Chasing the Wind

News. Faith. Nonsense.


Sham Acupuncture

Something I read today I thought was very interesting – western medicine doesn’t work as well as fake non-medicine, at least for lower back pain. A study found that fake acupuncture worked nearly as well as real acupuncture, and both of those were nearly twice as effective as western medicine.

In the largest experiment on acupuncture for back pain to date, more than 1,100 patients were randomly assigned to receive either acupuncture, sham acupuncture or conventional therapy. For the sham acupuncture, needles were inserted, but not as deeply as for the real thing. The sham acupuncture also did not insert needles in traditional acupuncture points on the body and the needles were not manually moved and rotated.

After six months, patients answered questions about pain and functional ability and their scores determined how well each of the therapies worked.

In the real acupuncture group, 47 percent of patients improved. In the sham acupuncture group, 44 percent did. In the usual care group, 27 percent got relief.

To me it seems obvious that much of the pain relief comes from just *thinking* you’re going to get relief. The next question I’d have is, if you know that going in, do you need treatment at all? Or just think about getting treatment?



6 responses to “Sham Acupuncture”

  1. And just like pain relief can come from just “thinking” it, PAIN can come from just “thinking” it…did ever know a hypochondriac?

    Like

  2. A doctor told me once I was a hypochondriac and I thought, “Great, now in addition to all these other symptoms I have, now I’m coming down with hypochondria.”

    Like

  3. Or maybe it means even bad accupuncture is better than good modern medicine?

    I wonder why the people getting “real” modern medicine didn’t think they were going to get relief?

    Personally, I’m not wild about the idea of voluntarily doing anything with “puncture” as part of it’s name.

    Like

  4. Heh. “Instead of 1 injection, we’re going to stick you with a thousand injections.”

    No, that doesn’t sound good.

    Like

  5. Teens often practice “cutting” to help relieve emonial pain and stress, and “dry needling” of trigger points (puncture with no injectable) has been shown to relieve the pain of Fibromyalgia, another disease with no “known cause”. Maybe we ought to start to look for a mechanism in the CNS that would explain this phenomenon and acupuncture as well.

    Like

  6. If it was the expectation of benefit that caused patients to think they got better, wouldn’t the western-medicine patients also expect to get better with their treatment?

    Sham acupuncture is basically impossible because there is nowhere you can put a needle that will not affect the energy flow in the body, and people will be able to tell if you only pretend to insert the needle. Studies usually show this, appropriate points work best, other points works somewhat as well.

    It is very difficult to use the Western scientific method to judge Eastern medicine. Western research methodology requires that you treat everyone the same except for one variable. Eastern medicine’s forte is in treating everyone individually.

    If we have to treat everyone the same, we are not practicing Oriental Medicine and the study is not evaluating Oriental Medicine, it is evaluating a standardized set of points n treating one common symptom. OM practitioners know to use different point combinations for different patients, but we cannot in the confines of a double-blind, randomized and controlled study. This is why study results do not mirror those found anecdotally in the clinic. In my practice, treating individually, I see about a 90% improvement rate with back pain.

    Jason Bussell
    President – Illinois Association of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine

    Like

Leave a reply to Jo Cancel reply

About Me

Michael, a sinner saved by grace, sharing what the good Lord has shared with me.

Solomon, in the book of Ecclesiastes, said, “I have seen all the things that are done under the sun; all of them are meaningless, a chasing after the wind.”

If you’re not living for the glory of God, then what you’re doing is meaningless, no matter what it is. Living for God gives life meaning, and enjoying a “chasing after the wind” is a gift from God. I’m doing what I can to enjoy this gift daily.

Got questions? I’m not surprised. If you have any questions about Chasing the Wind, you can email me at chasingthewind@outlook.com.

Recent Posts

  • Esther: Queen of the Darkest Night
    I.             Introduction Israel had long been warned that disobedience would lead to captivity. Jerusalem fell, many were exiled, and empires changed hands. Daniel not only foretold the rise of Persia—he also lived through the transfer of power as God’s people remained in exile. Esther takes place in the Persian Empire after Babylon fell, when many… Read more: Esther: Queen of the Darkest Night
  • God’s Plan: A New Year, A New You
                 I.      Jeremiah the Prophet It’s a new year—time to change the page on the calendar… unless, like me, you use a digital calendar. Then you don’t change the page; you press a button. Either way, it feels like a fresh start. But Scripture reminds us that “new” isn’t mainly about the calendar. The Bible’s… Read more: God’s Plan: A New Year, A New You
  • The Gifts of the Magi, the Gift of Our Savior
    I.             Introduction: How Did the Magi Know? Back in 2015, I traveled a lot more than I do today, and in December 2015, I found myself in the grand metropolis of Otley, UK.  Now in the UK, I don’t know if they know what a warm sunny day is, but that weekend, the rain had… Read more: The Gifts of the Magi, the Gift of Our Savior
  • Giving Thanks at Thanksgiving
      I.      Introduction The air is filled with the warm aromas of a hearty feast, families gather around tables laden with dishes like roast turkey, sweet potatoes, and green bean casserole. Expressions of gratitude echo through the air during this festive season, as traditions like cranberry sauce and dressing bring family and friends together.  Beyond… Read more: Giving Thanks at Thanksgiving
  • God Knows Us Intimately
                 I.      Introduction Psalm 139 Today I want to take a moment to reflect not on headlines or controversies, but on the foundational truth that every life is known and loved by God.  In Psalm 139, David meditates not on theological jargon, but on the overwhelming reality of God’s personal involvement with His creation. Psalm… Read more: God Knows Us Intimately

Newsletter