%0 Journal Article %T American Medical Students¡¯ Beliefs in the Effectiveness of Alternative Medicine %A Erica Frank %A Neda Ratanawongsa %A Jennifer Carrera %J International Journal of Collaborative Research on Internal Medicine & Public Health %D 2010 %I DRUNPP Sarajevo %X Introduction: While the use of complementary and alternative medical therapy (CAM) is common in the U.S., there have been no prior national studies of CAM-related attitudes of U.S. medical students.Methods: We surveyed the Class of 2003 at freshman orientation, entrance to wards, and senior year in a nationally representative sample of 16 U.S. medical schools. Our primary outcome of interest was students¡¯ Likert-scaled responses to the statement ¡°Alternative medicine can often be as effective as traditional medicine.¡±Results: With 4764 responses overall (a response rate of 80.3%), 9% strongly agreed, 45% agreed, 34% neither agreed nor disagreed, 11% disagreed, and 2% strongly disagreed that alternative medicine could be as effective as traditional medicine. Students became modestly more polarized in their beliefs, moving from 37% of students neither agreeing nor disagreeing with the statement at freshman year to 31% at senior year. Several variables including gender, paternal educational level, ethnicity, religion, political self-characterization, intended specialty, and prevention-orientation were associated with agreement.Conclusions: U.S. patients commonly use CAM, but newly-minted U.S. physicians¡¯ are often skeptical about its efficacy. This disconnect may make it difficult to integrate patients¡¯ CAM use into clinical decision-making. %K Physician %K Medical student %K Complementary and alternative medicine %U http://iomcworld.com/ijcrimph/ijcrimph-v02-n09-01-a.htm