Abstract
Background: In Switzerland and in the whole western world, the growing popularity of CAM is calling for its implementation in the undergraduate medical curriculum.
Aims: To determine whether medical experts and medical students are favorable to complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) education at Swiss medical schools and to investigate their opinion about its form, content and goals.
Methods: Experts in the fields of conventional medicine (COM, n = 106), CAM experts (n = 29) and senior medical students (n = 640) were surveyed by an online questionnaire.
Results: 48.7% of the COM experts, 100% of the CAM experts, and 72.6% of the students are favorable to CAM education at Swiss medical schools. The most requested disciplines are acupuncture, phytotherapy, and homeopathy; the most recommended characteristics of CAM education are elective courses, during the clinical years, in the format of seminars and lectures. For the CAM experts, the priority is to improve the students' knowledge of CAM, whereas for the COM experts and the students, the priority is to analyze efficiency, security, interactions, and secondary effects of CAM.
Conclusions: CAM courses should be informative, giving the students sufficient knowledge to provide a critical analysis of efficiency and security of different CAM modalities.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Marie Nicolao
MARIE NICOLAO, MD is general practitioner; the present study is part of the thesis she wrote at the Institute of Complementary Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Bern, Switzerland.
Martin G. Täuber
MARTIN G. TÄUBER, MD is Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, University of Bern, and Professor, Institute of Infectious Diseases, University of Bern, Switzerland.
Peter Heusser
PETER HEUSSER, MD MME is lecturer for anthroposophic medicine at the Institute of Complementary Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Bern, Switzerland.