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Acupuncture and standard emergency department care for pain and/or nausea and its impact on emergency care delivery: A feasibility study

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 15:51 authored by Tony ZhangTony Zhang, Shefton Parker, De Villiers Smit, David Taylor, Charlie XueCharlie Xue
Objective To evaluate the feasibility of delivering acupuncture in an emergency department (ED) to patients presenting with pain and/or nausea. Methods A feasibility study (with historical controls) undertaken at the Northern Hospital ED in Melbourne, Australia, involving people presenting to ED triage with pain (VAS 0-10) and/or nausea (Morrow Index 1-6) between January and August 2010 (n=400). The acupuncture group comprised 200 patients who received usual medical care and acupuncture; the usual care group comprised 200 patients with retrospective data closely matched from ED electronic health records. Results Refusal rate was 31%, with 'symptoms under control owing to medical treatment before acupuncture' the most prevalent reason for refusal (n=36); 52.5% of participants responded 'definitely yes' for their willingness to repeat acupuncture, and a further 31.8% responded 'probably yes'. Over half (57%) reported a satisfaction score of 10 for acupuncture treatment. Musculoskeletal conditions were the most common conditions treated n=117 (58.5%), followed by abdominal or flank pain n=49 (24.5%). Adverse events were rare (2%) and mild. Pain and nausea scores reduced from a mean±SD of 7.01±2.02 before acupuncture to 4.72±2.62 after acupuncture and from 2.6±2.19 to 1.42±1.86, respectively. Conclusions Acupuncture in the ED appears safe and acceptable for patients with pain and/or nausea. Results suggest combined care may provide effective pain and nausea relief in ED patients. Further high-quality, sufficiently powered randomised studies evaluating the cost-effectiveness and efficacy of the add-on effect of acupuncture are recommended.

History

Journal

Acupuncture in Medicine

Volume

32

Issue

3

Start page

250

End page

256

Total pages

7

Publisher

British Medical Journal Group

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2014 British Medical Journal Publishing Group

Former Identifier

2006045961

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-01-21

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