Value differences in orthodox and complementary medicine patients

Complementary (alternative) medicine is sometimes associated with a less materialistic, more ecologically aware lifestyle which may reflect distinct underlying values. This study set out to determine whether people choose to visit an orthodox medical GP or complementary homoeopathic practitioner par...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Furnham, A, Vincent, C
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 1995
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author Furnham, A
Vincent, C
author_facet Furnham, A
Vincent, C
author_sort Furnham, A
collection OXFORD
description Complementary (alternative) medicine is sometimes associated with a less materialistic, more ecologically aware lifestyle which may reflect distinct underlying values. This study set out to determine whether people choose to visit an orthodox medical GP or complementary homoeopathic practitioner partly because they have different values. About 50 patients from each group completed a two page questionnaire which required them to rate various terminal and instrumental values. Once demographic differences were controlled, it seemed clear that there were few value differences between them. It was concluded that value differences are not a major factor in choosing different medical practitioners. Complementary medical patients in the study were not distinguished by adherence to new-age views or a particular world view
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spelling oxford-uuid:1062aac6-eae5-4a1e-9ecb-c497c7e741b32022-03-26T09:56:07ZValue differences in orthodox and complementary medicine patientsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:1062aac6-eae5-4a1e-9ecb-c497c7e741b3EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford1995Furnham, AVincent, CComplementary (alternative) medicine is sometimes associated with a less materialistic, more ecologically aware lifestyle which may reflect distinct underlying values. This study set out to determine whether people choose to visit an orthodox medical GP or complementary homoeopathic practitioner partly because they have different values. About 50 patients from each group completed a two page questionnaire which required them to rate various terminal and instrumental values. Once demographic differences were controlled, it seemed clear that there were few value differences between them. It was concluded that value differences are not a major factor in choosing different medical practitioners. Complementary medical patients in the study were not distinguished by adherence to new-age views or a particular world view
spellingShingle Furnham, A
Vincent, C
Value differences in orthodox and complementary medicine patients
title Value differences in orthodox and complementary medicine patients
title_full Value differences in orthodox and complementary medicine patients
title_fullStr Value differences in orthodox and complementary medicine patients
title_full_unstemmed Value differences in orthodox and complementary medicine patients
title_short Value differences in orthodox and complementary medicine patients
title_sort value differences in orthodox and complementary medicine patients
work_keys_str_mv AT furnhama valuedifferencesinorthodoxandcomplementarymedicinepatients
AT vincentc valuedifferencesinorthodoxandcomplementarymedicinepatients