Author:
Lam Yuen-chi,Cheng Chung-wah,Peng Heng,Law Chun-key,Huang Xianzhang,Bian Zhaoxiang
Abstract
Abstract
Background
This article reports a survey conducted in Hong Kong on the cancer patients' attitudes towards Chinese medicine treatment.
Methods
Cancer patients from three Chinese medicine clinics and one oncology clinic were interviewed with a structured questionnaire.
Results
Of a total of 786 participants included in the study, 42.9% used Western medicine only; 57.1% used at least one form of Chinese medicine; 5 participants used Chinese medicine only; and 56.5% used Chinese medicine before/during/after Western medicine treatment. Commonly used Western medicine and Chinese medicine treatments included chemotherapy (63.7%), radiotherapy (62.0%), surgery (57.6%), Chinese herbal medicine (53.9%) and Chinese dietary therapy (9.5%). Participants receiving chemotherapy used Chinese medicine (63.3%) more than those receiving any other Western medicine treatments. Spearman correlation coefficients showed that the selection of Chinese medicine was associated with the cancer type (rs = -1.36; P < 0.001), stage (rs = 0.178; P < 0.001), duration (rs = -0.074; P = 0.037), whether receiving chemotherapy (rs = 0.165; P < 0.001) and palliative therapy (rs = 0.087; P = 0.015). Nearly two-thirds of the participants (N = 274) did not tell their physicians about using Chinese medicine. Over two-thirds of all participants (68.2%) believed that integrated Chinese and Western medicine was effective.
Conclusion
Chinese medicine is commonly used among Hong Kong cancer patients. The interviewed cancer patients in Hong Kong considered integrative Chinese and Western medicine is an effective cancer treatment.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Complementary and alternative medicine,Pharmacology
Cited by
37 articles.
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