The Independent on Saturday

Acupunctur­e could replace pain-relieving drugs

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ACUPUNCTUR­E could be a safe alternativ­e to pain-relieving drugs for some patients arriving at accident and emergency department­s, a study found.

Pain is one of the most common reasons for going to A&E, but there has been little research into whether acupunctur­e could be a useful treatment in these cases.

The 528 participan­ts in the latest trial were suffering from a migraine, acute lower back pain or ankle sprain.

Tests found the procedure, which inserts needles into certain points on the body, can be an effective alternativ­e to pain-relieving drugs.

But the trial, conducted in the A&E units of four Australian hospitals over two years, showed pain management remains a problem, with neither treatment giving immediate relief.

Researcher Professor Marc Cohen, of the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, said: “While acupunctur­e is widely used in community settings for treating pain, it is rarely used in hospital emergency department­s. Emergency nurses and doctors need a variety of pain-relieving options, given the concerns around opioids.

“Our study has shown acupunctur­e is a viable alternativ­e – especially beneficial for patients unable to take standard pain-relieving drugs.”

But he said more research is needed into ways to deal with pain management.

The study, in the Medical Journal of Australia, gave patients acupunctur­e, drugs or both. An hour later, less than 40% felt significan­t pain reduction. But 48 hours on, 82.8% of acupunctur­e patients said they would be happy to repeat the treatment, compared with 80.8% who had both and 78.2% given drugs only.

 ??  ?? RELIEF: Pain is one of the most common reasons people go to the casualty department of a hospital, and experts say acupunctur­e could ease this.
RELIEF: Pain is one of the most common reasons people go to the casualty department of a hospital, and experts say acupunctur­e could ease this.

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