Use of
practitioner-led complementary and alternative medicine (CAM), such as
acupuncture, massage, osteopathy and chiropractic treatment, rose from 12 per
cent of the population in 2005 to 16 per cent of the population in 2015,
according to a survey led by researchers at the University of Bristol’s Centre
for Academic Primary Care. However, access to these treatments was unequal,
with women, those who are better off and those in the south of England more
likely to use CAM.
The survey,
funded by the National Institute for Health Research, undertaken by Ipsos MORI
and published in BJGP Open today [14 November], asked adults in England about
their CAM use in the last 12 months. Out of a representative sample of 4,862
respondents aged 15 and over, 766 (16 per cent) said they had seen a CAM
practitioner.
More women
than men and more people in higher socioeconomic groups (A-C) than in lower
socioeconomic groups (D-E) used CAM. CAM use was almost twice as high in the
south of England compared with the North and Midlands.
The majority
of CAM users either paid for treatment themselves or had it paid for by friends
or family (67 per cent). Most CAM users self-referred (either found the
practitioners themselves or through a recommendation from a friend or family)
(70 per cent). A small proportion were referred by their GP (17 per cent) or
other health professional (four per cent) and more of these were from lower
socioeconomic groups.
The main
reasons for CAM use were for musculoskeletal problems, particularly back pain (38
per cent), and other musculoskeletal pain (neck pain, shoulder pain or knee
pain) (22 per cent). Mental health accounted for 12 per cent of CAM use,
including for minor depression, anxiety or stress (seven per cent) and sleep
problems, tiredness or fatigue (four per cent).
CAM use was
fairly evenly spread across all age groups.
Professor Debbie Sharp, from the Centre for Academic Primary Care and lead
author of the study, said:
“This survey shows that CAM is widely used by the
general population, especially for musculoskeletal and mental health problems,
with a slight increase in use since 2005. Access, however, is unequal and most
people who see a CAM practitioner are better off and pay for it themselves. We
also asked about people’s willingness to pay for CAM and found, unsurprisingly,
that it seemed to be based on ability to pay. However, 13 per cent of
non-CAM users said they would be willing to part-pay if the NHS or other
organisations paid the rest.”
Dr Ava Lorenc, co-author from the Centre for
Academic Primary Care, added:
“Current UK health policy advocates
patient-centred care and has a focus on prevention and patient self-management.
Greater integration of CAM services into NHS primary care could address the
inequality in access that we found, for example, through social prescribing.
This survey was part of a wider scoping study for a trial to test the
effectiveness of CAM for people with both musculoskeletal and mental health
problems, which we hope will add to the evidence-base for CAM.”
Paper
‘Complementary medicine use, views and experiences – anational survey in England’ by Deborah Sharp, Ava Lorenc, Richard
Morris, Gene Feder, Paul Little, Sandra Hollinghurst, Stewart Mercer and Hugh
MacPherson in BJGP Open