Use of complementary and alternative medicine in patients suffering from primary headache disorders.

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Use of complementary and alternative medicine in patients suffering from primary headache disorders. / Gaul, C; Eismann, R; Schmidt, T; May, Arne; Leinisch, E; Wieser, T; Evers, S; Henkel, K; Franz, G; Zierz, S.

In: CEPHALALGIA, Vol. 29, No. 10, 10, 2009, p. 1069-1078.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Gaul, C, Eismann, R, Schmidt, T, May, A, Leinisch, E, Wieser, T, Evers, S, Henkel, K, Franz, G & Zierz, S 2009, 'Use of complementary and alternative medicine in patients suffering from primary headache disorders.', CEPHALALGIA, vol. 29, no. 10, 10, pp. 1069-1078. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19366356?dopt=Citation>

APA

Gaul, C., Eismann, R., Schmidt, T., May, A., Leinisch, E., Wieser, T., Evers, S., Henkel, K., Franz, G., & Zierz, S. (2009). Use of complementary and alternative medicine in patients suffering from primary headache disorders. CEPHALALGIA, 29(10), 1069-1078. [10]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19366356?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Gaul C, Eismann R, Schmidt T, May A, Leinisch E, Wieser T et al. Use of complementary and alternative medicine in patients suffering from primary headache disorders. CEPHALALGIA. 2009;29(10):1069-1078. 10.

Bibtex

@article{bd8ebd588cff4d199ae6ec2dddf5b5da,
title = "Use of complementary and alternative medicine in patients suffering from primary headache disorders.",
abstract = "Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) is increasingly common in the treatment of primary headache disorders despite lack of evidence for efficacy in most modalities. A systematic questionnaire-based survey of CAM therapy was conducted in 432 patients who attended seven tertiary headache out-patient clinics in Germany and Austria. Use of CAM was reported by the majority (81.7%) of patients. Most frequently used CAM treatments were acupuncture (58.3%), massage (46.1%) and relaxation techniques (42.4%). Use was motivated by 'to leave nothing undone' (63.7%) and 'to be active against the disease' (55.6%). Compared with non-users, CAM users were of higher age, showed a longer duration of disease, a higher percentage of chronification, less intensity of headache, were more satisfied with conventional prophylaxis and showed greater willingness to gather information about headaches. There were no differences with respect to gender, headache diagnoses, headache-specific disability, education, income, religious attitudes or satisfaction with conventional attack therapy. A higher number of headache days, longer duration of headache treatment, higher personal costs, and use of CAM for other diseases predicted a higher number of used CAM treatments. This study confirms that CAM is widely used among primary headache patients, mostly in combination with standard care.",
author = "C Gaul and R Eismann and T Schmidt and Arne May and E Leinisch and T Wieser and S Evers and K Henkel and G Franz and S Zierz",
year = "2009",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "29",
pages = "1069--1078",
journal = "CEPHALALGIA",
issn = "0333-1024",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Use of complementary and alternative medicine in patients suffering from primary headache disorders.

AU - Gaul, C

AU - Eismann, R

AU - Schmidt, T

AU - May, Arne

AU - Leinisch, E

AU - Wieser, T

AU - Evers, S

AU - Henkel, K

AU - Franz, G

AU - Zierz, S

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) is increasingly common in the treatment of primary headache disorders despite lack of evidence for efficacy in most modalities. A systematic questionnaire-based survey of CAM therapy was conducted in 432 patients who attended seven tertiary headache out-patient clinics in Germany and Austria. Use of CAM was reported by the majority (81.7%) of patients. Most frequently used CAM treatments were acupuncture (58.3%), massage (46.1%) and relaxation techniques (42.4%). Use was motivated by 'to leave nothing undone' (63.7%) and 'to be active against the disease' (55.6%). Compared with non-users, CAM users were of higher age, showed a longer duration of disease, a higher percentage of chronification, less intensity of headache, were more satisfied with conventional prophylaxis and showed greater willingness to gather information about headaches. There were no differences with respect to gender, headache diagnoses, headache-specific disability, education, income, religious attitudes or satisfaction with conventional attack therapy. A higher number of headache days, longer duration of headache treatment, higher personal costs, and use of CAM for other diseases predicted a higher number of used CAM treatments. This study confirms that CAM is widely used among primary headache patients, mostly in combination with standard care.

AB - Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) is increasingly common in the treatment of primary headache disorders despite lack of evidence for efficacy in most modalities. A systematic questionnaire-based survey of CAM therapy was conducted in 432 patients who attended seven tertiary headache out-patient clinics in Germany and Austria. Use of CAM was reported by the majority (81.7%) of patients. Most frequently used CAM treatments were acupuncture (58.3%), massage (46.1%) and relaxation techniques (42.4%). Use was motivated by 'to leave nothing undone' (63.7%) and 'to be active against the disease' (55.6%). Compared with non-users, CAM users were of higher age, showed a longer duration of disease, a higher percentage of chronification, less intensity of headache, were more satisfied with conventional prophylaxis and showed greater willingness to gather information about headaches. There were no differences with respect to gender, headache diagnoses, headache-specific disability, education, income, religious attitudes or satisfaction with conventional attack therapy. A higher number of headache days, longer duration of headache treatment, higher personal costs, and use of CAM for other diseases predicted a higher number of used CAM treatments. This study confirms that CAM is widely used among primary headache patients, mostly in combination with standard care.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 29

SP - 1069

EP - 1078

JO - CEPHALALGIA

JF - CEPHALALGIA

SN - 0333-1024

IS - 10

M1 - 10

ER -