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  • Scientifically when it comes to acupuncture, it’s hard to see the point.

  • Hello everyone, Julian here for DNews.

  • Acupuncture is the practice of pricking skin or tissue with fine needles; it’s usually

  • used for pain relief although it’s claimed to have a plethora of other benefits.

  • The first definitive description of acupuncture is from China over 2000 years ago. and at

  • the time it was believed that illness was caused when life force, known as qi, couldn’t

  • properly flow through the body.

  • Or when the two forms of qi, yin and yang, were out of balance.

  • Prodding certain points would clear the blockages and restore the flow of qi, causing the illness

  • to subside.

  • If this sounds silly to you, remember that around the same time in the western world

  • we had a similar theory about the imbalance ofhumors,” and doctors used to think

  • people were sick because they had just too much of this blood stuff and it needed to

  • come out.

  • But while bloodletting went out of style around the same time as child labor, acupuncture

  • has been making a comeback since the 1950s as a tool for pain relief.

  • It’s also used to treat depression, irritable bowel syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis, smoking

  • addiction, chronic asthma, stroke rehabilitation, epilepsy, insomnia, morning sickness, and

  • glaucoma, high blood pressure, low blood pressure, even colorblindness!

  • Protip: if something claims to treat all of these ailments, that might be a red flag.

  • Whether or not acupuncture works is controversial, and part of the problem is that it is inherently

  • difficult to study scientifically.

  • Some factors like the soothing nature of the acupuncture room are easy to control for:

  • just turn up the lights and cut out the Careless Whisper.

  • But the act of putting in the needle itself causes headaches for researchers.

  • If the researchers know if the treatment is a placebo, it can affect their results.

  • So, scientists have developed a sort of stealth needle to overcome this problem.

  • It’s concealed in a sheath, and either goes in all the way or only pokes the surface.

  • The goal is for the patient to believe the needle is in, and the researcher won’t know

  • one way or the other.

  • But even with these sham needles and with a plethora of research, there is still considerable

  • debate.

  • A 2003 World Health Organization review of multiple acupuncture studies showed oodles

  • of positive results.

  • This review, however, omitted trials were sham acupuncture and the real thing had similar

  • effects.

  • Plus, a majority of the studies were published in Asian journals, and as Andrew Vickers of

  • the Research Council for Complementary Medicine pointed out in a different review of acupuncture

  • studies, “all trials originating in China, Japan, Hong Kong, and Taiwan were positive.”

  • By comparison 53% of reviewed trials in the US favored the treatment.

  • More recent reviews have debunked acupuncture.

  • A 2006 meta analysis published by the Journal of Internal Medicine found that the results

  • of acupuncture treatment couldn’t be differentiated from the placebo.

  • A 2010 meta analysis of meta analyses (that’s so meta) in the Journal of the International

  • Association for the Study of Pain concluded there was little evidence supporting acupuncture

  • as an effective form of pain relief.

  • But in 2012, a meta analysis out of the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center - authored by

  • that same Vickers guy from earlier - came out in favor of acupuncture, finding it had

  • an effect greater than the placebo, but conceded it wasrelatively modest.”

  • Now this is the point where I’d normally conclude more research is needed, but this

  • time I’m not so sure.

  • There have been over 3,000 trials on acupuncture there’s still no conclusive evidence that

  • being poked with needles alone reduces pain or other ailments in a significant way.

  • I’ll... let you draw your own conclusions.

  • Even if Acupuncture doesn’t have a positive effect, at worst it’s usually harmless.

  • The same can’t be said for homeopathy.

  • To learn more about this alternativemedicine,” check out Julia’s video here.

  • Have you ever been acupunctured?

  • Did it help with anything?

  • Do you think it was the placebo effect?

Scientifically when it comes to acupuncture, it’s hard to see the point.

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