| ||
|
|
|
How long an acupuncture treatment takes? How many visits required? and What the patient's response to treatment is?
Each treatment takes about an hour. Acupuncture is usually given in a series of treatments.
Since each person is unique, the number of treatments will vary. The determining factors
include the type of conditions, whether the conditions is chronic or acute, and the
individual response to the treatment.
It is almost impossible to predict how a patient will respond to acupuncture. Very
occasionally, one treatment is all that is required, whereas other people may need a number
of treatments to gain the same result for the same disease. In general most people,
and their problems, do not respond magically to one treatment, and between 5 and 10 teatment
sessions may be required in order to obtain the best results from acupuncture.
Acupuncture usually works in stages. The first 2 or 3 treatments represent a process of
"understanding the needs of the patient", and are therefore a sort of experiment designed
to assess the specific requirements for that person in that particular condition. Some
people respond to classical body or ear acupuncture, whereas others respond better to
acupuncture with electricity or moxabition. This partially reflects the skill of the
acupuncturist in the use of specific techniques, but it also represents the fact that
the body responds in a slightly different way to different stimuli.
If there has been no response to treatment after the first 5 sessions, then it is doubtful
whether any response will occur. However, sometimes improvement may be very delayed and
symptoms may not clear until the treatment ceased. Occasionally patients who have been
abandoned, with no improvement after three weeks, will suddenly find improvement some weeks
after cessation of acupuncture.
Although in China acupuncture is given daily, acupuncturists in the West tend to treat people
on a weekly basis. After 10 years of practice in the West, we notice that the best plan is twice
treatments in the first 2 weeks then followed by weekly basis.
Many clinical reports claim that acupuncture can have a curative effect in the treatment of
conditions like acute injuries, but there is no evidence to support that acupuncture can
reverse the damaged structure, like osteoarthritis, to normal. Although majority of patients
get a long-term relief of the symptoms after acupuncture, it doesn't mean that their bodies
have already gone back to normal, the problems they suffered before will possible recur later
on. The traditional Chinese approach is to attempt to maintain the patient in a state of
health, and regular one-monthly treatment patterns for those who with chronic problems, like
osteoarthritis, may therefore be justified. However, for most people who with non-chronic
conditions, we usually treat them when symptoms recur.
Sometimes the patient may experience a temporary worsening of symptoms due to acupuncture;
this response to treatment and in general is a good sign, usually only lasting for a day or
two and being followed by improvement.
After an initial evaluation the acupuncturist should provide you
with a treatment plan that includes the modalities to be used as well as the frequency
and duration of treatment.