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15, 2000

Alternative Therapies May Help Cancer Patients Cope


NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Cancer patients who use alternative medicines are no more likely than other cancer patients to stop their standard treatments, results of an Austrian survey show.

In fact, the researchers who conducted the survey report that patients who used the alternative or complementary medicines tended to have good coping skills and demonstrated a willingness to follow through on conventional treatments.

``Many oncologists fear that use of complementary and alternative medicine may lead patients to abandon medical treatment,'' according to Dr. Wolfgang Sollner from the University of Innsbruck, Austria, and colleagues. ``In our study, patients who used complementary and alternative medicine...expressed as high a trust in conventional medicine and showed as high compliance with radiotherapy as patients not interested in complementary and alternative medicine.''

The investigators administered questionnaires to 172 patients having radiotherapy treatment for their cancer. Overall, 24% of patients had used complementary and alternative medicine, while the majority--nearly 69% of patients--had never used these methods. The most common alternative methods used by the subjects were intake of multivitamins, herbs and homeopathy.

In general, the patients who were inclined to use complementary and alternative medicine were younger and had a more advanced stage of their illness, the report indicates. This makes sense, the authors note, as ``younger patients with progressive disease and worse prognosis are prone to use 'every method available' to influence the course of cancer.''

In addition, those who practiced complementary and alternative medicine had a higher level of disease coping skills--they had a greater tendency to solve problems and seek information than those who did not report having such an interest.

This evidence suggests that complementary and alternative medicines may offer cancer patients a way of ``avoiding passivity and of coping with feelings of hopelessness,'' Sollner's group concludes.

 

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