W
Wolfgang Weidenhammer
Researcher at Technische Universität München
Publications - 88
Citations - 4479
Wolfgang Weidenhammer is an academic researcher from Technische Universität München. The author has contributed to research in topics: Acupuncture & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 88 publications receiving 4244 citations. Previous affiliations of Wolfgang Weidenhammer include Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.
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EU FP7 project 'CAMbrella' to build European research network for complementary and alternative medicine.
Wolfgang Weidenhammer,George Lewith,Torkel Falkenberg,Vinjar Fønnebø,Helle Johannessen,Bettina Reiter,Bernhard Uehleke,Klaus von Ammon,Franziska Baumhöfener,Benno Brinkhaus +9 more
TL;DR: The project aims to evaluate the conditions surrounding CAM use and provision in Europe and to develop a roadmap for European CAM research, and to explore the needs and attitudes of EU citizens with respect to CAM.
Journal Article
Systematic clinical auditing in complementary medicine: rationale, concept, and a pilot study.
TL;DR: In the authors' opinion, systematic clinical auditing is a valuable tool for collecting basic information on structural characteristics, processes, and outcomes in complementary medicine and for determining representative and relevant questions for future randomized clinical trials.
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Key Issues in Clinical and Epidemiological Research in Complementary and Alternative Medicine – a Systematic Literature Review
H. Felix Fischer,Florian Junne,Claudia M. Witt,Klaus von Ammon,Francesco Cardini,Vinjar Fønnebø,Helle Johannessen,George Lewith,Bernhard Uehleke,Wolfgang Weidenhammer,Benno Brinkhaus +10 more
TL;DR: There was broad consensus that a mixed methods approach is the most suitable for gathering conclusive knowledge about CAM and most authors vote for the use of commonly accepted research methods to evaluate CAM.
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Public health ethics for complementary and alternative medicine
TL;DR: It is argued that public health ethics pertains to CAM as it does to other forms of healthcare, and it is suggested that this field should be explored further in relation to CAM.
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Patients of an interdisciplinary cancer treatment center: use of, knowledge about, and demand for CAM treatment options.
TL;DR: Assessment of the use of, knowledge about, and the demand for information concerning complementary and alternative medicine in cancer patients found current CAM use was associated with higher degrees of information and subjective importance, and not suffering from lymphatic cancer and metastases.