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  3. The Contribution of Complementary and Alternative Medicine to Reduce Antibiotic Use: A Narrative Review of Health Concepts, Prevention, and Treatment Strategies.
 

The Contribution of Complementary and Alternative Medicine to Reduce Antibiotic Use: A Narrative Review of Health Concepts, Prevention, and Treatment Strategies.

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.137613
Date of Publication
2019
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Kompleme...

Institut für Kompleme...

Author
Baars, Erik W
Zoen, Eefje Belt-van
Breitkreuz, Thomas
Martin, David
Matthes, Harald
von Schoen-Angerer, Tido
Soldner, Georg
Vagedes, Jan
van Wietmarschen, Herman
Patijn, Olga
Willcox, Merlin
von Flotow, Paschen
Teut, Michael
von Ammon, Klaus
Institut für Komplementäre und Integrative Medizin (IKIM)
Thangavelu, Madan
Wolf, Ursula
Institut für Komplementäre und Integrative Medizin, Anthroposophisch erweiterte Medizin (AeM)
Institut für Komplementäre und Integrative Medizin (IKIM)
Institut für Komplementäre und Integrative Medizin (IKIM)
Hummelsberger, Josef
Nicolai, Ton
Hartemann, Philippe
Szőke, Henrik
McIntyre, Michael
van der Werf, Esther T
Huber, Roman
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Evidence-based complementary and alternative medicine eCAM
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1741-427X
Publisher
Hindawi
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1155/2019/5365608
PubMed ID
30854009
Description
Aim

The aim of this narrative review was to explore the potential contributions of CAM to reduce antibiotic use.

Methods

We searched PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews with a specific, limited set of search terms and collected input from a group of expert CAM researchers to answer the question: What is known about the contribution of CAM health and health promotion concepts, infection prevention, and infection treatment strategies to reduce antibiotic use? Results. The worldview-related CAM health concepts enable health promotion oriented infection prevention and treatment aimed at strengthening or supporting the self-regulating ability of the human organism to cope with diseases. There is some evidence that the CAM concepts of health (promotion) are in agreement with current conceptualization of health and that doctors who practice both CAM and conventional medicine prescribe less antibiotics, although selection bias of the presented studies cannot be ruled out. There is some evidence that prevention and some treatment strategies are effective and safe. Many CAM treatment strategies are promising but overall lack high quality evidence.

Conclusions

CAM prevention and treatment strategies may contribute to reducing antibiotic use, but more rigorous research is necessary to provide high quality evidence of (cost-)effectiveness.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/185085
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5365608.pdftextAdobe PDF1.92 MBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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