Medicinal Plants Used for Abdominal Discomfort - Information from Cancer Patients and Medical Students.
Study Design
- Тип исследования
- Observational Study
- Популяция
- Cancer patients using medicinal plants
- Вмешательство
- Medicinal Plants Used for Abdominal Discomfort - Information from Cancer Patients and Medical Students. None
- Препарат сравнения
- None
- Первичный исход
- Medicinal plant use patterns
- Направление эффекта
- Mixed
- Риск систематической ошибки
- Moderate
Abstract
BACKGROUND/AIM: Abdominal discomfort during tumour therapy often leads to the use of phytotherapeutics from the field of folk medicine. What knowledge base do patients and young physicians have when they come across this phenomenon together? PATIENTS AND METHODS: We conducted an online survey of 157 medical students and, in consultation, 125 patients according to a standardised algorithm about their knowledge and use of a list of given medicinal plants for the above-mentioned symptomatology. We previously created the list of traditional German medicinal plants taking into account the symptoms of bloating, fullness, diarrhoea, constipation, and nausea. Both data pools are presented descriptively, compared using principal component analysis, and student knowledge was subjected to network analysis. RESULTS: As a median, patients know 9 medicinal plants and use 4 species. Students know 10 medicinal plants and use 5 species. The rate of non-users is 13.6% among patients and 11.4% among students. The plants used by both groups are ginger and mint, whereas patients also use camomile and fennel. The nearly coincident knowledge profile speaks of a common knowledge base - folk medicine. Network analysis illustrated that students stored their knowledge in symptom clusters. CONCLUSION: Patients with cancer and students are familiar with a similar canon of medicinal plants for the treatment of abdominal discomfort. Their common source is folk medicine. Targeted instructions on evidence-based phytotherapy are needed to improve students' existing symptom-cluster-related knowledge.
Кратко
Targeted instructions on evidence-based phytotherapy are needed to improve students’ existing symptom-cluster-related knowledge to help them deal with abdominal discomfort during tumour therapy.
Used In Evidence Reviews
Similar Papers
Food & function · 2013
A review of the gastroprotective effects of ginger (Zingiber officinale Roscoe).
World journal of gastroenterology · 2011
Effect of ginger on gastric motility and symptoms of functional dyspepsia.
Journal of ethnopharmacology · 2019
The role of gut microbiota for the activity of medicinal plants traditionally used in the European Union for gastrointestinal disorders.
Evidence-based complementary and alternative medicine : eCAM · 2015
The Effect of Ginger (Zingiber officinalis) and Artichoke (Cynara cardunculus) Extract Supplementation on Functional Dyspepsia: A Randomised, Double-Blind, and Placebo-Controlled Clinical Trial.
Nutrients · 2018
Herbs and Spices in the Treatment of Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders: A Review of Clinical Trials.
Methods and findings in experimental and clinical pharmacology · 2001