Background: In 1999 the Clinic for Internal Medicine and Integrative Medicine was founded in Essen as a regular part of the German inpatient health care system. Integrative medicine (standard internal medicine, evidence-based complementary and alternative medicine combined with intensified lifestyle modification) aims to help patients with chronic illness to cope with their condition more effectively and to achieve a health-promoting lifestyle. Techniques include cognitive restructuring, the elicitation of the relaxation response, and lifestyle education. The goal is to increase health-related quality of life (QoL) as well as control beliefs and to reduce morbidity in later life.
Aim: To demonstrate changes in quality of life, lifestyle, and control beliefs after a two-week hospital stay.
Methods: Uncontrolled prospective observational study with 557 consecutive hospital patients. Outcome parameters were quality of life (SF36), control beliefs (GKU), and daily health-related behavior (nutrition, physical activity, relaxation) on admission, at discharge, as well as 3 and 6 months after discharge.
Results: Weekly physical activity increases by 29%, consumption of not recommendable foods decreases by 18%. The majority of patients (57%) engage in relaxation exercises 6 months after discharge (on admission 23%). The physical sum scale (SF36) increases from 33.9 (95% KI 32.5-35.3) on admission to 37.3 (35.8-38.9) 6 months after discharge, the mental sum scale from 41.2 (39.5-42.9) to 45.1 (43.5-46.7). The ratio internal/external control belief rises from 1.17 (95% KI 1.11-1.24) to 1.32 (1.24-1.40). Pretherapeutic ratio internal/external control belief and its increase are associated with rises in QoL.
Conclusions: After integrative medicine treatment a lasting increase in QoL and lifestyle changes can be achieved. Reinforcement of internal control beliefs and own competence is possible and enhances outcomes in chronically ill patients.
Copyright 2004 S. Karger GmbH, Freiburg