US Emergency Department Studies How to Incorporate Acupuncture

US grant to develop alternatives to opioids.

University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center has been awarded a $1.5 million grant to develop and implement alternatives to opioids within its emergency department. The grant comes from the US Department of Health and Human Services, and those alternatives would include acupuncture and music therapy. The Alternatives to Opioids Program aims to decrease opioid use in the department by increasing knowledge of integrative therapies, implementing these modalities within the department, and providing sustained outpatient follow-up 

Dr Kiran Faryar, Director of Research in the hospital’s Department of Emergency Medicine, says “We are providing therapies that have never been implemented at this scale in the University Hospitals emergency department, in order to best care for patients with acute pain. When prescribing opioids there is always the potential for abuse. Data shows both music therapy and acupuncture improve pain and anxiety for patients with short term and long-term pain. This will be an evidence-based technique we can offer patients without the potential risk of substance use disorder.”

(University Hospitals Articles & News, 3 December 2024.)

Author: Robin Costello

I offer traditional Chinese acupuncture in Exeter, from a tranquil clinic a mile from the city centre, and next to the University of Exeter. I graduated originally from the London School of Acupuncture and Traditional Chinese Medicine’s 3 year full time Acupuncture Diploma (DipAc) course. I am on the practitioners register of the British Acupuncture Council (MBAcC), a regulatory and professional body with an entry standard of a full three year undergraduate degree level training. I have worked in a hospital in south west China, deepening my knowledge and using acupuncture and Chinese massage (tuina) as the treatment of choice in its country of origin. I have taught Chinese medicine in colleges, the NHS and at university level. I also practise Qi Gong, and Chinese dietary therapy, that is the medicinal use of ordinary foods, chosen to help achieve particular therapeutic effects in different individuals.