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Ayurvedic versus conventional dietary and lifestyle counseling for mothers with burnout-syndrome : A randomized controlled pilot study including a qualitative evaluation

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2017

Autor:innen

Kessler, Christian S.
Eisenmann, Clemens
Oberzaucher, Frank
Forster, Martin
Steckhan, Nico
Meier, Larissa
Stapelfeldt, Elmar
Michalsen, Andreas
Jeitler, Michael

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Published

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Complementary Therapies in Medicine. 2017, 34, pp. 57-65. ISSN 0965-2299. eISSN 1873-6963. Available under: doi: 10.1016/j.ctim.2017.07.005

Zusammenfassung

Objectives
Ayurveda claims to be effective in the treatment of psychosomatic disorders by means of lifestyle and nutritional counseling.

Design
In a randomized controlled study mothers with burnout were randomized into two groups: Ayurvedic nutritional counseling (according to tradition), and conventional nutritional counseling (following the recommendations of a family doctor). Patients received five counseling sessions over twelve weeks.

Main outcome measures
Outcomes included levels of burnout, quality of life, sleep, stress, depression/anxiety, and spirituality at three and six months. It also included a qualitative evaluation of the communication processes.

Results
We randomized thirty four patients; twenty three participants were included in the per protocol analysis. No significant differences were observed between the groups. However, significant and clinically relevant intra-group mean changes for the primary outcome burnout, and secondary outcomes sleep, stress, depression and mental health were only found in the Ayurveda group. The qualitative part of the study identified different conversational styles and counseling techniques between the two study groups. In conventional consultations questions tended to be category bound, while counseling-advice was predominantly admonitory. The Ayurvedic practitioner used open-ended interrogative forms, devices for displaying understanding, and positive re-evaluation more frequently, leading to an overall less asymmetrical interaction.

Conclusions
We found positive effects for both groups, which however were more pronounced in the Ayurvedic group. The conversational and counseling techniques in the Ayurvedic group offered more opportunities for problem description by patients as well as patient-centered practice and resource-oriented recommendations by the physician.

Zusammenfassung in einer weiteren Sprache

Fachgebiet (DDC)
300 Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie

Schlagwörter

Ayurveda, Burnout-Syndrome, Conversation analysis, Distress, Qualitative evaluation, Randomized controlled trial

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ISO 690KESSLER, Christian S., Clemens EISENMANN, Frank OBERZAUCHER, Martin FORSTER, Nico STECKHAN, Larissa MEIER, Elmar STAPELFELDT, Andreas MICHALSEN, Michael JEITLER, 2017. Ayurvedic versus conventional dietary and lifestyle counseling for mothers with burnout-syndrome : A randomized controlled pilot study including a qualitative evaluation. In: Complementary Therapies in Medicine. 2017, 34, pp. 57-65. ISSN 0965-2299. eISSN 1873-6963. Available under: doi: 10.1016/j.ctim.2017.07.005
BibTex
@article{Kessler2017-10Ayurv-40792,
  year={2017},
  doi={10.1016/j.ctim.2017.07.005},
  title={Ayurvedic versus conventional dietary and lifestyle counseling for mothers with burnout-syndrome : A randomized controlled pilot study including a qualitative evaluation},
  volume={34},
  issn={0965-2299},
  journal={Complementary Therapies in Medicine},
  pages={57--65},
  author={Kessler, Christian S. and Eisenmann, Clemens and Oberzaucher, Frank and Forster, Martin and Steckhan, Nico and Meier, Larissa and Stapelfeldt, Elmar and Michalsen, Andreas and Jeitler, Michael}
}
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