Traditional and Complementary Medicine Research Group, Health Innovations Research Institute, School of Health Sciences, RMIT University, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
J Altern Complement Med. 2013 Feb;19(2):81-91. doi: 10.1089/acm.2011.0233. Epub 2012 Aug 14.
Sixty percent (60%) to 80% of patients who visit chiropractic, osteopathic, or Chinese medicine practitioners are seeking pain relief.
This article aimed to identify the amount, quality, and type of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) pain research in Australia by systematically and critically reviewing the literature.
PubMed, Scopus, Australasian Medical Index, and Cochrane library were searched from their inception to July 2009. Australian and New Zealand Clinical Trial Registration and National Health and Medical Research Council databases were searched for human studies yet to be completed. Predefined search terms and selection criteria were used for data identification.
Of 204 studies selected, 54% were on chiropractic, 27% on Chinese medicine, 15% about multitherapy, and 4% on osteopathy. Chronic spinal pain was the most studied condition, with visceral pain being the least studied. Half of the articles in Chinese medicine or multitherapy were systematic reviews or randomized control trials. In comparison, only 5% of chiropractic and none of osteopathy studies were in these categories. Government funding was rare, and most studies were self-funded or internally funded. All chiropractic, osteopathic, and Chinese herbal medicine studies were conducted by the researchers of the professions. In contrast, half of the acupuncture studies and all t'ai chi studies were conducted by medical doctors or physiotherapists. Multidisciplinary collaboration was uncommon.
The quantity and the quality of CAM pain research in Australia are inconsistent with the high utilization of the relevant CAM therapies by Australians. A substantial increase in government funding is required. Collaborative research examining the multimodality or multidisciplinary approach is needed.
60%到 80%的看脊医、整骨医师或中医的病人都是为了缓解疼痛。
本文旨在通过系统和批判性地评价文献,确定澳大利亚补充和替代医学(CAM)疼痛研究的数量、质量和类型。
从建库起至 2009 年 7 月,我们检索了 PubMed、Scopus、澳大拉西亚医学索引和 Cochrane 图书馆,并检索了尚未完成的澳大利亚和新西兰临床试验注册和国家卫生与医学研究理事会数据库。使用预定义的搜索词和选择标准来识别数据。
在 204 项研究中,54%为脊医,27%为中医,15%为多疗法,4%为整骨疗法。慢性脊柱疼痛是研究最多的疾病,内脏疼痛研究最少。中医或多疗法的一半文章为系统评价或随机对照试验。相比之下,只有 5%的脊医研究和没有整骨疗法研究属于这两类。政府资助很少,大多数研究为自筹或内部资助。所有脊医、整骨和中药研究都是由相关专业的研究人员进行的。相比之下,一半的针灸研究和所有的太极研究都是由医生或物理治疗师进行的。多学科合作并不常见。
澳大利亚 CAM 疼痛研究的数量和质量与澳大利亚人对相关 CAM 疗法的高利用率不一致。需要大幅增加政府资助。需要开展合作研究,检查多模态或多学科方法。