Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Faculty Comments:You’ll need to explain how they are relevant to the topics and useful to the target audience. Cons
Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Faculty Comments:You’ll need to explain how they are relevant to the topics and useful to the target audience. Consider providing that information in the “speaker notes”.Outline how each resource is relevant. Consider using the speaker notes for this. Provide a list of resources to include in an organizational education plan on CAM and spirituality. PROFESSIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
Sarai Artires
Capella University
Health Promotion and Disease
Prevention in Vulnerable and Diverse
Populations.
January 2019
Introduction to complimentary and
alternative medicine, traditional
medicine, holistic approach, and
spirituality
– There are many ways in which these factors
are related.
– These are the four elements that are necessary
for the process of integral medicine
– CAM use is predominant in the noncommunicable diseases.
Understanding traditional
medicine
– The mainstay for the delivery of health care, especially in
rural or remote areas.
– This phenomena is mainly patterned over space and time
– Traditional attributes do refer to some millennial practices for
the prevention of health.
– Each and every traditional medicine, as well as the way they
will affect the health care plan, and its effects is normally
backed by research
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Holistic Approach
– Form of healing which considers the whole person
➢ Sprit
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➢ Body
➢ Mind
➢ Emotion
– Primary goal of this approach is the achievement of optimal health.
– This is to be done by way of gaining a proper balance in life
– Main belief is that these parts that make a person are interdependent
Religion and spiritual beliefs do play a lot of
important role in many patients.
Spirituality involves the search for the sacred
things in a person’s life
The effect of spirituality on the provision of health
care falls under three main categories.
• Mortality
• Coping
• Recovery
Understanding the spirituality of the patient is
something that is integral to the whole patient care
Understanding
Spirituality
Ethical
Ethical implications of these
principle on CAM
Helpful in the considerations of
some of the ethical questions
which were raised in the regulation
of CAM.
The four main principles that we
will look at are
• Non-maleficience
• Beneficence
• Respect for personal autonomy
• Justice
Understanding
ethical, legal,
and economic
principle
Understanding ethical, legal, and
economic principle
– Legal
– It is important to understand the regulatory
terms and levels that include:
– Licensure
– Certification
•
Different types of certifications required in
complimentary and alternative medicine.
– Registration
Understanding ethical, legal,
and economic principle
Economic
There is a high out-of-pocket expenditures on the use
of CAM therapies
This is something that forced policy make to shift their
attention to the cost of various therapies in CAM
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Challenges in the evaluation of economic impact of
CAM
How CAM, spirituality, traditional
medicine, and holistic approach
affect action plans for individuals .
– Offers gentler and safer approaches
–
Reduces the risks of chronic disease by
alternative treatment methods
– Changes pain management method in the
elderly
– Promotes patient empowerment and increases
therapeutic options
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How CAM, spirituality, traditional
medicine, and holistic approach affect
action plans among the Chinese.
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1
2
3
4
Advantages
of using
CAM and
TM in
making
action
plans for
interventio
ns
Disadvanta
ges of using
CAM and
CAM in the
action
plans for
interventio
ns
Advantages
of using
Spiritual
and Holistic
care among
the Chinese
Disadvanta
ges of using
Spiritual
and Holistic
care among
the
Chinese.
Conclusion
– The findings from this study give enough indication of how important CAM,
traditional medicine, holistic health, and spirituality can affect a plan of action
for individuals and populations(among the Chinese to be specific). Because all
these approaches can, in one way or another, affect the plan of action, physicians
need to tap into them to provider an integrated approach towards taking care of
patients.
References
– Ellison, C. G., Bradshaw, M., & Roberts, C. A. (2011). Spiritual and
religious identities predict the use of complementary and alternative
medicine among US adults*. Preventive Medicine, 54(1), 9–12.
– Gale, N. (2014). The Sociology of Traditional, Complementary and
Alternative Medicine. Sociology Compass, 8(6), 805–822.
doi:10.1111/soc4.12182
– Hsiao, A.-F., Wong, M. D., Miller, M. F., Ambs, A. H., Goldstein,
M. S., Smith, A., . . . Wenger, N. S. (2008). Role of Religiosity and
Spirituality in Complementary and Alternative Medicine Use
Among Cancer Survivors in California. Integrative Cancer
Therapies, 7(3), 139-146. doi:10.1177/1534735408322847
References
– Public., I. o. (2005). Complementary and Alternative Medicine in
the United States. Washington (DC): National Academies Press .
– Quan, H., Lai, D., Johnson, D., Verhoef, M., & Musto, R. (2008).
Complementary and alternative medicine use among Chinese and
white Canadians. Canadian Family Physician, 54(11), 1563–1569.
– Shirwaikar, A., Govindarajan, R., & Rawat, A. K. (2013).
Integrating Complementary and Alternative Medicine with Primary
Health Care. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative
Medicine, 2013(2013). doi:10.1155/2013/948308
References
– Siddiqui, M. J., Min, C. S., Verma, R. K., & Jamshed, S. Q. (2014).
Role of complementary and alternative medicine in geriatric care: A
mini review. Pharmacognosy Review, 8(16), 81–87.
doi:10.4103/0973-7847.134230
– Tais, S., & zober, E. (2013). The Economic Evaluation of
Complementary and Alternative Medicine. Natural Medicine
Journal, 5(2).
– Wu, J. C. (2010). Complementary and Alternative Medicine
Modalities for the Treatment of Irritable Bowel Syndrome: Facts or
Myths? Gastroenterology and Hepatology, 6(11), 705–711.
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