- Erin O’Reilly,
- Marika Sevigny,
- Kelley-Anne Sabarre and
- Karen P Phillips
BMC Complementary and Alternative MedicineThe official journal of the International Society for Complementary Medicine Research (ISCMR)201414:394
DOI: 10.1186/1472-6882-14-394
© O’Reilly et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. 2014
Received: 13 August 2014
Accepted: 26 September 2014
Published: 14 October 2014
Abstract
Background
Infertility patients are increasingly
using complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) to supplement or
replace conventional fertility treatments. The objective of this study
was to determine the roles of CAM practitioners in the support and
treatment of infertility.
Methods
Ten semi-structured interviews were
conducted in Ottawa, Canada in 2011 with CAM practitioners who
specialized in naturopathy, acupuncture, traditional Chinese medicine,
hypnotherapy and integrated medicine.
Results
CAM practitioners played an active role
in both treatment and support of infertility, using a holistic,
interdisciplinary and individualized approach. CAM practitioners
recognized biological but also environmental and psychosomatic
determinants of infertility. Participants were receptive to working with
physicians, however little collaboration was described.
Conclusions
Integrated infertility patient care
through both collaboration with CAM practitioners and incorporation of
CAM’s holistic, individualized and interdisciplinary approaches would
greatly benefit infertility patients.
Keywords
Infertility Qualitative Complementary and alternative medicine Naturopathy Traditional Chinese medicine AcupunctureBackground
Infertility
is a complex, multifactorial condition characterized by the absence of
conception following one year of unprotected sexual intercourse [1, 2, 3]. Biological, genetic [4], infectious [5], lifestyle [6, 7, 8, 9] and environmental [10, 11]
risk factors are associated with both male and female infertility.
Fertility issues are primarily investigated by family practice
physicians and gynecologists (i.e. diagnostic investigations, endocrine
disorders, anovulatory conditions) with unresolved infertility
ultimately treated by reproductive endocrinologists using assisted
reproductive technologies (ART) [2, 3].
For some patients, ART presents significant financial, psychological,
moral and ethical challenges which may lead to discontinuation of
treatment [12].
As medicine, in particular ART, becomes increasingly technological,
patients are choosing complementary and alternative medicine (CAM);
perceived as more natural with less side effects [13, 14]. CAM provides non-mainstream approaches which complement or replace conventional medicine [15].
Acupuncture, hypnotherapy, chiropractic and osteopathic manipulation,
naturopathy, homeopathy and traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) are
examples of CAM [15].
In Canada, CAM use for all conditions is increasing, with the typical patient female aged 20-64 years [16, 17]. Treatment of infertility using CAM has been reported in studies from Australia [18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23], Canada [24], United Kingdom (UK) [25, 26], United States (US) [27, 28, 29], Denmark [30], Jordan [31], Lebanon [32] and Turkey [33],
reflecting patients’ acceptance and interest in alternative approaches
to infertility treatment. Herbal supplements and acupuncture, used to
supplement or replace ART, are perhaps the most studied infertility
approaches [34, 35].
The range of CAM modalities, treatments and emphasis on individualized
therapies however, limits assessment of the therapeutic efficacy of CAM
to treat infertility [13, 33, 34, 36]. About 65-75% of Australian infertility patients report use of CAM [14, 22], compared to 29% of US patients [27], and 40% of UK patients [25]
indicating regional differences in CAM uptake. Use of herbal
supplements during pregnancy also exhibits regional variation, with use
most common in Russia, Eastern Europe and Australia [37]. In Canada, 9-23% women [37, 38]
report use of herbal supplements during pregnancy while 31% of male
infertility patients acknowledged use of alternative therapies including
vitamins, minerals and herbal remedies [24].
These studies indicate that Canadians are using CAM for reproductive
health, however the role of Canadian CAM practitioners in infertility
treatment has not been examined.
Despite
lack of evidence regarding CAM efficacy, patients are increasingly
using CAM to replace or supplement ART. CAM modalities may be useful to
help patients mitigate lifestyle risks to improve fertility and ART
success. The attitudes and experiences of CAM practitioners regarding
their roles in infertility treatment and perspectives on infertility
patients’ motivations have not been well studied. To address these gaps,
we have examined the roles of CAM professionals, practicing in Ottawa,
Canada, in the treatment and support of infertility.
Methods
Recruitment
CAM
practitioners were initially identified through assessment of Ottawa,
Canada CAM practice websites and contacted to participate in this study.
This purposive recruitment strategy primarily targeted practitioners
with an online (website) or advertised presence in the community,
thereby identifying established practices. Recruitment included a brief
summary of the research project, mechanisms of participation and an
advance copy of the informed consent form, which each practitioner
signed on the day of the interview. Participation was assessed on the
basis of CAM practice in the Ottawa, Canada region and previous
experience treating or supporting infertility. Ten Ottawa-area CAM
practitioners represented the study sample. This study was approved by
the University of Ottawa Research Ethics Board.
Data collection
Individual
interviews with CAM practitioners, conducted March-November, 2011, were
audio-recorded and noted, followed by transcription. One interview,
lasting 45-60 minutes, was conducted with each participant at their
practice. Interview topics enabled CAM practitioners to describe their
perspectives on infertility and their roles in infertility support and
treatment (Table 1). Demographic data were also collected (Table 2).
Table 1
Interview questions
Topic
|
Interview questions
|
---|---|
Models of infertility
|
How would you describe infertility?
|
Experiences from CAM practice
|
Please discuss how [naturopathy/homeopathy/acupuncture…etc.] is used with your infertility patients.
|
Is [naturopathy/homeopathy/acupuncture…etc.] used to support infertility or directly treat infertility?
| |
Do you observe gender difference in terms of your infertility practice?
| |
Practitioners’ perceptions of CAM-infertility patients
|
What,
in your opinion, motivates patients with infertility to seek additional
support through complementary and alternative medicine?
|
Related to infertility, what would you describe as the greatest unmet need for these patients?
| |
Collaborations
|
What is your relationship with physicians who treat infertility using medical models?
|
Recommendations
|
Recommendations for improvement?
|
What recommendations would you make regarding emotional support for infertility?
|
Table 2
Participant characteristics
CHARACTERISTIC
|
NUMBER
|
---|---|
Males
|
3
|
Females
|
7
|
AGE (years)
| |
<30
|
1
|
30-39
|
6
|
50-60
|
3
|
PROFESSIONAL TITLE
| |
Naturopathic Doctor
|
5
|
Acupuncturist
|
2
|
Doctor of Oriental Medicine
|
1
|
Hypnotherapist
|
1
|
Medical Doctor
|
1
|
DOMAIN SPECIALITIES
| |
Naturopathy
|
6
|
Homeopathy
|
1
|
Acupuncture
|
9
|
TCM/Oriental Medicine
|
6
|
Medicine
|
2
|
Hypnotherapy
|
2
|
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE
| |
0-5 years
|
4
|
6-10 years
|
2
|
11+ years
|
4
|
LICENSING
| |
BDDT-N
|
4
|
CPSO
|
1
|
American NCCAOM
|
2
|
CAATCM
|
1
|
Unspecified
|
2
|
% OF PRACTICE DEDICATED TO INFERTILITY
| |
≤5%
|
3
|
15-25%
|
4
|
40-60%
|
3
|
Data analysis
Interview
data were systematically explored using qualitative content analysis; a
method which serves to summarize the data content [39].
Ten interview transcripts were coded for content themes using NVIVO™
(QSR International, Cambridge, MA, USA). Briefly, the coding process
involved identification of major themes which were labelled and
organized using NVIVO™ a qualitative data analysis software program.
Themes emerged inductively with preliminary categorization provided by
interview topic. Major themes were identified as concepts, ideas or
perceptions expressed by at least five of the ten participants. Coding
meetings, which included the interviewers, provided opportunities to
refine thematic categories, ensure coding consistency and confirm
saturation [40, 41].
The coding and analysis process occurred while interviews were ongoing,
such that recruitment was terminated when saturation was achieved.
Results
Participants
Seven female and three male CAM practitioners participated in this study (Table 2).
Most participants engaged in interdisciplinary practice with multiple
treatment domains. Acupuncture, naturopathy and TCM were most common.
Perspectives on infertility
Participants
described a biomedical model of infertility which recognized
psychosomatic stress and lifestyle determinants. When asked to describe
infertility, four major themes emerged: inability to get pregnant, time-clinical model, stress as cause of infertility, biological model of infertility.
“We just use
the Western definition of a woman in her mid-thirties or below, trying
to conceive for one year and not being successful. We could consider
that infertile. Or older women, we generally give them six months of
effort and if that does not come about, we would consider them
infertile.” CAM201110, male doctor of Oriental medicine/acupuncturist
“I believe
that the base of infertility, as is the base of most things, comes from
psychosomatic roots. The female body knows how to get pregnant.”
CAM201105, female hypnotherapist
“Our training
includes the biological model so we use that, at least as a starting
point. Beyond things like physiology and endocrinology, we also assess
lifestyle factors such as stress, the environment, exposure to toxins,
relationship issues, and previous medical history.” CAM201103; female
naturopathic doctor (ND)
Integrated approach to infertility
CAM
practitioners used interdisciplinary, individualized, holistic
infertility treatment approaches with patients supported by stress and
lifestyle management. Diagnostic investigations often included physical
assessments, use of lifestyle-clinical history questionnaires and
fertility hormone laboratory tests. Major themes included: individualized approach, stress management, lifestyle management, holistic approach, interdisciplinary, biological approach.
“I think the
integrative approach would definitely include treatment of
psycho-emotional stress. It would include a number of natural health
products that are aiming to restore hormone balance. So I think like
something like acupuncture or meditation practice or even emphasizing
regular exercise. You know very very simple things that would improve
health and thereby improve fertility secondarily.” CAM201108; male,
medical doctor (MD)
“Naturopathic
medicine, the way that we’re regulated in the province of Ontario, we
assess each patient individually. So we do a full biomedical, physical
assessment. We check things like blood pressure, heart rate, we do a
full screen, physical exam and we can order lab work. So most of my
fertility patients, if they aren’t coming with labs from a reproductive
endocrinologist already, that’s typically something I will ask them to
get done or will requisition from here.” CAM201103; female ND
“But what
works for one patient will not work with the other, because no two trees
are the same, no two systems are the same. If I have a hundred patients
with infertility, I end up doing probably ninety-five different
treatments… almost everyone needs a unique remedy” CAM201106; male
ND/MD/homeopath
CAM infertility patients
CAM
patients were described as predominantly female and motivated to become
pregnant. Participants’ perceptions of gender and infertility practice
produced three major themes: most patients are women, women are more open to CAM, men are resistant to CAM. Participants perceived that in general, women were more receptive to CAM for infertility and other health issues.
“I think my
practice in general is mostly women. I think it has to do with the fact
that women are just more proactive with their health. They are just more
in tune with their bodies and they sort of buy into the naturopathic
paradigm more because I think they believe that its value in preventing
disease and working on deeper issues versus just symptomatic
improvement. I think that a lot of men want the quick fix - you know,
the pill.” CAM201104; female ND/acupuncturist
“I usually see
a lot more female than male, because I think men usually don’t take
care of themselves- they neglect their health and they don’t like to
talk. I think 75% of my practice are female, regardless of what disease
they have. And, those men that come it’s because their wife has forced
them to come. Also, because alternative medicine is a lot more accepted
by women than by men. Men are very engineered mind, very mechanical in
their approaches - they have a very hard time to believe that something
that conventional medicine has not put their seal of approval is of any
value. Women are not like that. I think women are a lot more open to
explore and investigate”, CAM201106; male ND/MD/homeopath
Participants were asked to consider their patients’ motivations for choosing a CAM approach. Major themes included: women
will do anything to get pregnant; end of line reached with conventional
medicine; identified CAM via internet or word of mouth.
“And usually,
with fertility in particular, most women are- will do almost anything at
the point that they come in to see the naturopath. You can ask them to
fly to the moon and back and they would try if they could.” CAM201101,
female ND
“So often
times I see people, it tends to be around this two year mark where, as
you say, there is not a lot of research on to what is an alternative
besides my doctor and what those recommendations are. So often times, I
see them when they are sort of at the end of their rope thinking like,
“oh, my goodness, is there ever going to happen for me”, and there is a
lot of emotional strain and stress around it.” CAM201105, female
hypnotherapist
“Yeah…I think
that’s more what people do these days –Internet searches… we ask them
where they got our name from and you know most of the time it’s through
Internet searches or referral from a fertility clinic.. sometimes it’s
word of mouth.” CAM201109, female, acupuncturist, doctor of Chinese
medicine
Infertility practice collaborations: CAM and Conventional medicine
Participants
described limited professional collaborations with physicians (general
practice, gynecologists, fertility specialists) who treat infertility.
Although two CAM practitioners were actively collaborating with the
local fertility clinic, most participants’ interactions with
conventional medicine were limited to CAM practitioners’ requests for
patient files and laboratory test results. Major themes included: no medicine collaborations, open to collaborations.
“I basically
don’t have a relationship with any of them. I just.. communicate with
the fertility clinic via faxes. I will send for request for records and
they’ll send them over and they are very amenable to that. I have never
had issues with getting records, so they are very open, but I have never
met any of them, never spoken to any of them. Absolutely no
relationship.” CAM201104, female, ND/acupuncturist
“I haven’t had any referrals
yet, but the longer I am here in Ottawa the more people I will meet… I
would like to go down and meet them because the more that they [fertility doctors] get
to know me and know my skill set the more that there will be referrals
there. However to date there aren’t any.” CAM201102, female, ND
“If the client wants, you know,
we go to the fertility center and immediately before they have their
medical procedure done, we do [acupuncture] treatment
at the center and immediately after the treatment is done, we do a
post-treatment at the center.” CAM201110, male doctor of Oriental
medicine/acupuncturist
Improved CAM-medicine collaborations were recognized as beneficial to patients. Four participants suggested an integrated conventional medicine-CAM approach. Communication, awareness and education were each identified by three participants as mechanisms to improve collaborations.
“What would be
ideal would be more of an integrative approach as a whole so to have
your conventional fertility specialist working even in the same
building, the same office, as a naturopath or other complementary, you
know, or to have a system in place where they could do both” CAM201101,
female ND
“Well I think
that some sort of formal line of communication between fertility doctors
and alternative providers is a really good idea. I would be willing to
contribute to that if something gets started.” CAM201108, male MD
“I’m sure a
part of it could come from my end and you know with other family doctors
I will often send a letter of introduction just to kind of let them
know that I am not there to take business away or I’m just there to
support the patient. I think probably education on their side, just in
school, in terms of understanding what a naturopathic doctor does. I
think a lot of them are skeptical because they just don’t know anything
about it.” CAM201104, female ND/acupuncturist
Gaps in infertility patient care
CAM practitioners identified lack of emotional support as the major unmet need for infertility patients. Education around lifestyle management, social networks and use of an integrated approach were also mentioned.
“Emotional
support. I would say. Oddly enough, there’s a lot that conventional
medicine can do to push hormones and you know, push ovulation, but where
I see that part is lacking is really in the emotional support that
people need.” CAM201101, female ND
“More
information on how lifestyle really plays a factor in fertility. How
important it is to keep ourselves healthy and to develop a healthy
lifestyle so that when we are ready to conceive, the chance it will
happen faster. I think more emotional support would definitely be
beneficial, particularly with the stress around conceiving because when
people get in phases where they are experiencing high levels of stress
and anxiety, that’s another confounding factor that can play a road
block in terms of healthy conception” CAM201102 female ND
Although
participants perceived that their individualized, holistic approach
mitigated some of the stress associated with infertility, they noted
that for some patients formal emotional supports (counseling or support groups) would be required.
“If they are
having a really hard time with it, definitely see a counselor.
Acupuncture can be really good to get rid of like emotional blockages.
And talking to their partner. Be really open as well”. CAM201107, female
acupuncturist.
“I would say have a therapist
that they can access, or have that as part of their system. I mean
certainly there are psychologists and people that are covered under OHIP [Ontario Health Insurance Plan] and
so would fall under the medical model. I think, of course, always, the
ultimate would be to have everybody working together under the same roof
and have people who are particularly specialized in the field. Always
an integrative approach.” CAM201101, female ND
Discussion
Ten
Ottawa CAM practitioners willingly described their holistic,
interdisciplinary and individualized approaches to infertility treatment
and support. CAM practitioners recognized biological determinants of
infertility and their interactions with environment, lifestyle and
stress. CAM practitioners readily described physiological anomalies as
causes for illness, disease and disability, acknowledging that
physiological systems are perturbed through modulating effects of
lifestyle and stress. Treatment plans were predicated on fertility
centre diagnostic results, blood/urine laboratory findings, physical
examinations along with patient lifestyle factors. A biological model of
infertility was most strongly proposed by participants with training in
naturopathy who also emphasized patient education and lifestyle risk
mitigation and prevention. All participants considered that
individualized treatments along with lengthy appointments fostered
patient disclosures on sensitive issues including poor lifestyle habits,
stress and family relationships. Australian CAM practitioners who
specialize in women’s health reported similar individualized, holistic
approaches to infertility; appreciated by patients as positively
reinforcing the provider-patient relationship [18].
The patient-centered, holistic, personalized treatment approach central
to acupuncture and other CAM therapies has been credited with
development of patients’ trust, sense of personal control and
empowerment [18, 42, 43].
Ottawa
CAM-infertility patients were characterized by practitioners as
predominantly female, extremely motivated to become pregnant and open to
alternative treatments. CAM-infertility patients are typically older,
female with a relatively high socioeconomic status [14, 44].
Participants perceived that CAM fertility-related investigations were
driven by the female partner, with men initially reluctant participants.
Although men and women experience infertility differently, men express
strong desires to conceive and subsequent grief with infertility [45, 46, 47].
Ottawa providers perceived infertility patients’ motivations for CAM
treatment to be related to their strong desire to achieve pregnancy and
dissatisfaction with ART, consistent with previous studies [18,20,27].
The Internet, word of mouth and previous experiences with CAM were
believed to contribute to patients’ awareness of CAM providers’
services.
Ottawa
practitioners recognized infertility and ART as significant
contributors to patients’ emotional distress. Patients diagnosed with
unexplained infertility are at particular risk for depression, distress
and difficulty reaching acceptance of their infertility [46, 47]. Discontinuation of ART is not only associated with financial, relationship and psychological stressors [12] but the burden of treatment itself [48].
Physical pain and discomfort, adherence to injection protocols along
with clinic environmental factors (e.g. poor organization,
depersonalized care, limited time for discussion) may all contribute to
infertility patients’ dissatisfaction with ART [48].
Ottawa CAM practitioners identified their individualized approach and
lifestyle management as mitigating some of their patients’
fertility-related emotional distress. Integration of formal counseling
during the infertility treatment process and for patients who struggled
with more debilitating symptoms was also recommended. UK, Australian and
New Zealand acupuncturists also recognized the significant emotional
toll of infertility treatments on patients, alleviating distress through
CAM and patient support [23, 42, 43].
Interactions
with conventional medical doctors who treat infertility were generally
limited to requests for patient records. Although Ottawa CAM
practitioners were receptive to CAM-medicine collaborations, they
acknowledged several barriers including lack of awareness and
understanding of CAM approaches and perceived negativity to CAM,
consistent with previous studies [18, 43]. The paucity of randomized control trial studies to properly assess the efficacy of CAM treatments for infertility [36] contributes to the often negative perception of CAM by conventional medicine [49], however, it is also evident that patients are choosing CAM for infertility support and treatment [18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24]. Indeed, UK patients pursued CAM for fertility enhancement in spite of their skepticism about its efficacy [25].
Similarly, Australian infertility patients opted for CAM despite being
unsure of the safety testing standards or regulatory approval for CAM
remedies [21].
Infertility patients often do not disclose CAM use to their medical
providers because the topic is not introduced, perceived lack of
relevance or concerns that physicians would have negative attitudes
towards CAM [14, 18, 21, 22, 24, 29].
CAM use may be relevant in ART outcomes, as demonstrated by a
prospective study of Danish infertility patients which reported that
concurrent CAM use was associated with a 30% decrease in ongoing
pregnancy and live birth rates [30].
Although for some infertility patients treatment failure and ART
discontinuation may influence the choice to use CAM, it is essential
that current patients discuss CAM use with physicians due to the
potential for some alternative therapies to interact with ART [29, 30].
This issue was recognized by Ottawa CAM practitioners, particularly
those with active ART collaborations. In spite of physicians’ concerns
regarding the efficacy of CAM and lack of scientific evidence [13, 19, 29], increasingly conventional medicine recognizes the holistic, patient-centered approaches of CAM to be beneficial [13, 29].
In North America, CAM is primarily used to supplement conventional medical care, rather than as an alternative [16, 17, 50],
suggesting that patients desire evidence-based health care that is also
holistic, patient-centered and individualized. Ottawa CAM practitioners
asserted the patient-benefits of a more integrated CAM-conventional
medicine approach to fertility treatment; also expressed by Australian
infertility patients [20].
Physicians’ development of CAM practice skills such as patient rapport,
attentiveness, listening and counseling, would greatly improve
perceptions of patient care [13, 25].
Many aspects of women’s reproductive health, including menopause,
infertility and pregnancy, have been identified as ideally treated by an
integrated CAM-conventional medicine approach [51].
Credentialing CAM providers, faculty development, education and
cultural sensitivity regarding the philosophies of CAM models are
general strategies to enhance CAM-conventional medicine collaborations [52].
Encouragingly, integrated models have been developed in nine North
American academic medical centers which combine research,
CAM-conventional medicine clinical care and education [53].
Limitations
The
limitations of our study include small sample size and the potential
participant bias of self-selection. Our participant sample was limited
to practitioners with established clinic practices as identified through
websites or by referral. Participant characteristics including
infertility patient experience, years of CAM practice experience, CAM
treatment domains, practitioner training, age and gender yielded a
heterogeneous sample, however responses to interview topics were fairly
consistent and reached saturation.
Conclusion
This
qualitative study enabled an in-depth exploration of CAM practitioners’
support and treatment of infertility. CAM treatment models recognized
biological, environmental and psychosomatic impacts on infertility.
Patient relationships were established using a holistic, individualized
approach, which may mitigate some of the emotional distress associated
with infertility. It is anticipated that a greater understanding of CAM
approaches to infertility support and treatment will enhance
cross-professional relationships for integrated infertility patient
care.
Declarations
Acknowledgements
Funding
was provided by the Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa
and the University of Ottawa’s Undergraduate Research Opportunities
Program.
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