
Health Care and Social Work Student’s: Choice between Complementary and Alternative Medicine or Conventional Medicine on a 5 Point Severity Scale of Diseases
Author(s) -
Andrea Sárváry,
Péter Takács,
Attila Sárváry
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
alternative and integrative medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2327-5162
DOI - 10.4172/2327-5162.1000256
Subject(s) - alternative medicine , scale (ratio) , medicine , work (physics) , point (geometry) , social medicine , health care , family medicine , public health , nursing , pathology , engineering , geography , mathematics , economic growth , economics , mechanical engineering , geometry , cartography
Background: Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) is still popular worldwide. This study investigatesand compares the choices of health care and social work students between CAM and conventional medicine (COM)on a 5 point severity scale of diseases.Methods: In a cross-sectional survey 595 (49.6% response rate) health care and social work students at theUniversity of Debrecen, Faculty of Health completed the questionnaire. Data were analysed using descriptive andinferential statistics.Results: The more serious the disease was, the frequency of primarily COM and secondly CAM increased (from37.1% up to 62.4%), while it decreased in only COM (from 26.2% to 23.5%), in primarily CAM and secondly COM(from 28.7% to 10.8%), in only CAM (from 7.9% to 3.2%). Significantly more health care than social work studentschose only COM on moderate level (34.0% vs. 24.2%; p<0.05) Significantly more social work than health carestudents chose primarily COM and secondly CAM on moderate, serious and the most serious levels (62.9% vs.49.9%; 69.4% vs. 58.8%; 71.8% vs. 59.9%; p<0.05). Significantly more males than females chose only COM on themost serious level (36.4% vs. 21.6%; p<0.05). Significantly more females than males chose only CAM on themildest level (8.9% vs. 1.3%, p<0.05) and primarily COM and secondly CAM on serious and the most serious levels(62.7% vs. 49.4%, 63.9% vs. 51.9%; p<0.05).Conclusions: Our results suggest that beside conventional medicine most health care and social work studentsconsider CAM to be an important element of healing process, although social work students are more open towardsthe combined use of CAM and conventional medicine. Our results supported that females have more positiveattitudes towards CAM than males