The following article first appeared in the June 2002 issue of Acupuncture
Today
ACUPUNCTURE, REST and TIME A Powerful Healing Combination
By Matthew D. Bauer,L.Ac.
In my last article (February 2002 issue of Acupuncture
Today), I addressed
the therapeutic value of doing less: not over-treating your patients and
giving the gentle-yet-powerful effects of acupuncture a chance to heal. In
this article, I'd like to discuss how to extend this strategy to the care
your patients, specifically those with neuro/muscular/skeletal conditions,
receive from other health-care providers. Of course, many of these same
principals could apply to other conditions. One note: the following advice
addresses physical care only, not prescription medications.
Quite often, acupuncturists see patients who are also being treated by
chiropractors, osteopaths, physical therapists, etc. Even if these patients
are not under someone else's care, they may have been prescribed exercises or
other practices they continue to perform on their own. While these
additional therapies might be helping, there is also a chance they are
damaging or complicating your patients’ condition. It does little good for
you to be so careful with your treatments if your patients are doing
something else that may aggravate their condition. How do you advise your
patients about the possible risk other therapies pose without overstepping
the line of professional courtesy? While each patient needs to be
considered individually, I have found some basic approaches helpful.
First, I avoid telling patients outright that I am concerned about the
therapy they are receiving from another healthcare provider. Instead, I try
to steer them to realize this possibility for themselves. During the
initial consultation, I explain that while all therapies have their own
benefit-to-risk ratio, most carry a greater risk than acupuncture, which
supports the body's natural healing ability and therefore enjoys an
excellent benefit-to-risk ratio.
At this point, patients who have been utilizing other therapies for weeks
or longer often admit that they've wondered whether it was helping at all,
or perhaps even doing some damage. I agree with them that it is difficult
to know for sure if the other therapy was having any negative affects, and
point out that since they had tried that therapy so long and continue to
experience problems, it makes sense to try another approach. Of course,
they already suspect this or else they wouldn't be coming to see me. I tell
them the decision is theirs alone to make, but that they might consider
suspending the other therapy and giving acupuncture a chance for a few weeks.
I try to frame the above discussion as a common-sense approach that gives
the lower-risk therapy (acupuncture) an opportunity instead of mixing it
with higher-risk therapies. If the lower-risk therapy does not take care of
the problem, they can always add the higher-risk ones again. I describe
this as practicing a "First, do no damage" approach to healing. Most
patients are comfortable with this, and will decide to suspend the other
therapies and allow acupuncture a chance to heal.
When I see patients who are convinced other therapies are helping them, I do
not force the issue, as they may be right. I still discuss benefit-to-risk
ratios, however, so that I can bring it up again if the patient does not
progress with acupuncture as I hoped. If that happens, I explain it is
difficult to judge exactly what my treatments may be doing because of the
other, higher-risk therapies. Acupuncture may be taking them a few steps
forward, only to have the other practices push them a few steps back. The
only way to accurately measure what acupuncture is doing is to eliminate
anything that may set the patient back. I never insist on this - I merely
recommend it as making sense.
I have seen dozens of patients who only realized the full benefits of
acupuncture after they had suspended other therapies and allowed their body
to heal. When it comes to exercises, I tell my patients that once their
injury has healed and they are back to normal, they can then slowly begin
doing exercises again if they wish. The point here, just as with my last
article, is not to think that "more therapy equals more healing."
Acupuncture, rest and time comprise a powerful healing combination.
|