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What do Cochrane systematic reviews say about new practices on integrative medicine?

Authors :
Rachel Riera
Vinícius Lopes Braga
Luana Pompeu dos Santos Rocha
Daniel Damasceno Bernardo
Luísa Avelar Fernandes de Andrade
Jessica Chiu Hsu
Luciana Di Giovanni Marques da Silva
Rodrigo Cesar de Sá Suetsugu
Nicole Hosni Dittrich
Lucas Riguete Pereira de Lima
Vicente Penido da Silveira
Barbara Caon Kruglensky
Letícia de Freitas Leonel
Edivando de Moura Barros
Anderson Adriano Leal Freitas da Costa
Miguel Lins Quintella
Rafael Leite Pacheco
Carolina de Oliveira Cruz
Ana Luiza Cabrera Martimbianco
Daniela Vianna Pachito
Vania Mozetic
Tatiana de Bruyn Ferraz Teixeira
Maria Regina Torloni
Alvaro Nagib Atallah
Source :
São Paulo Medical Journal, Vol 136, Iss 3, Pp 251-261 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Associação Paulista de Medicina, 2018.

Abstract

ABSTRACT BACKGROUND: This study identified and summarized all Cochrane systematic reviews (SRs) on the effects of ten integrative practices that were recently added to the Brazilian public healthcare system (SUS). DESIGN AND SETTING: Review of systematic reviews, conducted in the Discipline of Evidence-Based Medicine, Escola Paulista de Medicina (EPM), Universidade Federal de São Paulo (Unifesp). METHODS: Review of Cochrane SRs on the following interventions were identified, summarized and critically assessed: apitherapy, aromatherapy, bioenergetics, family constellation, flower therapy, chromotherapy, geotherapy, hypnotherapy, hand imposition or ozone therapy. RESULTS: We included a total of 16 SRs: 4 on apitherapy, 4 on aromatherapy, 6 on hypnotherapy and 2 on ozone therapy. No Cochrane SR was found regarding bioenergetics, family constellation, chromotherapy, clay therapy, flower therapy or hand imposition. The only high-quality evidence was in relation to the potential benefit of apitherapy, specifically regarding some benefits from honey dressings for partial healing of burn wounds, for reduction of coughing among children with acute coughs and for preventing allergic reactions to insect stings. CONCLUSION: Except for some specific uses of apitherapy (honey for burn wounds and for acute coughs and bee venom for allergic reactions to insect stings), the use of ten integrative practices that have recently been incorporated into SUS does not seem to be supported by evidence from Cochrane SRs.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18069460 and 15163180
Volume :
136
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
São Paulo Medical Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.f6bfb6c252844719a95a15bbf89caaa6
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1590/1516-3180.2018.0172170418