RESEARCH METHODOLOGY POSTER PRESENTATION ABSTRACTS
Please note: All posters will be displayed in
Salons 10-12.
THURSDAY, 10:15-11:00 AM
Aickin M.
The phased approach to CAM research.
Program in Integrative Medicine, and Department
of Family & Community Medicine, University of Arizona; Helfgott Research
Institute, National College of Naturopathic Medicine maickin@earthlink.net
Research in several areas of biomedicine have
benefited from categorizing studies according to their positions in
a hierarchy, starting with small exploratory trials and proceeding through
large-scale demonstration projects. Although most CAM/IM studies clearly
belong to an early research phase, they are frequently designed, analyzed,
and presented using the classical model of Phase III medical research
(primarily the randomized clinical trial). The negative consequences
of this practice will be delineated.
Definitions will be offered for appropriate
phases of CAM/IM research, based on the models existing in other areas
of biomedicine, consistent with opinions expressed by a broad, international
collection of CAM/IM researchers. The general aims of the phases in
this schema are:
Phase 0 to discover aspects of an approach
that is little understood, or for which there is essentially no prior
research.
Phase I to find the practical problems and determine the fundamental
feasibility of research on a particular approach.
Phase II to test the solutions to problems that were uncovered,
and to determine whether there is an indication of effectiveness that
would justify further research.
Phase III to compare the new CAM/IM approach with another (either
CAM or non-CAM) approach, in order to declare when one is better than
the other.
Phase IV to investigate the magnitude of the deterioration of
effect that happens with implementation outside a trial context; to
estimate cost-effectiveness.
Examples of articles will be presented that
illustrate the points of these definitions. Finally, an initiative will
be described that has recently been taken by the Journal of Alternative
and Complementary Medicine to encourage the conduct and publication
of high-quality, early-phase CAM/IM research.
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