acuperceptions project: using qualitative methods to understand acupuncture practice claire m...

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ACUPERCEPTIONS PROJECT: USINGQUALITATIVE METHODS TO UNDERSTANDACUPUNCTURE PRACTICE

Claire M Cassidy, PhD, Dipl Ac, LAcBethesda Maryland USA

GOALS OF THE ACUPERCEPTIONS PROJECT

•TO GIVE VOICE TO ACUPUNCTURE PRACTITIONERS

•…TO HELP PROVIDE A STRONG FOUNDATION FOR CLINICAL AND SURVEY RESEARCH.

TWO KINDS OF SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH

QUANTITATIVEo describes distributions and frequencies

QUALITATIVEo examines meaning and reasoning

We know that distributions and frequencies are useful…we also know that they don’t deal with experiential reality. In fact, what is actually going on is often difficult to measure in numerical ways. Instead, it must be shown.

SHOWN IN:

•WORDS •METAPHORS•IMAGES•MODELS OF REALITY

That people use to express themselves, make sense of their lives, and (for example) describe their health practices.

USING QUALITATIVE METHODS

•The ‘product’ is word-based, thematic…•Samples are ‘small’•Samples are ‘representative’•Reporting employs quotations, often

misinterpreted as ‘anecdotes’

QUOTATIONS FROM A SCIENTIFICALLY COLLECTED AND ANALYZED QUALITATIVE STUDY ARE ‘DATA POINTS’ THAT FUNCTION SIMILARLY TO STATISTICAL DATA POINTS.

QUALITATIVE RESEARCHPROVIDES A STRONG FOUNDATION

RCT

OTHER QUANTITATIVERESEARCH METHODS

ACUPERCEPTIONS PROJECT

•Depth interviews w/ American acupuncturists

1. What is ordinary practice like?2. Do acupuncturists practice according

to the explanatory model of Oriental medicine?

3. How are their own cultural values expressed & revealed?

ACUPERCEPTIONS SAMPLE

•N = 20 AMERICAN-TRAINED ‘ORDINARY’ ACUPUNCTURISTS

•FROM MULTIPLE U.S. STATES & SCHOOLS•BOTH SEXES•3 OR MORE YEARS OF CLINICAL

EXPERIENCE•WILLING TO PARTICIPATE IN PROJECT•TALKATIVE, THOUGHTFUL

GATHERING QUALITATIVE DATA:INTERVIEW TECHNIQUE:

ASK OPEN-ENDED QUESTIONS

•NO ANSWER IS IMPLIED •THE RESPONDENT CAN ANSWER AS S/HE

PLEASES •THE RESEARCHER MAY BE SURPRISED BY

RESULTING DATA.

SUPPOSE IT IS A NEW DAY. HOW DO YOU PREPARE YOURSELF FOR WORK?

I read notes. Two times a day I chant for my patients… ID

One of the first things I do is pray to the Grandmothers & Grandfathers to do things in a good way and help me see clearly… GL

My standard would be some modicum of neatness and order within the treatment room and in my own self, a sense of creating a welcoming space. Then I will…just sit…and call to my best person… KT

Me being very present to my own energy…and the openness ofmy own heart. I guess integrity would be the word of the day for me.KD

I meditate, do yoga, take a walk, eat a healthy breakfast—then I’m ready to work with others. NC

I just go to work! If there are…difficult cases, I do research ahead of time. LL

ANALYZING QUALITATIVE DATA

IDENTIFY AND MARK THEMES•THEME: INTENTIONALITY

• ‘patient-centered’ tonality• spiritual-emotional self-preparation to

deliver care

Do these ideas fit an Oriental Medicine medical model?Do these ideas fit a ‘western’ medical model?

PATIENT-CENTERED CARE

EMPHASIZES HORIZONTAL PATIENT-PRACTITIONER RELATIONSHIP

‘I’m here for patients. That’s a very conscious thought.’

EP

IS CHARACTERISTIC OF A RELATIONAL or HOLISTIC MEDICAL MODEL

SPIRITUAL-EMOTIONAL SELF- PREPARATION TO DELIVER MEDICAL CARE

IS IT ORDINARILY A PART OF ORIENTALMEDICINE THEORY or PRACTICE?

Sun Si Miao (581-682 AD) --I will strive to live in harmony with nature and teach my

patients to do the same--I will above all else hold and nurture a deep feeling of compassion--I will keep an open heart.

GENERALLY, DOES ACUPUNCTURE PRACTICE IN THE U.S. FIT WELL WITH THE ORIENTAL MEDICAL MODEL?

QI FLOWS…

“In humans, in one day and one night, there are 13,500 respirations, [during which the contents of] the vessels move 50 circuits around the body….” Nan Jing 1 (Flaws 1999)

DOES PRACTICE FLOW?

IS PRACTICE DYNAMIC? EMERGENT? ACTIVE?

…OR IS IT FORMULAIC?

•WHAT PRACTITIONERS SAY ABOUT QI

• SENSING QI

• SENSING THE NEEDLE AND ACUPOINT

• ESTABLISHING RELATIONSHIP

• DELIVERING TREATMENT

WHAT PRACTITIONERS SAY ABOUT QI/ENERGY

• I am always working with energy, but you burn yourself out ifyou use your own energy. You must channel it from othersources…Heaven, Earth…the Universe is filled with energyand we are working to get energy aligned and balancedinstead of in chaos, or being stagnant and stuck. NC

•After 23 years of practice, I don’t think it’s possible to deliver acupuncture without transmitting energy. DE

SENSING QI

I’m an average pulse taker…use the tongue for reinforcement. But … my forte is…listening with everything that I have and…hearing the gap in what one is saying and what one is living. …that’s where the juice is. It’s where the Qi is, right? Qi is energy and structure. WM

My hands feel as if they are turning into ears. I would like…when touching with intention, to hear what’s inside of where the hands are. I just have to wait…[and then] I’ll touch some part…and there’ll be a little ‘aha!’ that will tell me where to go. KT

For me, the pulses always were my best way in…the place where I really got down to business and made the treatment choice. I saw myself as an artist…sort of plucking the right strings that created the harmonious music. DE

SENSING THE NEEDLE AND THE ACUPOINT

I don’t move on to the next point until I know I’ve gottenthe Qi at that point. [What do you feel?] Kind of—kindof—like a pressure, or a light feedback in the needle. AB

When I feel like my hands are touching energy it givesme like, a chill up and down my spine. And with needles I getthe same thing. …I can actually ignite an acupuncture point with my finger; I don’t need a needle to do it. … If I’m using a needle,I feel something from the needle go into my fingers, like a littlecharge. GP

ESTABLISHING A RELATIONSHIP

[Acupuncture is] this ancient process of using needles…to affect the vitality of another human being in a way that helps that person become more in a homeostatic state, or morewho they’re meant to be. Basically all that an acupuncturist istrying to do is help the person show up in the best possiblewell-being. And sometimes that means living with their pain.It may be that what they’re carrying can’t really be gotten away,but can be lifted, or heartened, or made more bearable. … WhatI would like to do best is to be so present to someone when they come in that I get out of the way, and…understand that theyare already whole, and that all I am doing is providing a spacefor them finding their own wholeness. KT

ESTABLISHING A RELATIONSHIP HAS TWO ASPECTS

• FAMILIAR: establishing a relationship so thattreatment can be offered…all medical

systemsdo this

• DISTINCTIVE BECAUSE SPECIFIC TO A ‘FLOW’MODELRecognizing how energy flows amongpractitioner, patient, and universe…andencouraging a healing flow.

DELIVERING TREATMENT IN A FLOW MODEL

• DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT are not sequential, BUT LINKED IN AN ACTIVE FEEDBACK LOOP which allows the practitioner to judge if treatment is being effective in the moment.• The PATIENT OFTEN ACTIVELY PARTICIPATES

IN TREATMENT…and can feel if treatment is being effective.

ACTIVE FEEDBACK LOOP AND FLOW MODEL

If I’m working with pain, I want a response right away. So this morning I was working with shoulder pain. I wentto the shoulder, then put two needles in lower opposite leg, move shoulder and there was [not much] change, so I put another needle down in the leg and go up and move the shoulder again. I went back down to the leg, put another needle in, went back to the shoulder and the pain was gone. So I said ‘OK, I got what I wanted here.’ Then I put one needle in her hand on the affected arm, as a guide. As a guide for the energy to move up from leg and down arm to hand. … I want to be judging what I do in the moment. KD

INVOLVING THE PATIENT IN THE TREATMENT

•SOME STYLES EXPECT THIS• Kiiko Matsumoto: e.g., treating Oketsu

•PRACTITIONERS ASSESS THEIR PATIENTS• My goal is to meet people where they’re at…then

the treatment is just right for them. Someare sensitive, so I keep needles at the surface. Some people have difficulty accessing their energy…so forthem Qi is hard to obtain. So for them I needledeeply, vigorously,… KD

• By asking the patient’s body, you can alwaysget the right answer. DE

EXAMPLE OF A PATIENT SPONTANEOUSLY EXPRESSING HIS EXPERIENCE

“When you touch something, something else reverberates. There’s a connecting process going on….. [This is] interactive—you’re doing, I’m responding, and the two create something bigger than you and I.” JS

IN SUM: PRACTITIONERS DO PRACTICE AS IF THE FLOW OF QI MATTERS

THE EMERGENT MEDICAL MODEL

•High contact, patient-centered practice•Whole body-person focus•Patients modeled as responsive and

participatory, not passive•Practitioners skilled at sensing Qi•Diagnosis and treatment linked

in a feedback loop•Healing or transformative goal

HOW CAN WE PUT SUCH INFORMATION TO WORK?

WE CAN USE IT TO STRENGTHEN QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH

Scientific research must meet quality criteria. An essential one in cross-cultural research is called model fit validity.

MODEL FIT VALIDITY DEMANDS THAT THE METHODS AND TECHNIQUES USED TO STUDY SOMETHING BE APPROPRIATE TO THE TASK.

MODEL FIT VALIDTY

• Would you assess cricket by the rules of polo?• Do you judge the quality of a sweet cake by asking if it was properly grilled?

• Will you get a clear answer about the competence of acupuncture by assessing it according to the rules appropriate to the biomedical model?

The reason for practicing acupuncture, and for researching it, is to improve the quality of patients’ lives. …However, when it comes to research, the patients’ perspective and the subjective experience is often removed…. When this happens…research cannot answer the question of whether and how acupuncture addresses people’s health needs and improves their lives.” Paterson and Schnyer 2007:77

A …review of acupuncture research reports showed that most acupuncture research [has] been undertaken to prove the therapeutic efficacy of acupuncture, rather thangenerate knowledge that could be used to informclinical decision-making. Ryan 2006: 19

QUALITATIVE RESEARCH CAN HELP IMPROVE THE MODEL FIT VALIDITY OF CLINICAL TRIALS…

BY REFLECTING THE ACTUAL PRACTICE OF ACUPUNCTURE.

“The first principle…is that the clinical evaluation should respect the integrity of the medicine.”

MacPherson et al 2002

THE RCT--RANDOMIZED PLACEBO- CONTROLLED CLINICAL TRIAL--IS A USEFUL DESIGN FOR ASSESSING SPECIFIC ISOLABLE INTERVENTIONS, SUCH AS A DRUG, IN A LOW-CONTACT MEDICAL PRACTICE PATTERN

• It aims to minimize variables, e.g., focus on one diseaseand one test drug in a large sample randomlyassigned for same care within their group.

• Practitioner, patient, and ‘attitudes’ are purposefullyremoved as far as possible from the test.

IF WE ACCEPT THE ‘QI FLOW’ MODEL AS CHARACTERIZINGORDINARY ACUPUNCTURE PRACTICE, THE RCT IS NOT A GOOD DESIGN FOR ACUPUNCTURE.

• Needling is complex—not specific, not isolable• Acupuncture is a high-contact patient-centered practice• Skilled practitioners know if Qi is activated; patients often

do too, or are encouraged to notice.• Care is not ‘formulaic’ because• treatment is individualized• diagnosis and treatment on-going in feedback loop• focus of care is not on ‘cure’, but on achieving

dynamic physiological balance or homeodynamis• “Sham” cannot work if the whole body/universe is

involved in care, and energy is always transmitted.

“In 23 years of practice, I don’t think it’s possible to deliver acupuncture without transmitting energy.” DE

“I can actually ignite an acupuncture point with my finger. I don’t need a needle to do it”. GP

“Acupuncture isn’t a needle; it’s an environment.” PM

QUALITATIVE RESEARCHPROVIDES A STRONG FOUNDATION

RCT

OTHER QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH METHODS

WHERE CAN WE GO FROM HERE?

An in-depth study of 20 ‘ordinary’ acupuncturists is a good beginning, but cannot represent all acupuncturists.

What is needed now is to use qualitative data to design a survey instrument with high model fit validity that can be standardized and used to assess a large sample of acupuncturists quantitatively.

Would you like to be involved in such a project?

OTHER QUALITATIVE QUESTIONS TO EXPLORE•How does the theory of AOM get translated into the clinic?•Is acupuncture holistic as practiced—does it treat the

Whole mind-body-spirit? Is this idea traditional?...a ‘western’ add-on?

•Do acupuncturists follow the energy of the patient? Arethey aware of their own energy and its intersectionwith that of the patients? How can this be studied?

•What do practitioners aim to deliver, and what do patientsglean from acucare?

•What do practitioners think they are doing and why?•What do practitioners experience themselves as doing?•Do different styles result in different clinical results? •What are favored metaphors? How do these matter?•Are there significant national/regional differences in practice?

REFERENCES

Cassidy, C M 2004What Does It Mean To Practice an EnergyMedicine? J Altern Complement Med 10(1): 79- 83.

Cassidy, C M in press 2 chapters on “What does it mean to Practice an energy Medicine?” in D Major and M

Micozzi, Energy Medicine East and West, Elsevier Publ

MacPherson, et al, 2002, The clinical evaluation of traditionalEast Asian systems of medicine. Clin Acup Orient Med3(1): 16-19.

Paterson, C and R Schnyer 2007 Measuring patient-centeredoutcomes. Chapter 5 in: MacPherson, H et

al,Acupuncture Research, strategies for establishing an evidence base, Churchill-Livingstone (Elsevier), Edinburgh, pp 77-93.

Ryan, J D 2006 The Use of Evidence in Acupuncture ClinicalPractice. Aust J Acup and Chin Med 1(1):19-23.

THANK YOU!

REACH ME AT:

CLAIRE M CASSIDY, PHD, DIPL AC, LAC

WINDPATH@CASSIDY.NETINFO@ACUHEALINGWORKS.COM

MEDICAL META-PARADIGMS

PROCESSUAL/RELATIONAL REDUCTIONISTIC

Focus on flow, movement, VERBS Focus on states of being, NOUNSWhole body focus Physical body focusImbalance DiseasePeople vary; individualize care; Diseases vary, people similar;

minimize interventive protocols interventive protocols

normativeDiagnosis & treatment integrated Diagnosis precedes treatmentWhole person responds “Placebo Effect” problematicTransformativeCurative

“Physical symptoms are read narratively, contextually, and interpreted in cultural systems. A physician’s diagnosis is a plot summary of a socially constructed pathophysiological sequence of events.”

Kathryn MontgomeryHow Doctors Think: Clinical Judgmentand the Practice of Medicine

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