Veterans in Wisconsin Try Acupuncture as an
Alternative to Narcotics
During emotional hearings about the
alleged overprescription of narcotics at the Tomah VA hospital, many
who testified noted there are safer ways to treat pain.
One treatment mentioned was
acupuncture.
Larry Burt sought out the needle
therapy at a clinic in Waukesha that’s helping veterans reduce their use of
narcotics. Burt, 68, is one of many vets struggling with Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder. He’s also been hooked on alcohol, cigarettes and chewing tobacco.
To fight his addictions, the
Vietnam-era veteran took pills and underwent hypnosis, but they didn’t work.
“So I’m hoping this acupuncture will
eliminate my cravings,” Burt says.
Burt closes his eyes as an
acupuncturist places five tiny needles into his left ear and then five in his
right ear. He doesn’t even wince. As soothing music comes on, we leave Burt to
relax at the Milwaukee Veterans Acupuncture clinic in Waukesha. If it’s
anything like his past treatments here, he’ll be fast asleep in minutes.
While some are skeptical that
acupuncture works, a study the Journal of the American Medical Association
published in 2012 found the practice effective at easing chronic pain. The
military uses it to treat wounded soldiers on the battlefield, and the VA now
covers acupuncture for veterans back home.
Christine Jablonski, the nurse and
certified acupuncturist who started the Waukesha clinic, says she’s seen the
practice relieve patients’ pain, addiction or anxiety to the point where some
no longer need prescription drugs.
“If somebody has arthritis in their
knees, it’s not going to cure them, but can it make the difference in how much
medication they need? I’ve had patients, real elderly patients tell me, I’m
only 30 percent better maybe, but it’s a difference between a cane and not a
cane. That’s good. So sometimes it helps kind of around the edges,” Jablonski
says.
Dr. John Vondrell is a retired
anesthesiologist who volunteers at the Waukesha clinic.
“It’s not the answer by itself. It’s
something you work with other things. But you normally don’t need narcotics for
a lot of this stuff,” Vondrell says.
Vondrell says he’s disappointed, but
not surprised, by what’s alleged to have gone on at the Tomah VA.
Some patients reportedly called the
hospital “Candyland” because of how easy it was to get pills.
“The people come in demanding something
for pain, their discomfort. And the only thing that we as physicians really
have is pain medications and tranquilizers, other than if they used alternative
type therapy, which is usually not available, they really don’t have any other
option to get rid of pain other than narcotics,” Vondrell says.
NPR reported that Americans
in the military are prescribed narcotic painkillers three times as often as
civilians. In 2014, the Department of Veterans Affairs was treating about
650,000 veterans by giving them opiates.
Vondrell hopes more doctors become
accepting of alternative therapies and more become accessible to patients, so
fewer develop dangerous addictions to narcotics.
Back in the clinic room, Vietnam veteran
Ron Gronitz says acupuncture is easing his knee pain.
“I could tell three, four days
later, if I sat down in a chair, like I was 20 years younger, get up and walk
away. I’ve had guys tell me, it’s all in your head, it’s all in your head. I
don’t believe that. I really believe that it really worked,” Gronitz says.
So far, most who’ve taken advantage
of these free acupuncture treatments have been older veterans. The clinic
volunteers hope word spreads to younger men and women suffering with physical
or mental health problems after serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Source of the report is here.
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