Pinning Down Acupuncture: It's an Illusion
Andy Ho - Straits Times Indonesia | February 13, 2011
It not only looks silly, it doesn't do anything for you. Acupuncture is based on ancient astrology, not science or results. Clinical trials prove it. (EPA Photo) Related articles
Singaporeans Average Lifespan Longer by More Than a Year 2:46pm May 11, 2012
South Korea Stamps Down on ‘Human-Flesh’ Pills: Report 5:52pm May 6, 2012
New Stem Cell Treatment Improves Vision 9:54pm Jan 24, 2012
Indonesia to Target Unhealthy Fast Food Restaurants 5:53pm Nov 18, 2011
Cancer Scientist Cleared of Research Misconduct 11:20am Nov 16, 2011
Post a comment
Please login to post comment
Comments
422438From what i have heard in traditional China you paid your doctor while you were healthy, and if you fell sick he had to start paying you while treating you.
that goes with a more holistic outlook on disease, instead of just treating the symptoms that crop up, the doctor had to keep the bodies various systems in balance and working together.
Most General Practitioners in the UK have no real definition of 'health'. All they see, day after day, year after year are 'symptoms', presented by their patients, which they have to correlate with palliatives, cures, or surgery.
They are busy people, and seem more akin to car mechanics being presented with all manner of vehicles, in varying states of disrepair.
As an anecdote, my GP and his GP wife, partners in the practise, were gaining weight in an alarming fashion that belied their apparent reson d'etre.
Doctors are concerned with results, having to juggle huge numbers of patients, and a mechanistic approach works for them. I am not saying it is best for any patient, a human being, with inter-related systems, vastly more complex than any car.
Rather,it is considered best as a pragmatic support system to minimise the GP's workload, and benefit the maximum number of people. That is why, if patients are dissatisfied with being just 'another bunch of symptoms', they are looking to more 'holistic' traditional patient-centric health-care.
By the way, Andy, one of my acquaintances, teaching a class in Bahrain, was horrified to hear his pupils had been taught that the Sun goes round the Earth. Please don't write off wilful pre-Copernican Islamic ignorance and stupidity.
Dear writer (Mr. Ho), this controversy emerges from clinical trials comparing real and sham acupuncture. What you did not elaborate in your article is what is meant by 'sham' acupuncture? As acupuncture can be done not merely by piercing needles like in the photo, but also using laser, ultrasound, even with pressure or touch/ stroking the body surface. So, is the 'sham' acupuncture really sham? The modality of action is through neurophysicoendocrine pathway, by any modes of stimuli like stroking, piercing, etc. our body will react by showing the therapeutic effects like wellbeing, pain relieving, blood pressure downregulating (for hypertension, but not for normotensive). That is one point. The second point is about the source of phylosophy in TCM. It is not related technically to geocentrism or heliocentrism. TCM focuses on the human on earth, and the effects of celestial phenomena like the sun revolution, weather etc. on the human body. So, the geo- or helio-centrism is not relevant. As ancient Chinese only focused on the effect on human on earth. So, please study in deep first before writing. hahaha.
It's amazing how someone can be so angry or upset about what they are ignorant about. It seems to me that those who say Chinese medicine (or its modalities) is not scientific does not fully comprehend science or Chinese medicine.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1479473/Proof-that-acupuncture-works-up-to-a-point.html
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704841304575137872667749264.html
couple of articles that disagree with you
Singapore. The Singapore Medical Association desires that doctors here be permitted to refer patients to traditional Chinese medicine practitioners.
If this suggestion is accepted, I believe the practice of evidence-based medicine - and patient interests - will suffer a blow.
Of late, some doctors seem to have embraced even disproven remedies. Take, for instance, a review of acupuncture research that appeared last July in the New England Journal of Medicine. This highly respected journal is one of the most widely read by doctors.
In Acupuncture For Chronic Low Back Pain, the authors reviewed clinical trials done to assess if acupuncture actually helps in chronic low back pain. The most important meta-analysis available was a 2008 study involving 6,359 patients, which "showed that real acupuncture treatments were no more effective than sham acupuncture treatments."
The authors then editorialized: "There was nevertheless evidence that both real acupuncture and sham acupuncture were more effective than no treatment and that acupuncture can be a useful supplement to other forms of conventional therapy for low back pain."
First, they admit that pooled clinical trials of the best sort show that real acupuncture does no better than sham acupuncture. This should mean that acupuncture does not work - full stop. But then they say that both sham and real acupuncture work as well as the other and thus is useful. Translation: Please use acupuncture as a placebo on your patients; just don't let them know it is a placebo.
The authors trotted out the same conclusion after they reviewed an important German trial which also showed acupuncture to be merely a placebo.
In any randomized and blinded clinical trial of any mode of treatment for any condition, the finding that the treatment is no better than a placebo always leads to one conclusion only: It is therapeutically useless. Acupuncture, it would seem, is exempted from this rule.
A final study chosen for review was a "pragmatic" trial that was bereft of any use because, as the authors said, "neither providers nor patients were blinded to treatment. Therefore, a bias due to unblinding cannot be ruled out." In fact, such a "trial" is inherently biased.
Then, as spinmeisters, the authors concluded with a flourish: "Acupuncture... has not been established to be superior to sham acupuncture... However, (it) may be more effective than usual care, (so) it is not unreasonable to... incorporate acupuncture into... the management of chronic low back pain."
Balderdash!
I should add that I am not criticizing traditional practioners per se. Only acupuncture is being scrutinized here. Chinese herbology must be analyzed on its own merits.
Interestingly, although acupuncture may be traditional Chinese medicine's poster boy today, the Chinese physician in days of yore would have looked askance at it. Instead, his practice and prestige were based upon his grasp of the Chinese pharmacopoeia.
Acupuncture was left to the shamans and blood letters. After all, it was grounded, not in the knowledge of which herbs were best for what conditions, but astrology.
In Giovanni Maciocia's 2005 book, The Foundations Of Chinese Medicine: A Comprehensive Text For Acupuncturists And Herbalists, there is a chart showing the astrological provenance of acupuncture. The chart shows how the 12 main acupuncture meridians and the 12 main body segments correspond to the 12 Houses of the Chinese zodiac.
In Chinese cosmology, all life is animated by a numinous force called qi, the flow of which mirrors the sun's apparent "movement" during the year through the ecliptic. (The ecliptic is the imaginary plane of the earth's orbit around the sun).
Moreover, everything in the Chinese zodiac is mirrored on Earth and in Man. This was taught even in the earliest systematised TCM text, the Yellow Emperor's Canon Of Medicine, thus: "Heaven is covered with constellations, Earth with waterways, and man with channels."
This means that if there is qi flowing around in the imaginary closed loop of the zodiac, there is qi flowing correspondingly in the body's closed loop of imaginary meridians as well.
These meridians run from head to toe to form a network interlinking 361 points on the skin. But why are there 361 points? Since the earth takes three minutes under 24 hours to rotate 360 degrees on its axis, the sun appears to revolve through 361 degrees on the ecliptic every 24 hours. Hence 361 points. This factoid alone is sufficient to nail down the acupuncture-astrology linkage.
Since qi flows around in a closed loop, needles can be inserted at one of these points far removed from your site of pain to rechannel qi. If done well, this supposedly can cure your spot of trouble.
Note that not only is acupuncture astrological in origin but also the astrology is based on a model of the universe which has the earth at its center. This geocentric model was an erroneous idea widely accepted before the Copernican revolution.
Today, no one believes the earth is at the center of the universe. But the ancient Chinese saw this geocentric principle organising all of nature as well. From its accompanying astrological system, acupuncture was birthed.
So should doctors check the daily horoscopes of their patients?
Reprinted courtesy of Straits Times Indonesia. To subscribe to Straits Times Indonesia and/or the Jakarta Globe call 2553 5055.
- Tomy Winata to Build Jakarta's Tallest Building
- Lady Gaga Angers Thai Fans With Fake Rolex Comment
- Lady Gaga Refuses to Tone Down Her Shows: Manager
- Indonesia Set to Cap Bank Owners’ Stakes: Sources
- President's Son Nearly Attacked by Angry Mob
- Singapore Cabby Jailed for Molesting Indonesian Maid
- If You Don’t Like It, Don’t Watch, Djoko Says of Gaga
- Indonesia's Chief Justice Demands SBY Explain Corby Clemency
- Djoko Says ‘I Don’t Care’ About FPI Demonstration
- National Exams' ‘Fantastic’ Passing Rate Suspicious: ICW
-
10:41pm | Djoko Says ‘I Don’t Care’ Abou...
Meanwhile, in complete contrast from what the S.O.B is at liberty to say under the freedom of his beloved Indonesian constitution.... -
10:34pm | Tomy Winata to Build Jakarta's...
As sound as interesting it is, and how people would picture this monumental skyscraper will glorify the skyline of Jakarta. I see no objectives. -
10:34pm | Indonesian Police Consider Ton...
A small but extremely loud group of mentally retarded inbreds. And you know what we do with retarded inbreds: we ignore them. -
10:30pm | If You Don’t Like It, Don’t Wa...
The picture showed People with deepest and darkest hatred for other human beings and showing their true color by calling them KAFIR? You can only s -
10:04pm | Djoko Says ‘I Don’t Care’ Abou...
more on Sobri (lets call him S.O.B. from now on) Jakarta Post 15/4/08 – A videotape screened on Monday showed Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) -
9:42pm | Lady Gaga Concert Promoter Has...
the whole country went gaga over lady gaga -
9:41pm | Two IPB Security Guards Shot D...
Ah Bogor - such a center of peace and piety. -
9:39pm | Lady Gaga Concert Promoter Has...
"a permit from the venue, a recommendation from the Jakarta police, a recommendation from the Tourism and Creative Economy Ministry, a permit for
