Guest guest Posted February 4, 2009 Report Share Posted February 4, 2009 Hi all, In at least 18 states and growing... physical therapists are doing " dry needling " , which is somehow different from acupuncture, at least in metaphor. http://www.gemtinfo.com/physical-therapy/Dry-Needling-is-accepted-internationall\ y-as-a-tool-of-physical-therapy/page63.html http://www.dgs.eu.com/dateien/dgsa/downloads/Dry%20Needling%20in%20Orthopaedic%2\ 0Physical%20Therapy%20Practice.pdf The author of the article link also teaches " dry needling " courses to predominantly physical therapists. He says that " dry needling " is nothing like acupuncture... Except that needles are inserted into trigger points (kori / ashi points) not with the intent of moving " energy " around. Pretty sneaky ... So, what if anyone can do " dry needling " ? Why did we go to 4 years of school and take our licensing exams... Mind as well be MD, DC, DDS or PT. They can all do what we do in most states now. K. -- www.tcmreview.com The Four Reliances: Do not rely upon the individual, but rely upon the teaching. As far as teachings go, do not rely upon the words alone, but rely upon the meaning that underlies them. Regarding the meaning, do not rely upon the provisional meaning alone, but rely upon the definitive meaning. And regarding the definitive meaning, do not rely upon ordinary consciousness, but rely upon wisdom awareness. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 4, 2009 Report Share Posted February 4, 2009 John, Can I share your post with the PCOM email list? We are having a related conversation there about scope of practice, and having " cooperative " relationships with " medical acupuncturists " . Thank you, Andrea Beth Traditional Oriental Medicine Happy Hours in the CALM Center 1770 E. Villa Drive, Suite 5 Cottonwood, AZ 86326 (928) 274-1373 --- On Wed, 2/4/09, <johnkokko wrote: <johnkokko Physical Therapists doing " Dry needling " . How is this different from acupuncture? Chinese Medicine Wednesday, February 4, 2009, 12:01 AM Hi all, In at least 18 states and growing... physical therapists are doing " dry needling " , which is somehow different from acupuncture, at least in metaphor. http://www.gemtinfo.com/physical-therapy/Dry-Needling-is-accepted-internationall\ y-as-a-tool-of-physical-therapy/page63.html http://www.dgs.eu.com/dateien/dgsa/downloads/Dry%20Needling%20in%20Orthopaedic%2\ 0Physical%20Therapy%20Practice.pdf The author of the article link also teaches " dry needling " courses to predominantly physical therapists. He says that " dry needling " is nothing like acupuncture... Except that needles are inserted into trigger points (kori / ashi points) not with the intent of moving " energy " around. Pretty sneaky ... So, what if anyone can do " dry needling " ? Why did we go to 4 years of school and take our licensing exams... Mind as well be MD, DC, DDS or PT. They can all do what we do in most states now. K. -- www.tcmreview.com The Four Reliances: Do not rely upon the individual, but rely upon the teaching. As far as teachings go, do not rely upon the words alone, but rely upon the meaning that underlies them. Regarding the meaning, do not rely upon the provisional meaning alone, but rely upon the definitive meaning. And regarding the definitive meaning, do not rely upon ordinary consciousness, but rely upon wisdom awareness. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 4, 2009 Report Share Posted February 4, 2009 Andrea, Yes... please share the message and here is more in-depth info about CA: In California, PTs " need to be certified by the board (PT board) to perform tissue perforation " . Article 11 in the CA Physical Therapy Regulations on Kinesiological Electromyography certification: http://www.ptbc.ca.gov/laws_regs/regulations.shtml This includes only *200 clock hours of training* in this specialization, in order to perform " dry needling " aka trigger-point acupuncture. *ARTICLE 11. ELECTROMYOGRAPHY CERTIFICATION* *1399.60. Definitions.* As used in these regulations: (a) " Electroneuromyography " means the performance of tissue penetration for the purpose of evaluating neuromuscular performance, and includes the evaluation of specific abnormal potentials and evoked responses. (b) " Kinesiological electromyography " means the study, including tissue penetration, of the phasic activity of individual or multiple muscles in relation to another physical or physiological event or exercise and does not include the evaluation of specific abnormal potentials or evoked responses. ** In Colorado, and similarly in other states, PTs only need *46 hours of training* to do " dry needling " . The seminars offered by GEMt (I and II) span 6 days total : (48 hours) http://www.gemtinfo.com/physical-therapy/Trigger-Point-Dry-Needling-Level-II-Tra\ ining/page18.html At Samuel Merritt college, in CA, the doctoral PT program runs 33 months (less than 3 years). So, with less than 3 years of coursework, plus 200 clock hours, you can be a Doctor of physical therapy and also legally perform tissue perforation ( " dry needling " ) in the state of CA. To compare that with CA acupuncturist training, 3000 hours (3 1/2 - 4 years) of training, plus an extra 1200 hours (over 26 months) in order to be called a " Doctor " in order to have the same scope of practice (dry needling, topical medication application, massage therapy) and herbal consultation (anyone can do this) as a Doctor of physical therapy (33 month + 200 hour training). In CA, MDs, DOs and Dentists can perform acupuncture without further training (most take the Helms course as an option). Chiropractors can not practice " acupuncture " or " dry needling " in CA without an acupuncture license, because tissue perforation ie. " breaking the skin " is not in their scope of practice. The Helms Medical Institute course has a 220 hour and 300 hour option. This consists solely of one weekend, plus home-video study. http://www.hmieducation.com/course_desc.htm K. > > -- www.tcmreview.com The Four Reliances: Do not rely upon the individual, but rely upon the teaching. As far as teachings go, do not rely upon the words alone, but rely upon the meaning that underlies them. Regarding the meaning, do not rely upon the provisional meaning alone, but rely upon the definitive meaning. And regarding the definitive meaning, do not rely upon ordinary consciousness, but rely upon wisdom awareness. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 4, 2009 Report Share Posted February 4, 2009 Chinese Medicine , <johnkokko wrote: > " dry needling " is nothing like acupuncture... " Too right. It's not. Ever heard of a pneumothorax caused by a classically and correctly trained acupuncturist? Something dry-needlers are up to is - anecdotally - increasing the incidence of lung collapse in the Australian context of 'being stuck with needles to relieve pain'. I did a bit of reading about 'dry needling' a couple of years ago, and spoke to some physios who are proponents of it - seems they like their needles big, and a little rough, and desire to induce micro-tissue damage, thus deliberately setting up local - inflammatory? - responses. Fine, elegant, surgical-grade, high-quality needles aren't usually in their tool kits. They're also very fond of spraying the area to be needled, with some kind of freezing cold product, as part of the technique - eeek!! Our primary professional association has called for Aussie acupuncturists to note and document harm caused to folk by non-acupuncturists performing 'dry needling'. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 4, 2009 Report Share Posted February 4, 2009 Dear group, Happy Lunar Chinese New Year of Ox. My previous thread #31042, Red flag for non free-handed style acupuncturists, has already pointed out that if we acupuncturists are alienated ourselves from the teaching of Chinese medicine and meridian theories, we are rootless. We will become orphans and will be abandoned eventually. When the going gets tough, the tough gets going; we should sharpen our clinical efficacy as healers. " Dry needling " deals with trigger points that help muscles and tendons only. Acupuncturists should be in a higher level, dealing with more sophisicated systems such as immune system or brain issue. That distinguishes us as a medical profession. SUNG, Yuk-ming, PhD (Chengdu), BA (Houston), L Ac. (Hong Kong) 9/F,166 Hennessy Plaza, Henessy Rd., Wanchai, Hong Kong (852)9530 9007 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 4, 2009 Report Share Posted February 4, 2009 I support your position completely. . . On Feb 4, 2009, at 8:37 AM, sxm2649 wrote: > Dear group, Happy Lunar Chinese New Year of Ox. > > My previous thread #31042, Red flag for non free-handed style > acupuncturists, has already pointed out that if we acupuncturists are > alienated ourselves from the teaching of Chinese medicine and meridian > theories, we are rootless. We will become orphans and will be > abandoned > eventually. > > When the going gets tough, the tough gets going; we should sharpen our > clinical efficacy as healers. " Dry needling " deals with trigger points > that help muscles and tendons only. Acupuncturists should be in a > higher level, dealing with more sophisicated systems such as immune > system or brain issue. That distinguishes us as a medical profession. > > SUNG, Yuk-ming, PhD (Chengdu), BA (Houston), L Ac. (Hong Kong) > > 9/F,166 Hennessy Plaza, > Henessy Rd., Wanchai, > Hong Kong > (852)9530 9007 > > > Chair, Department of Herbal Medicine Pacific College of Oriental Medicine San Diego, Ca. 92122 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 4, 2009 Report Share Posted February 4, 2009 Thank you, John. I just sent it off. The conversation on the PCOM list is about medical acupuncture, and I find it remarkable that similar issues are being discussed on this list as well. Andrea Beth Traditional Oriental Medicine Happy Hours in the CALM Center 1770 E. Villa Drive, Suite 5 Cottonwood, AZ 86326 (928) 274-1373 --- On Wed, 2/4/09, <johnkokko wrote: <johnkokko Re: Physical Therapists doing " Dry needling " . How is this different from acupuncture? Chinese Medicine Wednesday, February 4, 2009, 5:49 AM Andrea, Yes... please share the message and here is more in-depth info about CA: In California, PTs " need to be certified by the board (PT board) to perform tissue perforation " . Article 11 in the CA Physical Therapy Regulations on Kinesiological Electromyography certification: http://www.ptbc.ca.gov/laws_regs/regulations.shtml This includes only *200 clock hours of training* in this specialization, in order to perform " dry needling " aka trigger-point acupuncture. *ARTICLE 11. ELECTROMYOGRAPHY CERTIFICATION* *1399.60. Definitions.* As used in these regulations: (a) " Electroneuromyography " means the performance of tissue penetration for the purpose of evaluating neuromuscular performance, and includes the evaluation of specific abnormal potentials and evoked responses. (b) " Kinesiological electromyography " means the study, including tissue penetration, of the phasic activity of individual or multiple muscles in relation to another physical or physiological event or exercise and does not include the evaluation of specific abnormal potentials or evoked responses. ** In Colorado, and similarly in other states, PTs only need *46 hours of training* to do " dry needling " . The seminars offered by GEMt (I and II) span 6 days total : (48 hours) http://www.gemtinfo.com/physical-therapy/Trigger-Point-Dry-Needling-Level-II-Tra\ ining/page18.html At Samuel Merritt college, in CA, the doctoral PT program runs 33 months (less than 3 years). So, with less than 3 years of coursework, plus 200 clock hours, you can be a Doctor of physical therapy and also legally perform tissue perforation ( " dry needling " ) in the state of CA. To compare that with CA acupuncturist training, 3000 hours (3 1/2 - 4 years) of training, plus an extra 1200 hours (over 26 months) in order to be called a " Doctor " in order to have the same scope of practice (dry needling, topical medication application, massage therapy) and herbal consultation (anyone can do this) as a Doctor of physical therapy (33 month + 200 hour training). In CA, MDs, DOs and Dentists can perform acupuncture without further training (most take the Helms course as an option). Chiropractors can not practice " acupuncture " or " dry needling " in CA without an acupuncture license, because tissue perforation ie. " breaking the skin " is not in their scope of practice. The Helms Medical Institute course has a 220 hour and 300 hour option. This consists solely of one weekend, plus home-video study. http://www.hmieducation.com/course_desc.htm K. > > -- www.tcmreview.com The Four Reliances: Do not rely upon the individual, but rely upon the teaching. As far as teachings go, do not rely upon the words alone, but rely upon the meaning that underlies them. Regarding the meaning, do not rely upon the provisional meaning alone, but rely upon the definitive meaning. And regarding the definitive meaning, do not rely upon ordinary consciousness, but rely upon wisdom awareness. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 4, 2009 Report Share Posted February 4, 2009 Yes, Margi. I know of a colleague who caused a pneumothorax. She is a classically-trained licensed acupuncturist. It can and does happen, even to " us " . It is important that we know of this possibility, even though its occurrence is rare. We also should know how to recognize it, and what to do for our patients when it happens. My friend was appropriately horrified. She took proper care of her patient, and changed her choice of needles. Andrea Beth Traditional Oriental Medicine Happy Hours in the CALM Center 1770 E. Villa Drive, Suite 5 Cottonwood, AZ 86326 (928) 274-1373 --- On Wed, 2/4/09, margi.macdonald <margi.macdonald wrote: margi.macdonald <margi.macdonald Re: Physical Therapists doing " Dry needling " . How is this different from acupuncture? Chinese Medicine Wednesday, February 4, 2009, 6:46 AM Chinese Medicine , <johnkokko wrote: > " dry needling " is nothing like acupuncture... " Too right. It's not. Ever heard of a pneumothorax caused by a classically and correctly trained acupuncturist? Something dry-needlers are up to is - anecdotally - increasing the incidence of lung collapse in the Australian context of 'being stuck with needles to relieve pain'. I did a bit of reading about 'dry needling' a couple of years ago, and spoke to some physios who are proponents of it - seems they like their needles big, and a little rough, and desire to induce micro-tissue damage, thus deliberately setting up local - inflammatory? - responses. Fine, elegant, surgical-grade, high-quality needles aren't usually in their tool kits. They're also very fond of spraying the area to be needled, with some kind of freezing cold product, as part of the technique - eeek!! Our primary professional association has called for Aussie acupuncturists to note and document harm caused to folk by non-acupuncturists performing 'dry needling'. --- Subscribe to the free online journal for TCM at Times http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com Help build the world's largest online encyclopedia for Chinese medicine and acupuncture, click, http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com/wiki/CMTpedia and adjust accordingly. Please consider the environment and only print this message if absolutely necessary. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 4, 2009 Report Share Posted February 4, 2009 Hi Margi: --Margi- Our primary professional association has called for Aussie acupuncturists to note and document harm caused to folk by non-acupuncturists performing 'dry needling'. --- Thanks for bringing this up. This is the type of thing that we need to be able to as a profession, not so much define which style of acupuncture is better or whatever, but to protect ourselves. If we honestly look at any of the standard medical professions in western countries we see little science and evidence and lots of politicking. If we are going to play the game *they* want us to play (Evidence Based Medicine these days) we are going to lose, because *they* don't play this game. I have not heard of arthroscopic surgery of the knee being kicked out of the profession despite the evidence stacked against it. My patients still come from, and go to that procedure: The New England Journal of Medicine performed a study which included a placebo arm and found that placebo did as well as the surgery. The conclusion is obvious, and the defense was immediate - again not science, but politics (and yes, possibly a valid clinical viewpoint): " The impact of this article on the public, the insurance industry, and the government has been significant and has raised a great deal of controversy. The conclusions reached by its authors are a good example of why research, particularly clinical research, should be subjected to peer review by experts in that specific field, and results validated, before such information is released to the public. " RW Jackson, BUMC Proceedings 2003;16:27–29 The impact was " significant " but the surgery continues largely uninterrupted. We need to have a strong voice, in my opinion. That's all, a strong voice. Hugo ________________________________ Hugo Ramiro http://middlemedicine.wordpress.com http://www.chinesemedicaltherapies.org ________________________________ margi.macdonald <margi.macdonald Wednesday, 4 February, 2009 8:46:52 Re: Physical Therapists doing " Dry needling " . How is this different from acupuncture? Traditional_ Chinese_Medicine , <johnkokko@. ..> wrote: > " dry needling " is nothing like acupuncture. .. " Too right. It's not. Ever heard of a pneumothorax caused by a classically and correctly trained acupuncturist? Something dry-needlers are up to is - anecdotally - increasing the incidence of lung collapse in the Australian context of 'being stuck with needles to relieve pain'. I did a bit of reading about 'dry needling' a couple of years ago, and spoke to some physios who are proponents of it - seems they like their needles big, and a little rough, and desire to induce micro-tissue damage, thus deliberately setting up local - inflammatory? - responses. Fine, elegant, surgical-grade, high-quality needles aren't usually in their tool kits. They're also very fond of spraying the area to be needled, with some kind of freezing cold product, as part of the technique - eeek!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 5, 2009 Report Share Posted February 5, 2009 Chinese Medicine , Andrea Beth Damsky < wrote: > > Yes, Margi.� I know of a colleague who caused a pneumothorax.� She is a classically-trained licensed acupuncturist.� It can and does happen, even to " us " .� It is important that we know of this possibility, even though its occurrence is rare.� We also should know how to recognize it, and what to do for our patients when it happens.� > > My friend was appropriately horrified.� She took proper care of her patient, and changed her choice of needles. Hi Andrea, yes it is always possible that 'we' might cause pnuemothorax... I once read - somewhere, the reference is only in my head these days - that if each of us were to work for 120 yrs, we would each cause 1 pneumothorax in that time. To be accepted into my professional body - AACMA - you have to provide written evidence that you can safely identify, and respond to, a suspected pneumothorax. What I see coming through in the Aust context is that dry-needlers are less likely to be 'appropriatly horrified' than we might be, and would be less likely to change needles or techniques, because 'dry-needling' doesn't have the almost infinite possibility of technique, point selection, needling style, and of course TCM diagnosis, that classical acupuncture offers patients. Previously an RN, I've observed that there's something about practicing within the medical and paramedical realms which teaches practitioners that if its a known risk, and the patient received informed consent, then whilst not ok, to some extent, it's still 'all in a day's work' that life-threatening events might be caused by treatment. I don't ever want to get into that mind-set, and I can see that Angela's friend hasn't either. Margi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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