Should acupuncture be used more widely in the NHS?
A growing body of healthcare
practitioners believe acupunture should be offered routinely for more
conditions including pain in labour and cancer
Every woman needing pain relief
while giving birth at University College London hospital (UCLH) is offered
acupuncture, with around half of the hospital’s midwives specially trained to
give the treatment. UCLH is far from typical in this respect, though: acupuncture is not standard throughout the UK and
many health practitioners claim patients are often denied access to it through
the NHS because of entrenched scepticism from sections of the medical
establishment.
Dr David Carr is one of a number of
clinicians who is determined to change that. A clinical lecturer in maternal
foetal medicine at St George’s, University of London, he is also an accredited
acupuncturist working at the Royal London hospital for integrated medicine (RLHIM).
In 2013 he established a flagship maternity acupuncture service at UCLH NHS
trust, which has trained 120 of its midwives.
He has also trained a further 100
midwives, obstetricians and anaesthetists throughout the UK since January 2014
– funded by the UCLH charity – to provide acupuncture to women in labour
through a one-day course endorsed by the British
Medical Acupuncture Society.
Carr says: “There are conditions for
which acupuncture works and others where it doesn’t. It is not a cure-all, and
should be open to scrutiny. But the focus of my work is for acupuncture to
become a standard part of midwifery training, and at the same time change
perceptions among clinicians about its appropriate use for a whole range of
other conditions.”
The form of acupuncture in use in
the NHS,
and being taught by accredited trainers like Carr, is western medical
acupuncture (WMA) – evolved from Chinese acupuncture but using current medical
knowledge. The difference is that WMA has discarded mystical concepts like yin,
yang and qi, and considers itself to be part of conventional medicine rather than
an “alternative”.
The UK lags behind many other
European countries in its support for acupuncture. Just 2,500 medical
professionals here are qualified to practice it, compared with 45,000 in
Germany. The National Institute for Clinical Excellence (Nice) recommends WMA
specifically for the treatment of only two conditions – lower back pain (which
costs the NHS £1bn a year) and headaches. In Scandinavia its use in childbirth
is commonplace.
A growing body of healthcare
practitioners believe it should be offered routinely for a variety of
conditions, including pain in labour, cancer, musculoskeletal conditions and
even irritable bowel syndrome (IBS).
At a time of NHS cuts the use of
needles at 8p per unit look attractive. In St Albans, where a group of
nurse-led clinics have been using acupuncture since 2008 for patients with knee
osteoarthritis, economics have been put under scrutiny. WMA was offered to 114
patients rather than a knee replacement costing £5,000, and 79% accepted. Two
years later a third of them had not required a knee transplant, representing an
annual saving of £100,000, as estimated by researchers to the St Albans local
commissioning group.
Dr Adrian White, a lead researcher,
said: “This first evaluation shows the practicability of offering a low-cost
acupuncture service as an alternative to knee surgery.”
So why is acupuncture not being used
more widely? The difficulty of proving its efficacy is clearly one of the
biggest stumbling blocks. An analysis of 29 studies of almost 18,000 patients
found acupuncture effective in treating chronic pain compared with sham
acupuncture. But even treatment proponents question whether a randomised
controlled trial – the gold standard of medical research – works, given that
faking treatment is nearly impossible.
Emotional responses clearly play
their part. Physiotherapist Anna Housley, from University
hospital of south Manchester (UHSM), has used it with spectacular
results to relieve phantom pain in amputees. She says: “I could have helped
more people if some of the doctors had been more open-minded. Although some
medics were very supportive, others were not and one doctor told me that he did
not see any benefit in acupuncture, and would therefore not refer any patients
to me.”
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