A
Qualitative Assessment of Acupuncture Experience
This study was to examine the experience of patients from a low-income,
ethnically diverse medically underserved population receiving acupuncture for
chronic pain. Qualitative analysis using inductive thematic analysis of
interviews with participants from an acupuncture trial. This study was
conducted in four community health centers in the Bronx, New York. Thirty-seven
adults with chronic neck or back pain or osteoarthritis who participated in a
previous acupuncture trial. Up to 14 weekly acupuncture treatments. Pain and
quality of life were examined in the original trial; this study examines
qualitative outcomes. The themes grouped naturally into three domains of the acupuncture
experience: the decision-making process, the treatment experience, and the
effect of acupuncture on health. Regarding decision-making, important factors
were a willingness to try something new even if you do not necessary
"believe" in it or have specifically positive expectations; a sense
that medications were not working for their pain, that they also caused
significant adverse effects, and that natural strategies might be preferable;
and a feeling of desperation. Cost and access were significant barriers to acupuncture
treatment. Regarding the process of acupuncture, the open and personal
communication with the acupuncturist was an important factor, as were the sense
that the process of acupuncture related to a natural process of healing or
correction within the body and that part of making acupuncture successful
required being open to the power of the mind to generate a positive outcome.
Regarding the effect of treatment, notable aspects were the deep sense of rest
and relaxation participants reported during treatment as well as the benefit
they experienced for conditions other than pain. The themes that emerged in
this ethnically diverse, low-income population were very similar to those that
have emerged over the past decade of qualitative research on the acupuncture
experience in other patient populations.
Source: Kligler B,
Buonora M,
Gabison J,
Jacobs E,
Karasz A,
McKee MD.
"I Felt
Like It Was God's Hands Putting the Needles In": A Qualitative Analysis of
the Experience of Acupuncture for Chronic Pain in a Low-Income, Ethnically
Diverse, and Medically Underserved Patient Population. J Altern
Complement Med. 2015 Aug 6.
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