Litcius/Paper detail

Prevalence of Traditional and Complementary Alternative Medicine’s Use among Cancer Patients in South Peninsular Malaysia

Nurul Huda Razali, Aisyah Ali, Siew Hua Gan, Chun Sen Lim

2020Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Biology18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Objective: This study sought to describe the use of traditional and complementary alternative medicine’s (CAM) in a cohort of cancer patients in Johor, a state in Southern Peninsular Malaysia.Methodology: This is a four-month cross sectional study, targeted, on cancer outpatient clinics in three hospitals. Ethical approval and signed written informed consents were obtained from the patients, prior to the study. A standardised, interviewer-administered questionnaire was used to obtain the socio-demographic characteristics, clinical characteristics and questions on CAM’s use. Results: The response rate was 95.4%. The majority of the participants was females (79.9%) and was from the Malay ethnic group (79.2%) with most having only a secondary education (41.8%). The mean age was 57.7 ± 12.47 years with the majority having breast cancer (51.1%). There were no significant association between the socio demographic variables with CAM’s use with the exception of hospital, participants’ religion and ethnicity (p-value < 0.05). Many patients preferred biologically-based therapies (87.8%) such as herbs and dietary supplements with a large proportion having reported to have utilised CAM after having completed the conventional treatment (40.0%). The majority (60.1%) of the patients were satisfied with CAM treatment while only 17.40% showed dissatisfaction. Most cancer patients chose CAM due to their perceived fewer side effects (31.1%), to increase quality of life (26.7%) and as a curative intent (20.7%).Conclusion: There is a high prevalence of CAM’s use among cancer patients in Southern State in Malaysia.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMalayEthnic groupFamily medicineCancerQuality of life (healthcare)Alternative medicineInterviewBreast cancerInformed consentCross-sectional studyCancer treatmentTraditional medicineInternal medicineLawLinguisticsSociologyNursingAnthropologyPolitical sciencePathologyPhilosophyComplementary and Alternative Medicine Studies