Familiarity with Complementary and Alternative Medicine: A Multimodal Curriculum in Medical Education

Purpose: To identify whether exposing medical students to a multimodal curriculum of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) practices improves their understanding of CAM clinical applications. Background: A significant portion of the U.S. population uses CAM: 34% of adults and 12% of children....

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Main Authors: Christine Farag, Laurie C. Caines, Helen Wu, Mingda Sun, Mary P. Guerrera
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Mary Ann Liebert 2022-07-01
Series:Integrative Medicine Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/IMR.2022.0024
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author Christine Farag
Laurie C. Caines
Helen Wu
Mingda Sun
Mary P. Guerrera
author_facet Christine Farag
Laurie C. Caines
Helen Wu
Mingda Sun
Mary P. Guerrera
author_sort Christine Farag
collection DOAJ
description Purpose: To identify whether exposing medical students to a multimodal curriculum of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) practices improves their understanding of CAM clinical applications. Background: A significant portion of the U.S. population uses CAM: 34% of adults and 12% of children. Integrative medicine combines the best of conventional and CAM practices. Despite the increased clinical acceptance of CAM, medical education has been lagging, leaving gaps in learners' knowledge. It is important for medical education to keep pace with these developments by educating students and expanding the view of interprofessional care. Methods: A total of 101 first-year medical students at the University of Connecticut participated in a multimodal CAM curriculum. This included (1) an hour lecture, (2) an online research assignment for a continuity patient, and (3) 2 of 4 modules: acupuncture, hypnotherapy, Reiki, or pet therapy. Pre- and post-tests were administered 1 week apart to assess familiarity with CAM practices and the perceived safety and efficacy of each modality. The familiarity was rated on a scale of 0 (not familiar) to 10 (very familiar). Paired Student's t-tests assessed changes from pre- to post-tests at significant levels (p?<?0.01). Results: Overall, the mean percentage of students who were able to identify 1 of the top 8 CAM modalities increased from 38% to 49%. The average familiarity rating of CAM significantly increased from 4.7 pretest to 6.6 post-test (p?<?0.01). The top 8 CAM modalities, as selected by students, included acupuncture, meditation, yoga, massage, Reiki, chiropractic, hypnosis, and pet therapy. Overall, the familiarity ratings increased for both safety and effectiveness with intermodule variability from pre- and post-test (p?<?0.01). Larger increases in effectiveness familiarity were found than of safety familiarity (p?<?0.01). Conclusions: This multimodal curriculum significantly improved medical students' familiarity with CAM modalities and the perceived safety and effectiveness of the modalities.
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spelling doaj.art-6310994d7220460da3cef7f13774be662024-01-26T04:12:10ZengMary Ann LiebertIntegrative Medicine Reports2768-32222022-07-011110110610.1089/IMR.2022.0024Familiarity with Complementary and Alternative Medicine: A Multimodal Curriculum in Medical EducationChristine FaragLaurie C. CainesHelen WuMingda SunMary P. GuerreraPurpose: To identify whether exposing medical students to a multimodal curriculum of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) practices improves their understanding of CAM clinical applications. Background: A significant portion of the U.S. population uses CAM: 34% of adults and 12% of children. Integrative medicine combines the best of conventional and CAM practices. Despite the increased clinical acceptance of CAM, medical education has been lagging, leaving gaps in learners' knowledge. It is important for medical education to keep pace with these developments by educating students and expanding the view of interprofessional care. Methods: A total of 101 first-year medical students at the University of Connecticut participated in a multimodal CAM curriculum. This included (1) an hour lecture, (2) an online research assignment for a continuity patient, and (3) 2 of 4 modules: acupuncture, hypnotherapy, Reiki, or pet therapy. Pre- and post-tests were administered 1 week apart to assess familiarity with CAM practices and the perceived safety and efficacy of each modality. The familiarity was rated on a scale of 0 (not familiar) to 10 (very familiar). Paired Student's t-tests assessed changes from pre- to post-tests at significant levels (p?<?0.01). Results: Overall, the mean percentage of students who were able to identify 1 of the top 8 CAM modalities increased from 38% to 49%. The average familiarity rating of CAM significantly increased from 4.7 pretest to 6.6 post-test (p?<?0.01). The top 8 CAM modalities, as selected by students, included acupuncture, meditation, yoga, massage, Reiki, chiropractic, hypnosis, and pet therapy. Overall, the familiarity ratings increased for both safety and effectiveness with intermodule variability from pre- and post-test (p?<?0.01). Larger increases in effectiveness familiarity were found than of safety familiarity (p?<?0.01). Conclusions: This multimodal curriculum significantly improved medical students' familiarity with CAM modalities and the perceived safety and effectiveness of the modalities.https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/IMR.2022.0024complementary and alternative medicineCAMintegrative medicinemedical educationcurriculum
spellingShingle Christine Farag
Laurie C. Caines
Helen Wu
Mingda Sun
Mary P. Guerrera
Familiarity with Complementary and Alternative Medicine: A Multimodal Curriculum in Medical Education
Integrative Medicine Reports
complementary and alternative medicine
CAM
integrative medicine
medical education
curriculum
title Familiarity with Complementary and Alternative Medicine: A Multimodal Curriculum in Medical Education
title_full Familiarity with Complementary and Alternative Medicine: A Multimodal Curriculum in Medical Education
title_fullStr Familiarity with Complementary and Alternative Medicine: A Multimodal Curriculum in Medical Education
title_full_unstemmed Familiarity with Complementary and Alternative Medicine: A Multimodal Curriculum in Medical Education
title_short Familiarity with Complementary and Alternative Medicine: A Multimodal Curriculum in Medical Education
title_sort familiarity with complementary and alternative medicine a multimodal curriculum in medical education
topic complementary and alternative medicine
CAM
integrative medicine
medical education
curriculum
url https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/full/10.1089/IMR.2022.0024
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AT mingdasun familiaritywithcomplementaryandalternativemedicineamultimodalcurriculuminmedicaleducation
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