Acupuncture
Recognized as Pain Medicine
The purpose of this survey was to evaluate attitudes toward acupuncture
among pain medicine fellowship directors. Additional goals were to assess the
availability of acupuncture at academic medical centers and ascertain the
inclusion of this modality in fellowship curricula. Electronic and paper
surveys were distributed to the 97 American College of Graduate Medical
Education pain medicine fellowship directors during January and February, 2014.
Directors were queried about their referral patterns to acupuncture, as well as
their perceptions of the utility of acupuncture for common pain conditions.
They were asked about the availability of acupuncture at their institution, and
whether acupuncture was included in the fellowship curriculum. Sixty-seven
percent of fellowship directors (65/97) completed the questionnaire. A majority
of directors (83%) reported acupuncture is available to patients at their
institution, and reported that acupuncture is a modality that they discuss with
patients when creating a treatment plan for chronic pain (72%). The majority of
programs include acupuncture as part of didactic (63%) and clinical (52%)
education. Time constraints, lack of qualified teaching personnel, and cost to
patients were cited as barriers to inclusion. The majority of fellowship
directors considered acupuncture a safe and worthwhile option for common pain
conditions. Results from this survey indicate that acupuncture is widely
available to patients at academic medical centers, integrated into many pain
fellowship curricula, and considered a useful modality by physician leaders in
the field of pain medicine. This sentiment, paired with the flexibility of
national guidelines for pain fellowship curricula, suggests a trend toward
greater inclusion of this modality in academic medicine.
Source: Mann B,
Burch E,
Shakeshaft C.
Attitudes
Toward Acupuncture Among Pain Fellowship Directors. Pain Med. 2015 Dec 7.
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