Attitudes and beliefs regarding the use of herbs and supplementary medications with COVID-19: A systematic review
Author | Abderrezzaq, Soltani |
Author | Jaam, Myriam |
Author | Nazar, Zachariah |
Author | Stewart, Derek |
Author | Shaito, Abdullah |
Available date | 2022-11-21T06:44:51Z |
Publication Date | 2022-11-13 |
Publication Name | Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy |
Identifier | http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sapharm.2022.11.004 |
Citation | Soltani A, Jaam M, Nazar Z, Stewart D, Shaito A. Attitudes and beliefs regarding the use of herbs and supplementary medications with COVID-19: A systematic review. Res Social Adm Pharm. 2022 Nov 13:S1551-7411(22)00393-X. doi: 10.1016/j.sapharm.2022.11.004. |
ISSN | 15517411 |
Abstract | Background and aimThere is growing interest in using herbs and supplementary medications to treat and/or prevent COVID-19, evidenced by multiple reports exploring their effectiveness and safety. From a health psychology perspective, the desire to use herbs and supplementary medications to prevent and/or treat COVID-19 is a health behavior which is attributed to attitudes and beliefs. This systematic review critically appraised and synthesized the data from studies investigating these attitudes and beliefs. MethodsEMBASE, PubMed, ScienceDirect, Scopus, Cochrane (library), and WebOfScience were searched from inception to December 13, 2021 for studies investigating attitudes and beliefs on the use of herbs and supplementary medications to treat and/or prevent COVID-19. ResultsA total of 17 articles were identified for inclusion. All except one were of cross-sectional design. Participants across most studies had a positive attitude towards using herbs and supplementary medications. They believed that herbs and supplementary medications were effective and were confident in their value in preventing and/or treating COVID-19 symptoms. The majority of included studies had significant flaws in study design and reporting, including inconsistent definitions of herbs and supplementary medications, a lack of theoretical models and conceptual frameworks underpinning the study of beliefs and attitudes, in addition to methodological issues of robustness affecting the validity and reliability of data. ConclusionThe use of herbs and supplementary medicines to prevent and/or treat COVID-19 could well be driven by a positive attitude stemming from beliefs of effectiveness and safety. There is a need for well-designed studies on attitudes and beliefs that are driven by health behavior theories to permit generalizability of findings and establish more conclusive relationships between beliefs, attitudes and the decision to use herbs and supplementary medications to treat and/or prevent COVID-19. |
Sponsor | Qatar National Research Fund (QNRF) grant number RRC02-0807-210,022 to AS. The funding source (QNRF) had no role in study design, in the collection, analysis and interpretation of data, in the writing of the manuscript, or in the decision to submit the article for publication. |
Language | en |
Publisher | Elsevier |
Subject | COVID-19 Herbs Supplementary medications Systematic review Attitudes Beliefs |
Type | Article |
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