Use and perceived effectiveness of non-pharmacological home remedies for digestive symptoms: a questionnaire-based survey among primary care patients

Author:

Sebo Paul1ORCID,Gaboreau Yoann23ORCID,Morel Marie4ORCID,Haller Dagmar M1ORCID,Maisonneuve Hubert14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University Institute for Primary Care (IuMFE), University of Geneva , Geneva , Switzerland

2. Department of General Practice, University of Grenoble , Grenoble , France

3. TIMC UMR 5525, Grenoble Alpes University , Grenoble , France

4. University College of General Medicine, University Claude Bernard Lyon 1 , Lyon , France

Abstract

Abstract Background Patients frequently visit their primary care physician (PCP) for digestive symptoms. We aimed to compile a list of non-pharmacological home remedies (NPHRs) that patients frequently use and find effective so that PCPs can then propose them to their patients with various digestive symptoms. Methods In this questionnaire-based survey on the use and perceived effectiveness of NPHRs for digestive symptoms, 50 randomly selected Swiss or French PCPs consecutively recruited 20–25 patients between March 2020 and July 2021. These patients were given a list of 53 NPHRs previously developed by our research team. They were asked whether they used them (Y/N) and whether they considered them to be ineffective, not very effective, moderately effective, or very effective in treating abdominal pain (14 NPHRs), bloating (2), constipation (5), diarrhoea (10), digestion trouble (12), nausea/vomiting (2) and stomach pain (8). We considered NPHRs to be perceived as effective if patients reported that they were moderately or very effective. Results A total of 1,012 patients agreed to participate in the study (participation rate = 84.5%, median age = 52 years, women = 61%). The two most frequently used NPHRs were rice cooking water for diarrhoea (29% of patients) and prunes for constipation (22%). The perceived effectiveness of the NPHRs ranged from 82% (fennel infusions for abdominal pain) to 95% (bicarbonate for stomach pain). Conclusion Our data could be useful to PCPs interested in proposing NPHRs to their patients suffering from digestive disorders, and more generally to all PCPs interested in learning more about patients’ use of NPHRs in primary care.

Funder

Faculty of Medicine of the universities of Geneva, Lyon and Grenoble

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Family Practice

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