Transcript Document

Complementary and Alternative Medicine
Curriculum: Who Needs It?
Educational Challenges and Strategies
Victor S. Sierpina, MD
W.D. and Laura Nell Nicholson
Family Professor of Integrative
Medicine
UTMB
Concerns
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Evidence
Biological plausibility
Advocacy
Safety
Product quality
Placebo
Challenges
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Communication
Content
Critical thinking
Consider public safety issues
NCCAM Domains of Alternative
Therapies
• Biological therapies: herbs, supplements, special
diets
• Mind-body therapies: meditation, biofeedback,
relaxation, yoga, tai chi
• Manual therapies: chiropractic, massage,
osteopathy
• Biofield therapies: magnets, healing touch,
therapeutic touch, Reiki
• Alternative systems: traditional Chinese
medicine, Ayurveda, naturopathy, homeopathy
Key questions
1) Given the wide public use of CAM,
how do health professionals learn to
communicate with patients about such
therapies and
2) How do they assess such therapies for
safety and efficacy?
IOM CAM Committee
Recommendations
• 1) Health profession schools must include
sufficient content on CAM so that graduates can
competently advise their patients
• 2) That funding be provided to train research
training for CAM practitioners
• 3) That training standards and practice
guidelines be established by CAM practitioners
• 4) That competency guidelines be defined for
both CAM and conventional practitioners
regarding scope of practice, referral patterns,
and integration of conventional and CAM
therapies.
Resources
• IOM Report: Complementary and Alternative
Medicine in the United States,
http://www.nap.edu/openbook/0309092701/html/1
.html#pagetop
• White House Commission on Complementary and
Alternative Medicine Policy
http://www.whccamp.hhs.gov/finalreport.html
• National Education Dialogue (handout for
member list and mission)
WHHCAMP Recommendations
• “The education and training of CAM and
conventional practitioners should be
designed to ensure public safety, improve
health, and increase the availability of
qualified and knowledgeable CAM and
conventional practitioners and enhance the
collaboration among them."
WHHCAMP recommendations
• “Conventional health professional schools,
postgraduate training programs, and
continuing education programs should
develop core curricula of knowledge about
CAM that will prepare conventional health
professionals to discuss CAM with their
patients and clients and help them make
informed choices about the use of CAM.”
Resources
• National Center for Complementary and
Alternative Medicine http://nccam.nih.gov/
• Progress Notes Series on Curricular
Initiatives
http://cam.utmb.edu/cam_education_series.
asp
R 25 Grantees
2000
Boston Children’s Hospital/ Harvard
Medical School
Rush Presbyterian St. Luke’s School of
Nursing
University of Minnesota
University of North Carolina
University of Texas Medical Branch
R 25 Grantees
2001
Maine Family Medicine
Residency
Georgetown Medical
School
Tufts Medical School
University of Michigan
University of Washington
Medical School
2002
American Medical Student
Association
Oregon Health Sciences
University
University of Kentucky
University of California at
San Francisco
University of Washington
School of Nursing
Consortium of Academic Health Centers for
Integrative Medicine
• http://www.imconsortium.org
• 27 US and Canadian Medical Schools
• “Our mission is to help transform medicine
and healthcare through rigorous scientific
studies, new models of clinical care, and
innovative educational programs that
integrate biomedicine, the complexity of
human beings, the intrinsic nature of healing
and the rich diversity of therapeutic
systems.”
What is Integrative Medicine
Definition: “Integrative Medicine is the
practice of medicine that reaffirms the
importance of the relationship between
practitioner and patient, focuses on the
whole person, is informed by evidence, and
makes use of all appropriate therapeutic
approaches to achieve optimal health and
healing.” –CAHCIM definition
Elements of Successful Curricular
Change
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Leadership
Cooperative Climate
Politics
Participation by Organizational Members
Human Resource Development
Evaluation
Bland et al. Academic Medicine, 2000;75(6):575-594
Proposed Consensus of CAM Education
Goals for Medical Schools
  Provide basic knowledge
of the language and domains of
CAM
  Teach critical thinking
skills in assessing evidence
regarding CAM practices
  Make known essentials
about safety, efficacy, risks of
CAM, as well as potential for
interaction of CAM practices
with conventional medical
treatment
Sierpina, V. Alt Therapies Health &
Med 2002; 8(6): 102-104
  Encourage communication
skills in advising patients about
CAM practices
  Promote cultural
competency regarding CAM
practices
  Provide knowledge about
the role of interdisciplinary
health care teams including
referral processes to CAM
practitioners in the present
health care system
Core Goals of UTMB’s CAM Curriculum
• 1) Communicate effectively with patients about
CAM use.
• 2) Access and interpret the evidence for safety,
efficacy, and clinical appropriateness of CAM
therapies.
• 3) Develop a therapeutic relationship that is
patient-centered and includes respect for a
pluralism of cultural and religious values.
• 4) Develop positive personal perspectives on the
construct of wellness and of illness.
Longitudinal CAM Curriculum
• Summary (hand out)
• Design Model (hand out)