Naturopathy and the primary care practice. (17/59)

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Herbs in orthodox practice: a view by medical students. (18/59)

Use and opinion of herbs among medical students of Imo State University Nigeria was assessed. Information on herb use, indication and opinion from returned self-administered questionnaire was analyzed. A total of 114 students (91.2%) of 125 responded. 32 (28.1%) students had used herbs before, a significant proportion being males (OR 3.7). Herbal tea was the most popular herb used; maintaining good health and treating malaria were the only indications (50% each). Most students (>90%) believe herbs to be harmful, and generally unsafe especially in pregnancy. Most students (73%) who had used herbs consider them effective in treating hypertension or diabetes mellitus (OR 3.5 & 6.0 respectively). Most students (89.1%) believe there's a lot of misinformation about herbs. Most students view use of herbs with skepticism. Inculcating study of herbs in medical curriculum will provide better information on herbs.  (+info)

A pilot study on the effects of a team building process on the perception of work environment in an integrative hospital for neurological rehabilitation. (19/59)

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Perceptions, use and attitudes of pharmacy customers on complementary medicines and pharmacy practice. (20/59)

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A brief report: Yale Research Symposium on Complementary and Integrative Medicine. (21/59)

The 2010 Yale Research Symposium on Complementary and Integrative Medicine highlighted original research in related areas by Yale faculty and provided a forum to discuss and debate issues of evidence and plausibility. In this brief report, we describe selected presentations on such diverse foci as nutritional influences on cancer, acupuncture for low back pain, protein intake's effects on bone consumption, Chinese herb-derived adjuvant chemotherapy, and the relationship between anger and cardiac arrhythmia. This symposium demonstrated that rigorous research methods are being used to study unconventional therapies and that an integrative medicine approach requires a solid scientific foundation.  (+info)

Progress in complementary and alternative medicine research: Yale Research Symposium on Complementary and Integrative Medicine. (22/59)

Integrative Medicine at Yale and the Yale Center for Continuing Medical Education (CME) sponsored the Yale Research Symposium on Complementary and Integrative Medicine in March 2010 at the university's School of Medicine. Delivering the keynote address, Dr. Josephine P. Briggs, Director of the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), highlighted recent progress made in the field of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM).  (+info)

Integrative emphases on intimate, intrinsic propensity/pathological processes--causes of self recovery limits and also, subtle related targets for neuroprotectionl pleiotropicity/multimodal actions, by accessible therapeutic approaches--in spinal cord injuries. (23/59)

BACKGROUND: The last two decades have come up with some important progresses in the genetic, immune, histochemical and bio (nano)-technological domains, that have provided new insight into cellular/molecular mechanisms, occurring in the central nervous system (CNS)--including in spinal cord-injuries. METHODS: In previous works, emerging from our theoretical and practical endeavors in the field, we have thoroughly described the principal intimate propensity and the pathophysiological processes--representing intrinsic limitations for self-recovery after SCI, and, at the same time, subtle targets for neuroprotection/recovery--and reviewed the main related worldwide-published reports. The aim of this paper is to emphasize the connections between such main aspects and some feasible integrative solutions, including the ones for clinical practice. RESULTS: Consequently, we stress upon some therapeutic suggestions regarding this subject matter by systematizing the most up to date and efficient ones--obviously, within major limits, according to the very low capacities of CNS/ spinal cord (SC) to post-injury self preserve and recover. Moreover, we also talk about accessible drugs, respectively those being already in clinical use (but at present, mainly used to treat other conditions, including the neurological ones) and hence, with relatively well known, determined effects and/or respectively, restrictions. DISCUSSIONS: The recent advances in the knowledge on the basic components of the afore mentioned CNS/ SC propensity for self destroying and inefficient endogenous repair mechanisms in the actual new context, will hopefully be, from now on, more effectively correlated with revolutionary--mostly still experimental--treatments, especially by using stem cells within tissue engineering, including, if needed, more advanced/courageous approaches, based on somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT). CONCLUSIONS: This paper contains the scientific motivated highlighting of some already available drugs, "neuroprotective" (and not only) properties too, which enable practitioners with (although not yet capable to cure--but anyway) more efficient therapeutic means, to approach the extremely difficult and still painfully disappointing domain, of spinal cord injury (SCI).  (+info)

Integrative care for the management of low back pain: use of a clinical care pathway. (24/59)

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