Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2892698872> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2892698872 endingPage "1284" @default.
- W2892698872 startingPage "1270" @default.
- W2892698872 abstract "Introduction: Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) use has been increasing in the past decades in tandem with changes regarding the notions of health and illness. Comparing conventional medicine (CM) and CAM in how they address health problems has been a point of focus for both the health sciences and individuals dealing with health problems. Various social, cultural, political, economic, and personal factors play a role in whether different health approaches are integrated or not when addressing illness experiences. Methods: The qualitative study comprised semistructured interviews (N = 9) and participant observation involving 105 patients conducted between January 2015 and May 2017 at 4 clinics of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Budapest, Hungary. Code structures were created inductively with Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis. Results: The mutually exclusive view of CM/CAM use occurred due to loss of trust in the doctor-patient relationship causing problems in communication, and also as a result of the patient espousing certain cultural dispositions. Significant dispositions included a preference for the “natural” and psychologization, the latter often manifested in psychosocial etiology, vitalism, and illness symbolism. Discussion: A polarized choice of therapy may occur as a result of a competitive health care market in which medical modalities and their underlying cultural systems compete within a global milieu of information proliferation and a hybridization of individual worldviews. Through a process of “cultural creolization”, changing concepts of health and illness create varying patient expectations and meanings regarding illness, which in turn affect therapy choice as well. Conclusion: Mirrored in the articulation of an individual’s illness trajectory is a tension that is also reflected in the struggles in the health care system to more adequately understand health/illness processes from a pluralistic perspective. The power relations in the health arena (among CAM/CM practitioners and systems) play a role in legitimizing or undermining different health practices, which as consequence affects the possibility of integrating them into the processes of care. Thus, therapy choice is not only linked to changing notions of health and illness, but also to shifting conceptualizations of self, identity, and the practitioner-patient relationship." @default.
- W2892698872 created "2018-10-05" @default.
- W2892698872 creator A5012446383 @default.
- W2892698872 creator A5034453238 @default.
- W2892698872 date "2018-09-26" @default.
- W2892698872 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W2892698872 title "Patient Journeys of Nonintegration in Hungary: A Qualitative Study of Possible Reasons for Considering Medical Modalities as Mutually Exclusive" @default.
- W2892698872 cites W1547450212 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W1584171701 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W1724441796 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W1965717905 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W1970413671 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W1980818956 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W1987853147 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W1995999664 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W1999068081 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W1999997976 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2003937534 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2016276486 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2017195792 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2047356238 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2054990837 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2056555905 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2061889034 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2063487534 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2065687031 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2067205028 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2067927231 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2070991140 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2077919114 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2078181610 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2078621800 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2083513425 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2084693379 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2092142717 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2103666798 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2112882763 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2117227231 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2117432928 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2119972013 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2122202911 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2126571253 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2131872504 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2147496620 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2156688723 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2161274294 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2162241038 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2165317538 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2167643701 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2396996667 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2507171869 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2521940999 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W2624583861 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W4230171037 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W4251459090 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W79229537 @default.
- W2892698872 cites W99117875 @default.
- W2892698872 doi "https://doi.org/10.1177/1534735418801533" @default.
- W2892698872 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/6247556" @default.
- W2892698872 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30256678" @default.
- W2892698872 hasPublicationYear "2018" @default.
- W2892698872 type Work @default.
- W2892698872 sameAs 2892698872 @default.
- W2892698872 citedByCount "5" @default.
- W2892698872 countsByYear W28926988722019 @default.
- W2892698872 countsByYear W28926988722020 @default.
- W2892698872 countsByYear W28926988722021 @default.
- W2892698872 countsByYear W28926988722022 @default.
- W2892698872 countsByYear W28926988722023 @default.
- W2892698872 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2892698872 hasAuthorship W2892698872A5012446383 @default.
- W2892698872 hasAuthorship W2892698872A5034453238 @default.
- W2892698872 hasBestOaLocation W28926988721 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConcept C150966472 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConcept C160735492 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConcept C190248442 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConcept C2779903281 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConcept C3557399 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConcept C36289849 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConcept C542102704 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConcept C54355233 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConcept C66782513 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConcept C71924100 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConcept C77805123 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConcept C86803240 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConceptScore W2892698872C144024400 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConceptScore W2892698872C150966472 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConceptScore W2892698872C15744967 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConceptScore W2892698872C160735492 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConceptScore W2892698872C17744445 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConceptScore W2892698872C190248442 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConceptScore W2892698872C199539241 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConceptScore W2892698872C2779903281 @default.
- W2892698872 hasConceptScore W2892698872C3557399 @default.