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Complementary/alternative Medicine in Chronic Illness As Informed Self-care Decision Making

Overview
Journal Int J Nurs Stud
Specialty Nursing
Date 2002 Sep 17
PMID 12231024
Citations 59
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Abstract

The reasons that persons with chronic illness explore complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) have not been well understood. Using data from a study of self-care decision making in chronic illness, we conducted a qualitative secondary analysis to interpret the rationale underlying decisions to experiment with and use various CAM practices and products. The findings confirm that CAM use can be understood as a critical component of self-care management in general, and not as a rejection of conventional medicine or an unrealistic search for cure. In contrast, it represents personal responsibility for health, reframing the measures by which therapeutics are evaluated, and adopting a pragmatic approach to living as well as possible in the context of a chronic condition.

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