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Acupuncture for Pregnancy, Birth and Beyond
Posted by Marisa Belger on September 23, 2006 - 8:00am.
Acupuncture Pregnancy

When it comes to the numerous discomforts that often accompany pregnancy, acupuncture is a supreme multitasker. From conception to every day life with baby, the ancient Chinese system of healing can treat many of the most common aches and pains.

The first step to integrating acupuncture into your pregnancy is to find a licensed acupuncturist with extensive experience working with pregnant women. A qualified acupuncturist will be able to distinguish common pregnancy-related ailments from those that require conventional medical care. Acupuncture treatments are usually painless—the needles are extremely thin—and will not affect the baby unless the treatment is geared to specifically stimulate labor.

First Trimester
During the first three months of pregnancy, acupuncture can provide relief from fatigue and migraines as well as the pervasive nausea of morning sickness. A study published in the journal Birth found that women who were less than 14 weeks pregnant had shorter and less frequent bouts of nausea when they received acupuncture. The best news was that the treatment brought about immediate results.

Second Trimester
As the pregnancy progresses new physical challenges often arise. Weekly acupuncture treatments – an acupuncturist will usually assess the patient on an individual basis to come up with a treatment plan that will be most efficient – can help with heartburn, hemorrhoids, elevated blood pressure, edema, even excessive weight gain. It is during this period that an acupuncturist should be especially aware of symptoms that may require additional medical attention.

Third Trimester

In months four through six many pregnant women suffer from the strain of the growing baby. Treatment during this period can help sciatica, lower back pain, and pubic and joint pain. And once the pain has been addressed, an acupuncturist can also spend time assisting the positioning of the baby. Acupuncture treatments received between weeks 32 to 36 can help the baby move into a head-first position. An acupuncturist will often use moxabustion – burning of the herb mugwart next to an acupuncture point – to help a baby shift out of the breech position and into a more birth-friendly stance.

Birth
During labor, acupuncture can be used to reduce pain and/or to stimulate contractions when necessary. If needles are too difficult to integrate into the already overwhelming process of birth, acupressure can be used instead.

Postpartum

After birth, consistent acupuncture treatments can help bring the reproductive system back into balance while alleviating depression and treating back and perineal pain. For first-time mothers, acupuncture is also an excellent method of managing the stress and anxiety that often accompany the first weeks at home with your bundle of joy.

Via Pregnancy Today and Acupuncture Today



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<em>Anonymous</em>'s picture
acupuncture "fact",do you know?
by Anonymous on September 25, 2006 - 6:04am
Hi.very good site.so what do your think about the following things: <a href="http://www.backachetherapy.co.uk/"> Seven “ facts “about acupuncture </a>. Myth: <a href="http://www.backachetherapy.co.uk/">Acupuncture </a> is widely used in China Truth: <a href="http://www.backachetherapy.co.uk/">Acupuncture </a> is not widely used in China  Acupuncture is not widely used in China as a part of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) - TCM also being a phrase that originated in the 20th century (1954). Acupuncture declined in popularity once scientific medicine was introduced to China. In 1995 the Committee for Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP) went to China and found that around 15-20% of the population used TCM (not just acupuncture), and that those people used TCM in conjunction with scientific medicine: what we would term complementary medicine. This level of use is at the lower end of the scale compared to other countries with advanced healthcare systems and it falls well short of countries such as Germany, Canada, France and Australia where the use of alternative remedies is more than twice that of China. China's use of alternative remedies is actually lower than the UK population's - currently around 25%. Myth:Acupuncture can stimulate the body’s own healing response and help restore its natural balance by “Qi” Truth: There is no evidence for the existence of this universal energy(“Qi”) There are no scientific instruments that can detect it. It seemingly can only be detected and adjusted by practitioners. It is not a falsifiable hypothesis (it can't be tested) and as such is meaningless. Myth: Acupuncture is an ancient Chinese cure that has existed, unchanging, for centuries. Truth: acupuncture was formalized in a complex way over the past 100 years, mostly in Europe and France and after the Communist takeover in China. Before that time there was no consistent formalization of acupuncture points or what each place was supposed to do. It was largely regional, and the thinking varied from city to city." Myth:Acupuncture offers specific cures Truth: Acupuncture doesn’t offer specific cure . If it has the effect of, say, releasing endorphins through the application of needles, well, many things release endorphins -- a walk in the woods, a 5-mile run, a pinch on the butt." Myth: Acupuncture can claim to have an effect many condition. Truth: Acupuncture can only claim have an effect very few condition. If there is one area that acupuncture can claim to have an effect it's in pain relief. Although most evidence supporting acupuncture can be dismissed as anecdotal, trials have been done where acupuncture does show a pain relieving effect above placebo. The effect is not large, of the same magnitude as taking Aspirin or Ibuprofen, but nonetheless it's there and cannot be ignored.That's not to say that there are not problems with such claims however. Pain is an entirely subjective experience; it cannot be directly measured and the severity felt depends to a large extent on the patient's state of mind; which can be influenced by the practitioner giving the treatment. This leads on to the problem of blinding procedures with acupuncture. The practitioner is always aware of whether he's giving real or sham acupuncture and which patients he's giving them to.The pain relief effect does seem to exist; however, it's not clear whether it's a real effect of acupuncture or a strong placebo effect that's induced in the patient by the elaborate procedure of an acupuncture treatment 

Myth: Acupuncture is very safe:

 

Truth: Acupuncture is not inherently dangerous but being an invasive technique, it is not risk free.

 Haematoma may result from the accidental puncture of a circulatory structure. Nerve injury can result from the accidental puncture of any nerve. Brain damage or stroke is possible with very deep needling at the base of skull. Also rare, but possible, is pneumothorax from deep needling into the lung, and kidney damage from deep needling in the lower back. Needles that are not properly sterilized can transfer diseases such as HIV and hepatitis. There is also the danger, common to all alternative therapies, of not seeking proper medical treatment because of an over reliance on alternatives. Acupuncturists are not doctors and will not have the capability of diagnosing a serious illness from its typical symptoms. Myth: Acupuncture is more effective. Truth: Acupuncture is not very effective. The practise is based on untenable principles and the small amount of evidence there is to support its use in pain relief can also be called into question. Although there are claims that it has a mild pain relieving effect, it probably does so simply because it's an elaborate placebo. Whether the mild pain relieving properties are of acupuncture are real or not, most claims for the efficacy of acupuncture are grossly over-exaggerated. If there is a use for Acupuncture, it can only be in mild pain relief. The question then becomes a matter of whether the cost of acupuncture for this mild pain relief can be justified (Content from internet,www.skeptics.org.uk ,etc) <a href="http://www.backachetherapy.co.uk/"> Bristol Chinese Pain relief Acupuncture </a> www.backachetherapy.co.uk

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