Method evidence record
Integrative Medicine Attitude Questionnaire
The IMAQ is a 26-item self-report instrument assessing healthcare professionals' attitudes toward integrative medicine—the combined use of conventional and complementary therapies based on evidence and patient-centered values. Developed by Bikker and colleagues, it measures five dimensions of attitudes: cognitive, practical, affective, and social aspects of integrative practice.
Source record
Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.
Integrative Medicine Attitude Questionnaire
Taxonomic method record · process-pipeline / integrative-medicine
- Bikker, A. P., Merelle, S. B., & Reinders, M. E. (2005). Attitudes towards integrative medicine among healthcare professionals: A cross-sectional survey. Patient Education and Counseling, 56(3), 327–335. · URL
- Mercer, S. W., Watt, G. C. M., & Gauden-Mackintosh, N. K. (2002). General practitioner activity, consultation length, chronic disease management and co-morbidity are associated with health service use in populations. British Journal of General Practice, 52(478), 308–313. · URL
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