Healthcare Utilization and Perceived Health Status from Falun Gong Practitioners in Taiwan: A Pilot SF-36 Survey
Yu-Whuei Hu (1), Li-Shan Huang (2), Eric J. Yeh (3), Mai He (4) ((1), National Dong Hwa University, Hualian, Taiwan (2) National Tsing Hua, University, Hsinchu, Taiwan (3) Amgen Inc. Thousand Oaks, CA, USA (4), Department of Pathology & Immunology

TL;DR
This pilot study found that Falun Gong practitioners in Taiwan reported better perceived health status and used fewer medical resources than the general population, suggesting potential health benefits of the practice.
Contribution
It provides novel empirical data on health perceptions and resource use among Taiwanese Falun Gong practitioners compared to national norms.
Findings
Higher SF-36 scores in practitioners across most health domains.
Significant reduction in medical visits after practicing Falun Gong.
Many practitioners reported improvement or cure of chronic conditions.
Abstract
Objective: Falun Gong (FLG) is a practice of mind and body focusing on moral character improvement along with meditative exercises. This 2002 pilot study explored perceived health status, medical resource utilization and related factors among Taiwanese FLG practitioners, compared to the general Taiwanese norm estimated by the 2001 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS). Methods: This cross-sectional, observational study was based on a voluntary, paper-based survey conducted from October 2002 to February 2003 using the same Taiwanese SF-36 instrument employed by the NHIS. Primary outcomes included eight SF-36 domain scores and the number of medical visits. One-sample t-tests, one-way ANOVA and multivariate linear regression analyses were performed. Results: The response rate was 75.6% (1,210/1,600). Compared to the norm, the study cohort had significantly higher scores in six of eight…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsComplementary and Alternative Medicine Studies · Health and Wellbeing Research · Traditional Chinese Medicine Studies
MethodsLinear Regression
