Belief in Acupuncture Key to Effect on Back Pain, Study Suggests
1. Belief in Acupuncture Key to Effect on Back Pain, Study
Suggests
FRIDAY, Feb. 27, 2015 (HealthDay News) -- Acupuncture for back pain is more likely to help people
who believe the treatment will work, new research suggests.
The study included 485 people who received acupuncture for back pain and completed
questionnaires before they began treatment, at two and three months into treatment, and then again
at six months after treatment.
Patients who had low expectations of acupuncture before they began the therapy gained less benefit
than those who believed it would work, according to the researchers at the University of
Southampton in England.
The investigators also found that patients who had a positive view of their back pain and felt in
control of their condition had less back-related disability while undergoing acupuncture.
2. The findings, published in the March issue of the Clinical Journal of Pain, showed that "psychological
factors were consistently associated with back-related disability," study author Dr. Felicity Bishop
said in a university news release.
"When individual patients came to see their back pain more positively, they went on to experience
less back-related disability," Bishop said.
"In particular," she explained, "they experienced less disability over the course of treatment when
they came to see their back pain as more controllable, when they felt they had better understanding
of their back pain, when they felt better able to cope with it, were less emotional about it, and when
they felt their back pain was going to have less of an impact on their lives."
One arthritis doctor said the study findings illustrate an important point.
"This study emphasizes the influence of the placebo effect on pain. The process whereby the brain's
processing of different emotions in relation to their treatment can influence outcome is a really
important area for research," Dr. Stephen Simpson, director of research at Arthritis Research UK,
said in the news release.
3. Arthritis Research UK funded the study.
SOURCE: University of Southampton, news release, Feb. 12, 2015
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/news/fullstory_151200.html