The American Academy of Medical Acupuncture
It is surprising to many people that a large and growing number of
traditional physicians support the use of and practice of acupuncture techniques. The American Academy of Medical Acupuncture was organized
by physicians who want to further the use of acupuncture in regular medical treatment. The Academy was founded nearly twenty years
ago by a group of physicians trained in acupuncture, which graduated from courses sponsored by the UCLA School of Medicine. It used to be
that acupuncture practitioners had vast knowledge of the traditional acupuncture techniques and philosophy, but little or no training in
traditional western medicine. At the other end of the medical spectrum were physicians, who knew nothing about traditional Chinese
medicine, and looked with some doubt on the claims of acupuncture treatment. However, a number of studies and experiments showed that
acupuncture gave consistently good results in a number of areas, and so physicians started referring their patients for particular problems, such
as persistent pain. After some time traditional physicians starting learning and using acupuncture techniques as part of their own methods
of treatment. In addition to the techniques, they learned the long history behind the current acupuncture techniques.
The Academy (known as AAMA) is important to both physicians and patients, for members of the AAMA meet the highest standards
for both traditional medicine and certified acupuncture practitioners. Most patients implicitly trust physicians, both for
their extensive training and for their high standards of practice. They extend both of these to the practice of acupuncture within their
offices.
One of the goals of the AAMA is to spread knowledge and appreciation of acupuncture to other physicians and health
professionals that presently know little about its use. Most physicians in hospitals have heard of the possible use of acupuncture instead
of anesthesia, but it is also becoming more accepted in other areas, such as minimizing pain and nausea for the patient once the operation is
over and the patient is in the recovery room. Acupuncture also has some interesting uses possible in emergency room treatments.
The AAMA is also very dedicated to pursuing research and studies into new
applications for acupuncture in both the hospital and physician office settings. It is especially interested in researchers to look into
the fundamentals of why certain acupuncture techniques are as successful as they are. In other words, many doctors want a traditional
medical explanation of the process that the acupuncture treatment starts. It seems that a simple insertion of a number of needles is a
mystifying way to accomplish the results, and there is a good deal of research into how to exactly explain the mechanisms that occur. Doctors who
do research into these areas may publish their results in a magazine called
Medical Acupuncture, the official journal of the American Academy of Medical Acupuncture. These magazine presents authoritative papers, case
reports, and research findings that integrate concepts from traditional and modern forms of acupuncture with Western medical training. This
publication covers the effectiveness and safety of acupuncture in pain relief, cancer, stroke, pulmonology, urology, OB/GYN, gastroenterology,
and much more.
The existence of a large and growing numbers of qualified physicians that are also trained acupuncturists guarantees that the
benefits of each discipline will continue to make current American health practice better for the patients.
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