The following article first appeared in the February 2002
issue of Acupuncture Today
WHEN LESS EQUALS MORE
By Matthew D. Bauer,L.Ac.
This is my second in a series or articles written in an
effort to share some of the lessons I have learned from my years in private
practice. I hope the information given in these articles might prove useful,
especially to those newer to acupuncture practice. In this article, I want to
share what has been one of the most clinically useful lessons I have learned the power of doing less.
When I fist opened my practice in the mid 1980’s, I
approached my work with the attitude that I might be able to make up for my
lack of acupuncture experience with sheer effort. I had some massage and
body-working background and I regularly supplemented my acupuncture techniques
with a generous dosage of massage and acupressure. I guess I felt that if the
acupuncture didn’t work at least my patients would get a decent massage for
their money.
In my third year of practice, I began to rethink this
strategy. While I was generally pleased with the results I was seeing and had
learned to accept that even the best practitioners don’t cure everyone, I had a
few cases that bothered me. Every once in a while a patient would return for
follow-up treatment and report that their symptoms had become exacerbated after
their last treatment. Some of these cases were the result of a normal healing
response and these patients soon enjoyed marked improvement. Others were
coincidental to the treatment and caused by something else. But some, despite
my good intentions and decent track record, were cases where I had aggravated
the patient’s condition.
As I thought about this, I realized it was most likely the
acupressure/massage techniques that caused these instances. I decided to try
doing less hands-on therapy and relied more on acupuncture alone. I still did
some acupressure/massage after removing needles, but altered my technique to a
lighter one that complimented the acupuncture rather than adding one primary
therapy on top of another. I also confronted my insecurity about my diagnosis
and point selection by staying longer with my original treatment strategy and
not switching to different techniques whenever patients reported no dramatic
improvements right away. And lastly, I stopped throwing in extra insurance
points. Following this approach, I not only saw the instances of exacerbation
dwindle to almost zero, I also saw an over-all improvement in treatment
outcomes.
In my previous article (Acupuncture Today December 2001), I
gave advice on how to more closely measure your patient’s progress and
subjective complaints. The first stages of progress following acupuncture can
be subtle and may not be noticed by your patient. When you see signs your
patient is improving, such as improved pulses or noticing less muscle tension,
etc., stay with that treatment. It is probably just a matter of time before
your patient notices they are feeling better. If you change your treatment
approach whenever your patient tells you they haven’t felt any improvement, you
may be changing from an effective treatment to one less helpful. Trust your
training and respect your instincts. Your first hunch is usually your best.
Carefully measure your patient’s progress and give the treatment time.
Lao Tzu once said
The softest of all things can overcome
the hardest of all things and he praised wu wei; the art of doing by
non-doing. Gentle therapeutic nudges often get better results than strong
therapy workouts. Acupuncture gives our natural healing system a critical nudge
and then nature and time do the rest. In healing, doing more does not
necessarily equal doing better. Have faith in your ability and the power of
acupuncture. Try doing less you may find it does more.
|