Eaves Emery R, Sherman Karen J, Ritenbaugh Cheryl, Hsu Clarissa, Nichter Mark, Turner Judith A, Cherkin Daniel C
Department of Family and Community Medicine & School of Anthropology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
Group Health Research Institute, Seattle, USA.
BMC Complement Altern Med. 2015 Feb 5;15:12. doi: 10.1186/s12906-015-0531-9.
The relationship between patient expectations about a treatment and the treatment outcomes, particularly for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) therapies, is not well understood. Using qualitative data from a larger study to develop a valid expectancy questionnaire for use with participants starting new CAM therapies, we examined how participants' expectations of treatment changed over the course of a therapy.
We conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews with 64 participants initiating one of four CAM therapies (yoga, chiropractic, acupuncture, massage) for chronic low back pain. Participants just starting treatment were interviewed up to three times over a period of 3 months. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and analyzed using a qualitative mixed methods approach incorporating immersion/crystallization and matrix analysis for a decontexualization and recontextualization approach to understand changes in thematic emphasis over time.
Pre-treatment expectations consisted of conjecture about whether or not the CAM therapy could relieve pain and improve participation in meaningful activities. Expectations tended to shift over the course of treatment to be more inclusive of broader lifestyle factors, the need for long-term pain management strategies and attention to long-term quality of life and wellness. Although a shift toward greater acceptance of chronic pain and the need for strategies to keep pain from flaring was observed across participants regardless of therapy, participants varied in their assessments of whether increased awareness of the need for ongoing self-care and maintenance strategies was considered a "positive outcome". Regardless of how participants evaluated the outcome of treatment, participants from all four therapies reported increased awareness, acceptance of the chronic nature of pain, and attention to the need to take responsibility for their own health.
The shift in treatment expectations to greater acceptance of pain and the need for continued self-care suggests that future research should explore how CAM practitioners can capitalize on these shifts to encourage feelings of empowerment rather than disappointment surrounding realizations of the need for continued engagement with self-care.
患者对治疗的期望与治疗结果之间的关系,尤其是对于补充和替代医学(CAM)疗法而言,目前尚不清楚。我们利用一项更大规模研究中的定性数据,开发了一份有效的期望问卷,供开始新的CAM疗法的参与者使用,在此过程中,我们研究了参与者对治疗的期望在一个疗程中是如何变化的。
我们对64名开始采用四种CAM疗法(瑜伽、整脊疗法、针灸、按摩)之一治疗慢性下背痛的参与者进行了半结构化定性访谈。刚开始治疗的参与者在3个月内接受了多达三次访谈。访谈内容逐字记录,并采用定性混合方法进行分析,该方法结合了沉浸/结晶法和矩阵分析法,采用去情境化和再情境化的方法,以了解主题重点随时间的变化。
治疗前的期望包括对CAM疗法能否缓解疼痛以及改善参与有意义活动的推测。期望在治疗过程中往往会发生转变,更广泛地纳入更广泛的生活方式因素、长期疼痛管理策略的需求以及对长期生活质量和健康的关注。尽管无论采用何种疗法,所有参与者都出现了向更能接受慢性疼痛以及需要采取策略防止疼痛发作的转变,但参与者对于提高对持续自我护理和维持策略需求的认识是否被视为“积极结果”的评估各不相同。无论参与者如何评估治疗结果,来自所有四种疗法的参与者都报告说,他们对疼痛的认识有所提高,对疼痛的慢性性质有了更深刻的理解,并更加关注对自身健康负责的必要性。
治疗期望向更能接受疼痛以及需要持续自我护理的转变表明,未来的研究应探索CAM从业者如何利用这些转变,以鼓励增强权能感,而不是在意识到需要持续进行自我护理时产生失望情绪。