Treating the patient not the symptoms: Acupuncture to improve overall health – Evidence, acceptance and strategies

Documented mechanisms of acupuncture suggest the possibility of whole body effects in addition to local and regional effects. Traditional theories of acupuncture predict whole body effects. Does this permit the possibility of applying treatment to target overall health improvement of the patient rat...

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Main Author: Stephen Birch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-03-01
Series:Integrative Medicine Research
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221342201830194X
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spelling doaj-2ac4b263c8c349d4b96490210643930d2020-11-25T00:42:23ZengElsevierIntegrative Medicine Research2213-42202019-03-01813341Treating the patient not the symptoms: Acupuncture to improve overall health – Evidence, acceptance and strategiesStephen Birch0Corresponding author at: Department of Health Sciences, Kristiania University College, PB 1190 Sentrum, N-0107 Oslo, Norway; Department of Health Sciences, Kristiania University College, Oslo, NorwayDocumented mechanisms of acupuncture suggest the possibility of whole body effects in addition to local and regional effects. Traditional theories of acupuncture predict whole body effects. Does this permit the possibility of applying treatment to target overall health improvement of the patient rather than the symptom? After introducing the term ‘health improvement’ this paper explores situations where it might be advantageous to do this, giving examples of how health authorities in some countries have proposed broader treatment approaches that focus on health improvement. It also discusses cases where acupuncture has been recommended as a treatment method in a number of these proposals and gives some clinical examples of this kind of whole body ‘health improvement’ targeted treatment effects. Given that health authorities have already recognised this potential for the application of acupuncture the author then explores evidence of more whole-body ‘health improvement’ effects from systematic reviews and examples of health experts recommending acupuncture to take advantage of them. Research strategies and foci are then proposed and explored to develop this evidence. What are the best treatment approaches to create these effects? By what mechanisms can ‘health improvement’ be produced? How can one measure these effects? It is likely that treatments based on ‘pattern identification’ (PI) may provide the best strategies for producing ‘health improvement’, thus PI-based acupuncture treatments are likely to be the best strategy for clinical research investigating these effects. Keywords: Acupuncture, Health, Pattern identification, Health improvement, Researchhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221342201830194X
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stephen Birch
spellingShingle Stephen Birch
Treating the patient not the symptoms: Acupuncture to improve overall health – Evidence, acceptance and strategies
Integrative Medicine Research
author_facet Stephen Birch
author_sort Stephen Birch
title Treating the patient not the symptoms: Acupuncture to improve overall health – Evidence, acceptance and strategies
title_short Treating the patient not the symptoms: Acupuncture to improve overall health – Evidence, acceptance and strategies
title_full Treating the patient not the symptoms: Acupuncture to improve overall health – Evidence, acceptance and strategies
title_fullStr Treating the patient not the symptoms: Acupuncture to improve overall health – Evidence, acceptance and strategies
title_full_unstemmed Treating the patient not the symptoms: Acupuncture to improve overall health – Evidence, acceptance and strategies
title_sort treating the patient not the symptoms: acupuncture to improve overall health – evidence, acceptance and strategies
publisher Elsevier
series Integrative Medicine Research
issn 2213-4220
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Documented mechanisms of acupuncture suggest the possibility of whole body effects in addition to local and regional effects. Traditional theories of acupuncture predict whole body effects. Does this permit the possibility of applying treatment to target overall health improvement of the patient rather than the symptom? After introducing the term ‘health improvement’ this paper explores situations where it might be advantageous to do this, giving examples of how health authorities in some countries have proposed broader treatment approaches that focus on health improvement. It also discusses cases where acupuncture has been recommended as a treatment method in a number of these proposals and gives some clinical examples of this kind of whole body ‘health improvement’ targeted treatment effects. Given that health authorities have already recognised this potential for the application of acupuncture the author then explores evidence of more whole-body ‘health improvement’ effects from systematic reviews and examples of health experts recommending acupuncture to take advantage of them. Research strategies and foci are then proposed and explored to develop this evidence. What are the best treatment approaches to create these effects? By what mechanisms can ‘health improvement’ be produced? How can one measure these effects? It is likely that treatments based on ‘pattern identification’ (PI) may provide the best strategies for producing ‘health improvement’, thus PI-based acupuncture treatments are likely to be the best strategy for clinical research investigating these effects. Keywords: Acupuncture, Health, Pattern identification, Health improvement, Research
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221342201830194X
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