Acupuncture and Herbal Medicine: Japan and US Compared
Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM), such as acupuncture
and herbal medicine, is popular in many countries. Yet, treatment outcomes of
CAM are found to vary significantly between medical trials in different social
environments. This paper addresses how the social organization of medicine
affects medical treatment outcomes. In particular, it examines the extent to
which two popular complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) interventions (acupuncture
and herbal medicine) are coordinated with biomedicine and how coordination
characteristics are related to the treatment outcomes of the two CAM
interventions. This paper conducts an archival analysis of the institutional
settings of the CAM interventions in Japan and the U.S. It also conducts a
systematic content analysis of the treatment outcomes in 246 acupuncture
reports and 528 herbal medicine reports that are conducted in Japan or the U.S.
and registered in the Cochrane Library's Central Register of Controlled Trials
(CENTRAL), and 716 acupuncture reports and 3,485 herbal medicine reports that
are from Japan or the U.S. and listed in MEDLINE. It examines the association
between the treatment outcomes of the two interventions and the geographical
location of the reports; it also explores how the institutional settings of the
interventions are related to the treatment outcomes. Japanese herbal medicine
is integrated into the national medical system the most and American herbal
medicine the least; American acupuncture and Japanese acupuncture fall in the
middle. Treatment outcomes are the most favorable for Japanese herbal medicine
and the least favorable for American herbal medicine. The outcomes of American acupuncture
and Japanese acupuncture fall in the middle. The co-utilization of CAM with
biomedicine can produce difficulties due to tensions between CAM and
biomedicine. These difficulties and subsequent CAM treatment outcomes vary, depending
on how CAM is institutionalized in relation to biomedicine in the national
medical system. Coordinated CAM interventions are more likely to be effective
and synergic with biomedicine, when compared to uncoordinated ones.
Source: Shim JM.
The influence
of social context on the treatment outcomes of complementary and alternative
medicine: the case of acupuncture and herbal medicine in Japan and the U.S. Global Health. 2015 Apr 25;11(1):17.
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