The use of CAM providers and psychiatric outpatient services in people with anxiety/depression: A cross-sectional survey
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/10747Date
2016-11-11Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Background: Depression has been identified as one of the most frequent predictors of CAM use. However, limited
data exist about the use of CAM providers among people with anxiety/depression in Norway. The aim of this study
was to investigate the use of CAM providers, and the use of CAM providers and psychiatric outpatient services in
combination, among people with self-reported anxiety and/or depression.
Methods: We used questionnaire data from 12,982 participants (30–87 years) in the cross-sectional sixth Tromsø
Study (conducted in 2007-8). Eligible for analyses in our study were 1685 participants who reported suffering from
anxiety and/or depression. By descriptive statistical methods, we estimated the use of CAM providers, psychiatric
outpatient services, and the combination of these. By logistic regressions we studied the association between the
use of these services and gender, age, income, education, and self-reported degree of anxiety/depression.
Results: During the previous year, 17.8 % of people with anxiety/depression visited a CAM provider once or more,
11.8 % visited psychiatric outpatient services, and 2.5 % visited both. Men with anxiety/depression were less likely to
visit CAM providers compared to women (odds ratio [OR] 0.40, confidence interval [CI] 0.30–0.55), whereas higher
educated people were more likely to visit compared to the lowest educated (OR 1.47, CI 1.02–2.13). The use of
CAM providers was not associated with the degree of anxiety/depression. For those who used both CAM providers
and psychiatric specialist services during the previous year, severe anxiety/depression was strongly associated with
use compared to moderate disease (OR 7.53, CI 2.75–20.65).
Conclusions: People with severe anxiety/depression seem to use CAM providers and psychiatric services
additionally, whereas those with moderate disease seem to use these services more as alternative pathways.
CAM provider treatment might be a substitute for conventional care, particularly in patients with moderate disease.
Description
Published version. Source at http://doi.org/10.1186/s12906-016-1446-9. License CC BY 4.0.