THE EFFECTIVENESS OF ACUPUNCTURE ON ORTHOPAEDIC PAIN WITHIN A VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION SETTING

Background: Acupuncture is rapidly rising in popularity within western populations since its development and consequently there is increasing interest from a variety of clients. Purpose: To evaluate the effectiveness of acupuncture on orthopaedic pain within a vocational rehabilitation setting in Lo...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Laran Chetty
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Airlangga 2022-03-01
Series:Journal of Vocational Health Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://e-journal.unair.ac.id/JVHS/article/view/27460/17303
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832570209106395136
author Laran Chetty
author_facet Laran Chetty
author_sort Laran Chetty
collection DOAJ
description Background: Acupuncture is rapidly rising in popularity within western populations since its development and consequently there is increasing interest from a variety of clients. Purpose: To evaluate the effectiveness of acupuncture on orthopaedic pain within a vocational rehabilitation setting in London, United Kingdom. Method: A retrospective service evaluation design. A pre- and post-acupuncture questionnaire was utilised as the data collection tool. Result: Eighty-six clients were included in this evaluation because they met the criteria for inclusion. Analysis on the age differences between males and females were not statistically significant (p=0.05). The conditions that were most frequently seen at the clinic included: 57% (49/86) spinal pain; 28% (24/86) upper limb pain; and 15% (13/86) lower limb pain. The mean number of treatment sessions for acupuncture was three (range=1-6). Overall each session of treatment lasted on average twenty minutes (range=15-30). The total number of needles used during each session of treatment averaged five (range=3-8). The reported benefit of treatment was 44% (38/86) excellent, 49% (42/86) good, and 7% (6/86) poor. Conclusion: This evaluation has demonstrated that acupuncture is effective on orthopaedic pain within a vocational rehabilitation setting. Repeat audits and larger sample sizes are needed for confirmation the findings.
format Article
id doaj-art-6342ec39bd1d4186bb445c6866db6ee5
institution Kabale University
issn 2580-7161
2580-717X
language English
publishDate 2022-03-01
publisher Universitas Airlangga
record_format Article
series Journal of Vocational Health Studies
spelling doaj-art-6342ec39bd1d4186bb445c6866db6ee52025-02-02T16:21:50ZengUniversitas AirlanggaJournal of Vocational Health Studies2580-71612580-717X2022-03-015315215610.20473/jvhs.V5.I3.2022.152-156THE EFFECTIVENESS OF ACUPUNCTURE ON ORTHOPAEDIC PAIN WITHIN A VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION SETTINGLaran Chetty0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2614-3408National Health Service, Occupational Health and Wellbeing Centre, London, United KingdomBackground: Acupuncture is rapidly rising in popularity within western populations since its development and consequently there is increasing interest from a variety of clients. Purpose: To evaluate the effectiveness of acupuncture on orthopaedic pain within a vocational rehabilitation setting in London, United Kingdom. Method: A retrospective service evaluation design. A pre- and post-acupuncture questionnaire was utilised as the data collection tool. Result: Eighty-six clients were included in this evaluation because they met the criteria for inclusion. Analysis on the age differences between males and females were not statistically significant (p=0.05). The conditions that were most frequently seen at the clinic included: 57% (49/86) spinal pain; 28% (24/86) upper limb pain; and 15% (13/86) lower limb pain. The mean number of treatment sessions for acupuncture was three (range=1-6). Overall each session of treatment lasted on average twenty minutes (range=15-30). The total number of needles used during each session of treatment averaged five (range=3-8). The reported benefit of treatment was 44% (38/86) excellent, 49% (42/86) good, and 7% (6/86) poor. Conclusion: This evaluation has demonstrated that acupuncture is effective on orthopaedic pain within a vocational rehabilitation setting. Repeat audits and larger sample sizes are needed for confirmation the findings.https://e-journal.unair.ac.id/JVHS/article/view/27460/17303acupunctureevaluationvocational rehabilitationorthopaedicpain
spellingShingle Laran Chetty
THE EFFECTIVENESS OF ACUPUNCTURE ON ORTHOPAEDIC PAIN WITHIN A VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION SETTING
Journal of Vocational Health Studies
acupuncture
evaluation
vocational rehabilitation
orthopaedic
pain
title THE EFFECTIVENESS OF ACUPUNCTURE ON ORTHOPAEDIC PAIN WITHIN A VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION SETTING
title_full THE EFFECTIVENESS OF ACUPUNCTURE ON ORTHOPAEDIC PAIN WITHIN A VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION SETTING
title_fullStr THE EFFECTIVENESS OF ACUPUNCTURE ON ORTHOPAEDIC PAIN WITHIN A VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION SETTING
title_full_unstemmed THE EFFECTIVENESS OF ACUPUNCTURE ON ORTHOPAEDIC PAIN WITHIN A VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION SETTING
title_short THE EFFECTIVENESS OF ACUPUNCTURE ON ORTHOPAEDIC PAIN WITHIN A VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION SETTING
title_sort effectiveness of acupuncture on orthopaedic pain within a vocational rehabilitation setting
topic acupuncture
evaluation
vocational rehabilitation
orthopaedic
pain
url https://e-journal.unair.ac.id/JVHS/article/view/27460/17303
work_keys_str_mv AT laranchetty theeffectivenessofacupunctureonorthopaedicpainwithinavocationalrehabilitationsetting
AT laranchetty effectivenessofacupunctureonorthopaedicpainwithinavocationalrehabilitationsetting