Acupuncture for cancer patients: One says she credits
treatments with helping her to feel better
WEST ALLIS (WITI) — When a doctor
first recommended it, Beth Dowhen of West Allis had her doubt. Could
acupuncture really help with her cancer symptoms?
You can often find Dowhen in her
garden. Her daffodils are always the first to bloom.
“I had one Easter Sunday. All the rest came
two weeks later. It was like one just couldn’t wait!” Dowhen said.
Dowhen understands impatience. She
was cooped up inside by more than a long winter.
“Last year I didn’t do anything in the yard. I
feel so blessed to be normal again,” Dowhen said.
Dowhen has been cancer free for more
than six months. She’s back to feeling like she did three years ago — before
doctors found cancer at the base of her tongue.
“They decided to do chemo and
radiation,” Dowhen said.
To reign in the symptoms caused by
her treatment, she found herself laying on a table for something she’d never
considered.
“I thought, you know, acupuncture?
Is it going to be some old hippie somewhere doing it?” Dowhen said.
The Pavlic Center on the Wheaton
Franciscan Elmbrook Memorial campus feels more like a spa than a clinic. During
procedures, Acupuncturist Christine Warrix carefully navigated needles the size
of a hair onto Dowhen’s arms, legs and feet.
The one on Dowhen’s chin was meant
to help with the dry mouth caused by radiation.
“About five minutes after that first
treatment, I felt saliva come into my mouth and that just amazed me,” Dowhen
said.
Other needles in other spots were
meant to help with stress and relaxation.
“If they’re nauseous or have a lack
of appetite, acupuncture can help with that,” Warrix said.
Dowhen credits the needles with
stopping a sore throat she’d had for months on end.
Pavlic Center supervisor Kara Wilde
says some cancer patients need a little convincing in order to undergo the
acupuncture treatments.
“Baby steps is sometimes where you
have to begin with some people. It is something that is able to alleviate
some pain. It can sometimes alleviate some of the discomforts they have. Just
in well-being, as far as not being able to sleep at night, or being achy first
thing in the morning,” Wilde said.
Dowhen has gone from hesitant to an
acupuncture advocate.
“I really do credit acupuncture with
helping me feel better,” Dowhen said.
And now that spring is finally here,
Dowhen is back to doing the things she loves — like working with her neglected
garden that turned out to be just a resilient as she is.
Acupuncture is generally not covered
by insurance. Dowhen gets her treatment thanks to the Elmbrook Memorial
Foundation and its donors. She says she always walks out the door feeling
better than when she walked in.
Source of the report is here.
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