healthcare professionals’ attitudes towards/media/files/anmf/presentations/anmc 2017/7c.pdf ·...
TRANSCRIPT
Healthcare professionals’ attitudes towards
acupuncture: an analysis of barriers and
enablers to its integration
Zhang, M, N1,2; Zheng, Z1; Vesty, G1
1. School of Health and Biomedical Sciences, RMIT University,
Bundoora, Victoria, Australia
2. School of Nursing, Midwifery and Paramedicine, ACU,
Melbourne, Australia
My Research / Thesis
Australian doctors and nurses or midwives’
attitudes and perceptions of acupuncture and
acupressure practice in Perioperative Care-
National Survey
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http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2017/03/02/12/3DDFF69100000578-0-image-a-
17_1488456787923.jpg
Figure 1. Matthews (2017),
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-4274898/Ditch-
paracetamol-try-ACUPUNCTURE.html.
Figure 2. “Acupressure”. n.d.
https://fullbodybalancing.com/acupressure-5-benefits-
health/
Definition of terms
•Acupuncture: needles
•Acupressure: pressure
•Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM)
–broad set of health care practices ≠
conventional medicine
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Side Effects after operations/GA
PONV Pain (Post Operative Nausea and Vomiting)
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Figure 3. Gayer (2014), http://www.outpatientsurgery.net/guides/ambulatory-
anesthesia/2014/images/9_prevention.jpg
Figure 4. “Boy in hospital bed” (2016),
http://www.med.uio.no/helsam/english/research/projects/pediatric-pain-
management-practices-postoperative/
Aims and Study Design
Study 1
Literature Review
Aim 1
Purposive literature review to identify key themes associated with barriers,
enablers and acceptance of acupuncture use in perioperative care
Study 2
National Survey
Aim 2
Examine the beliefs, attitudes, perceptions, clinical use, knowledges and perceptions of Australian
doctors and nurses toward the use of acupuncture and acupressure in perioperative care
Further analysis of Study 2
Aim 3
Identify any potential barriers that may impact on the implementation of the use of acupuncture /
acupressure in perioperative care
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Why examine attitudes?
Proven Effectiveness
Cochrane review: compared PC 6 stimulation with
sham treatment →PC6 acupoint stimulation
significantly ↓ the incidence of nausea, vomiting and
the need for rescue antiemetics (Lee, Chan & Fan, 2015).
Acupuncture (Level I), specifically auricular
acupuncture (Level I [PRISMA] ↓ postoperative pain,
opioid requirements as well as opioid-related adverse
effects compare to a variety of controls (Schug et al., 2015).
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Why examine attitudes? (Continued)
Attitudes of physicians – 80% considered it is effective & safe
Current literature focuses on CAM in general
High referral rate of acupuncture
Australia: 70-80% (Easthope et al., 2000; Wardle et al., 2013)
International: 50-94% (Chen et al., 2010)
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Literature Search Strategies
To explore the attitudes and perceptions of
acupuncture use in peri-operative care
Integrative Review
Broadest type of research review method inclusion of
experimental and non-experimental research
Study selection-Purposive sampling
PRISMA flowchart of study selection process followed
- 12 studies selected
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PRISMA Flowchart
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Literature Review Findings
Perceptions and attitudes
• Overall positive attitudes and perception among
surveyed health care professionals despite low
knowledge of and exposure to acupuncture.
• GPs took a favourable view towards both the efficacy
and cost effectiveness of acupuncture among other
physicians (Wardle, Sibbrit & Adams, 2013; Norheim & Fonnebo, 1998; Lipman,
Dale & MacPherson, 2003; Czarnawska-Illiev & Robinson, 2016).
Who referred patients and to whom
GPs, Age groups, Sex
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Literature Review: Findings (Continued)
Barriers and enablers of integrating acupuncture
into conventional medicine (Manias et al, 2015)
Three themes identified
–Intrapersonal
–Interpersonal
–Environmental & External
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Findings (Continued)
1. Intrapersonal barriers +/- enablers
- Knowledge of and exposure to acupuncture
- Personal use
- Prior positive experiences
- Prescribed CAM previously and comfortable with referral to
acupuncture
- Belief in the efficacy of acupuncture
- Perceived lack of evidence
- Scepticism and Prejudice
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Findings (Continued)
2. Interpersonal barriers +/- enablers
-Patients’ own request
-Number of patients asking about acupuncture
-Using CAM practitioners for source of information
-Direct interactions with the acupuncturists to build trust
-Patient feedback and refusal
-Different medical paradigms of Western Medicine and Traditional
Chinese Medicine
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Findings (Continued)
3. Environmental/External barriers +/- enablers
-Lack of options
-Side effects from conventional therapies
-Availability of credentialed providers
-Difficulty in finding a practitioner
-Lack of reimbursement & insurance coverage
-Lack of regulation
-Logistical (facility, issues with administration such as frequency, timing,
length of time, hospital setting, body parts, number of needles)
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Limitations of prior research: areas to
further explore
• Low response rate associated with large online
studies
• Bias with regional/small number of participants/single
site study
–limits the generalisability of results
• Cultural diversity and geographical differences
• Missing data from nurses!!!
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Implications for future clinical practice
•Change in patient and societal interest in CAM.
•Healthcare professionals must be well informed about
acupuncture and the potential benefits and limitation.
•Attitudes are important to this integration. Knowledge shapes
attitudes.
•Education is the key!!!
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Overcoming Barriers Figure 2: A conceptual framework for translating evidence into
practice adapted from Gonales et al (2012)
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Key Points
• The national survey (Study 2) focuses on the GAP
between translating evidence into practice
• Participants including nurses/midwives (whom spend
most of our time with our patients during their
hospitalization!!!)
• First nationwide survey in Australia
• Willingness of receiving further education has been
included in the survey questionnaire.
• Provide the foundation for further studies
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Quote
“Innovation is taking two things that already
exist and putting them together in a new way.”
Tom Freston
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References
• Chen, L., Houghton, M., Seefeld, L., Malarick, C., & Mao, J. (2010). A survey of selected physician views on
acupuncture in pain management. Pain Medicine, 11, 530-534.
• Czarnawska-Iliev, I., & Robinson, N. (2016). General Practitioners’ use of and attitudes to acupuncture in
relation to the UK’s National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) clinical guidelines – a pilot
study. European Journal of Integrative Medicine, 8, 342-354. Retrieved from:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eujim.2016.07.004.
• Donald, G.K., Mackeret, P., & Tobin, I. (2010). Medical students and acupuncture: a short sharp placement
experience. Acupuncture Medicine, 28(1),12-15. doi: 10.1136/aim.2009.001602. PubMed PMID: 20351370.
• Easthope, G., Tranter, B., & Gill, G. (2000). Normal medical practice of referring patients for complementary
therapies among Australian general practitioners. Complementary Therapies in Medicine, 8, 226–233. Retrieved
from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1054/ctim.2000.0398
• Faircloth, A. (2014). Perceptions of acupuncture and acupressure by Anaesthesia provider (VCU Theses and
dissertation). Paper 3586
• Fries, C. J. (2008). Classification of complementary and alternative medical practices. Canadian Family
Physicians, 54, 1570-71. PubMed PMID: 19005130.
• Giordano, J., Boatwright, D., Stapleton, S., & Huff, L. (2002). Blending the boundaries: steps toward an
integration of Complementary and Alternative Medicine into mainstream practice. Journal of Alternatively and
Complementary Medicine, 8, 897-906. doi: 10.1089/10755530260511892. PubMed PMID: 12614540.
• Gonzales, R., Handley, M.A., Ackerman, S., & O’Sullivan P.S. (2012). Increasing the translation of evidence
into practice, policy, and public health improvements: a framework for training health professionals in
implementation and dissemination science. Academic Medicine, 87, 271-8. doi:
10.1097/ACM.0b013e3182449d33. PMCID: PMC3307591.
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References (Continued)
• Johnston, M.F, Hui, K. K., & Bastani, R. (2005). Incorporating acupuncture into oncologic practice: how
clinical need shapes physicians acceptance. Journal of Cancer, 3, 11-12. Scopus ISSN: 15446301.
• Lee, A., Chan, S,K,C., Fan, L, T, Y. (2015). Stimulation of the wrist acupuncture point PC6 for preventing
postoperative nausea and vomiting. Cochrane. Retrieved from:
http://www.cochrane.org/CD003281/ANAESTH_wrist-pc6-acupuncture-point-stimulation-prevent-nausea-
and-vomiting-after-surgery
• Lipman, L., Dale, J., & MacPherson, H. (2003). Attitudes of GPs towards the provision of acupuncture on the
NHS. Complementary Therapies in Medicine, 11, 110-114. doi: 10.1016/S0965-2299903)00042-6
• Manias, E., Rixon, S., Williams, A., Liew, D., & Braaf, S. (2015). Barriers and enablers affecting patient
engagement in managing medications with specialty hospital settings. Health Expectations, 18(6), 2787-2798.
doi: 10.1111/hex.12255
• Moher,D., Liberati, A,, Tetzlaff, J., & Altman, D.G, (2009). The PRISMA Group. Preferred Reporting Items
for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses: The PRISMA Statement. PLoS Medicine, 6(7):e1000097. Retrieved
from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1000097
• Norheim, A. J., & Fonnebo, V. (1998). Doctors’ attitudes to acupuncture-a Norwegian study. Social Science &
Medicine, 47(4), 519-523. Retrieved from PubMed.
• Schug, S.A., Palmer, G. M., Scott, D. A., Halliwell, R., & Trinca, J. (2015). Acute Pain Management: Scientific
Evidence (4th ed.). Melbourne: Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists and Faculty of Pain
Medicine.
• Shao, J, Y, J., Borthwick, A, M., Lewith, G, T., & Hopwood, V. (2005). Attitudes towards traditional
acupuncture in the UK. Evidence Based Integrative Medicine, 2(1), 37-45. Retrieved from AMED.
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References (Continued)
• Wardle, J.L., Sibbrit, D., & Adams, J. (2013). Acupuncture referrals in rural primary healthcare: a survey of
general practitioners in rural and regional New South Wales Australia. Acupuncture in Medicine, 31, 375-382.
doi: 10.1136/acupmed-2013-010393
• Whittemore, R., & Knafl, K. (2005). The integrative review: updated methodology. Journal of Advanced
Nursing, 52, 546-553.
• World Health Organization (WHO). (n.d). Acupuncture: review and analysis of reports on controlled
clinical trials. Retrieved from apps.who.int/medicinedocs/pdf/s4926e/s4926e.pdf
• Ytrehus, I. A., Norheim, A J., Emaus, N., & Fonnebo, V. (2010). Physicians become acupuncture patients-not
acupuncturists. The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, 16(4), 449-455. doi:
10.1089/acm.2008.06434
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Thank you
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