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Home > "A" Clinical Trials Conditions > Adolescents' Use of Complementary and Alternative Medicine Adolescents' Use of Complementary and Alternative Medicine
Adolescents' Use of Complementary and Alternative Medicine
For Condition: Healthy
Status: No longer recruiting
Sponsor(s): National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) ,
Synopsis: The purpose of this study is to help improve our understanding of when and why adolescents decide to use alternative and complimentary medicines, and to understand factors that lead to better communication between youth and their clinicians.
Details: Alternative therapies and herbal remedies are increasingly recognized as having therapeutic value, and as many as 42% adults use some form of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). The prevalence of CAM use among adolescents is not known. Questions remain about the safety and efficacy of some CAM therapies, and how to best facilitate communication about alternative medicine between patients and clinicians. Research with adults shows that most do not reveal their use of alternative therapies to their providers. Adolescence is a time of experimentation and the beginning of a shift from depending upon parents to taking responsibility for one's own care. Thus, the health practices begun in adolescence have an impact into adulthood. However, none of the current guidelines for the provision of care to adolescents advise asking about complementary or alternative medicine use. Finally, adolescents are exposed to increasing coverage of CAM in the media, and on the internet. The specific aims of this study are to: 1) determine the prevalence of complementary and alternative medicine use among a representative sample of adolescents, 2) describe the range of therapies adolescents use, and where they are procured, 3) describe adolescent and clinician factors that are associated with communication between adolescents and their providers about complementary and alternative medicine, and 4) describe adolescents' exposure to information about CAM from sources such as parents, providers, and the media, and how this impacts CAM use. We propose a cross sectional random digit dial telephone survey of 1200 adolescents in Monroe County, NY. Our findings will allow us to understand how adolescents use alternative medicine. Additionally, since alternative therapies can have potentially serious side-effects or drug interactions, insight into how and when alternative medicine use is disclosed may help clinicians provide better care to adolescents.
Eligibility:
Study Type: Observational, Natural History, Cross-Sectional, Random Sample, Retrospective Study
Minimum Age/Maximum Age: 14 Years/19 Years
Genders: Both
Protocol Entry Criteria: Adolescents ages 14-19
Total Enrollment: 1400
Location and Contact Information:
Overall Study Official:
JonathanKlein, Principal Investigator, University of Rochester
University of Rochester Department of Pediatrics
Rochester, New York, 14642
United States
Additional Information:
Study ID Numbers: 1 R21 AT00407-01;
Study Start Date:
Record last reviewed: March 2004
Additional information available at: clinicaltrials.gov
Clinicaltrials.gov Reference link: NCT00032656
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Adolescents' Use of Complementary and Alternative Medicine
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