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Statistics on Acupuncture Treatment in North America
& Europe
In 2001, Members of
the British Acupuncture Council surveyed 132 acupuncture
patients, and found that
· Their physical
symptoms were relieved 75% of the time, and
· Their emotional and
mental symptoms 67% of the time.
· In addition, 54%
felt "inner life changes," and
· 27% experienced
"major life changes."
42% of the patients
changed their reason for coming at some point during the
course of their treatment.
(The Journal of
Alternative and Complementary Medicine, 2001
7(3):261-8.)
Data from a 2004 U.S.
Dept. of Health and Human Services report analyzed
responses from a much larger group of Americans
(31,044), and found that only 4% had ever tried
acupuncture. Still, the same data shows that acupuncture
is slightly more popular than homeopathy, four times
more popular than naturopathy, and ten times more
popular than ayurveda
(Barnes PM, Powell-Griner
E, McFann K, Nahin RL. Complementary and alternative
medicine use among adults: United States, 2002. Adv
Data. 2004 May 27;(343):1-19.)
According to a 1998
survey of the literature published in the Archives of
Internal Medicine, Western medical doctors are most
likely to refer patients for acupuncture (43%) than for
chiropractic (40%) or massage (21%).
(A review of the incorporation of complementary and
alternative medicine by mainstream physicians. Arch
Intern Med. 1998 Nov 23;158(21):2303-10. )
For more on this, read former JAMA editor George
Lundberg MD's book, ‘Severed Trust:Why American Medicine
Hasn't Been Fixed.’
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