Abstract

As consumer demand for complementary therapies has increased, so too has the public's expectation that health care professionals be knowledgeable about complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) and prepared to advise patients. In 2000, the National Institutes of Health National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) began awarding competitive, 5-year educational grants to academic institutions committed to teaching CAM content to health professional students. Fifteen awards were made under this program. Five somewhat overlapping domains of competency have emerged: awareness of CAM therapies and practices, evidence base underlying CAM therapies, CAM skill development, self-awareness and self-care, and CAM models and systems. The NCCAM R-25 projects have demonstrated the value of defining competencies in a variety of ways that can usefully guide the allopathic learner toward the broader goals of informed integrative, patient-centered practice and enhanced self-care.

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