使用草药疗法。文化适应程度、保险状况、社会经济地位以及是否有个人医疗服务提供者与使用草药无关。
在这个墨西哥裔美国青少年的便利样本中,基于从业者的FTM方式使用较少见。自我使用草药治疗很常见;很少使用有害草药。获得医疗服务似乎并未促使人们使用草药。不满意的患者使用草药的比例较高,再加上不透露情况以及提供者未进行询问的比例较高,这表明需要努力提供更具文化敏感性的医疗服务,包括对墨西哥裔美国青少年常规询问FTM的使用情况。补充和替代医学(CAM)/FTM的使用模式在年龄和种族群体之间存在差异。