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החברה הישראלית לרפואה משלימה
Israeli Society for Complementary Medicine
יו"ר:
פרופ' אלעד שיף

מזכיר:
ד"ר אילנה לוי יורקובסקי

גזבר:
ד"ר גלי שטופמן
Dietary and herbal supplements use among patients hospitalized in internal medicine departments

להלן תקציר המאמר. לקריאתו בטקסט מלא, אנא פנה/י לספרייה הרפואית הזמינה לך

 

למאמר המלא

 

Ben-Sasson M, Levy I, Ben-Arye E, Attias S, Schiff E. Dietary and herbal supplements use among patients hospitalized in internal medicine departments. Complement Ther Med. 2020 May;50:102345. doi: 10.1016/j.ctim.2020.102345. Epub 2020 Feb 12. PMID: 32444039

 

Abstract

 

Objectives: To assess consumption of dietary and herbal supplements (DHS) among patients in internal medicine departments and determine whether such use is documented in their medical files.

 

Methods: 267 patients from three internal medicine departments of an academic medical center in Haifa, Israel were assessed prospectively with questionnaires about their DHS use in the month preceding hospitalization. DHS were categorized into vitamins & minerals, herbal supplements and others. Further data was then collected from patients' medical records on socio-demographic and medical characteristics, as well as documentation of DHS use.

 

Results: 123 patients (50.6 %) used DHS on a daily basis. Most of them (53.7 %) were using more than one DHS. DHS use was more prevalent in older (OR = 1.02 [1.001-1.036], p = 0.034) and educated (OR = 0.482 [0.252-0.923], p = 0.028) patients. Vitamins & minerals were used mainly to enhance vitality and address laboratory abnormalities, whereas herbal supplements were used mainly for gastrointestinal problems (p < 0.001). DHS use was reported to the physicians by 42 % of the patients, mostly at the patients' initiative [92 (82.1 %), p < 0.001)]. Vitamins and minerals were the most reported category of DHS (94 (57.3 %), p < 0.001). The use of DHS was reported to physicians for 112 DHS (41.8 %) but only 32 DHS (11.9 %) were documented in their medical files. The documentation of vitamins and minerals was significantly higher compared to herbal supplements documentation (29 (17.7 %) & 3 (2.9 %) respectively, P < 0.001).

 

Conclusions: DHS are commonly used by patients hospitalized in the internal medicine departments. Many patients do not report such use to the physicians, and more strikingly, physicians do not document DHS use in patient medical files. This communication gap may have serious medico-legal ramifications due to DHS side effects and DHS interactions with other DHS and with conventional drugs.

 

 

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