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Can Acupuncture Cure Addiction Although
acupuncture and Oriental medicine have made great strides in the past few
decades, it continues to face obstacles from other health professionals
and policy makers, in part because of a lack of randomized, controlled
trials that prove its effectiveness. (see
Acupuncture Point ) Everyone claims
addiction is a major problem in this country. The jails are crowded with
addicts. Addiction, either directly or indirectly, costs untold millions
(and possibly billions) of dollars in every area of life: poor health;
lost productivity; crime; accidents; and so on. Addiction is a state
of mind. Addictive thinking is so pervasive in our country that we tend to
lose perspective, and substance dependence merely marks the extreme end of
a continuum. In simple terms, addiction stems from an unreasoned,
counterproductive attachment to an idea, person or thing. You can be
addicted to drugs, alcohol or nicotine, but you can also be addicted to
food; money; exercise; work; power; sex; or television. Addictive
attachments are a reaction to an inner sense of emptiness, so in an
acupuncture paradigm, addiction is perceived as a condition of "empty
fire." This describes the volatile impulsivity of many addicts. It also
acknowledges the underlying feelings of weakness and fear that set someone
up for addiction. To understand how acupuncture contributes to substance abuse treatment, it
helps to have a basic grasp of the differences between Eastern and Western
medical paradigms. Oriental medicine assumes that mind, body and spirit
are inextricably connected and affect each other. It relies heavily on the
body's intrinsic capacity for healing itself. Imbalances in the body's
energy matrices cause disease, and acupuncture heals by restoring balance.
Standard Western substance abuse treatment is confrontational; it operates
on the assumption that the patient's denial must be shattered before
recovery can begin. Relapse is often cause for dismissal from the program,
even though everyone admits relapse is part of the disease. Everyone also
acknowledges that addiction is a disease of lying - to oneself and to
others - yet most treatment relies heavily on talk, either through
counseling or meetings. (see
Acupuncture Point ) Treatment centers
that include acupuncture take a nurturing, but not enabling, approach. The
goal is to build self-reliance from the inside out by encouraging even
small gains while de-emphasizing punishment for missteps. Patience with
the process is key to an acupuncture-based treatment program. Acupuncture
originated in China more than 2,000 years ago, making it one of the oldest
and most commonly used medical procedures in the world. Does it Really
Work? Find out about Acupuncture Point
http://AcupuncturePoint.smartreviewguide.com
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