Edinburgh University promoting veterinary acupuncture.

Sounds like an excuse for a junket.

Anyway, let’s hope that the students manage to fit in a very close look at the real history of Traditional Chinese Medicine – a history which is explained in detail by Rose Shapiro in the ‘Full of Easten Promise’ chapter of her book Suckers: How alternative medicine makes fools of us all:
pp. 51-55:

Dr Paul Unschuld of the University of Munich is the leading Western authority on the history of Chinese medicine. He has said the origins of Traditional Chinese Medicine as we know it today actually lie in the very recent past, and TCM is a ‘misnomer for an artificial system of health care ideas and practices generated between 1950 and 1975 by committees in the People’s Republic of China’. Unschuld describes how, after the communist revolution, the vast and heterogeneous Chinese medical heritage was restructured to fit Marxist-Maoist principles. Crucially, TCM was needed to maintain social and political control in a country beset by poverty and with fewer than twenty thousand scientifically trained doctors, mostly practising in big cities, to serve a predominantly rural population of around six hundred million. Ancient practices were selectively cherry-picked, with many elements reinterpreted, in order to ‘build a future of meaningful coexistence of modern Western and traditional Chinese ideas and practices’. [13]

-snip-

Straightforward pragmatism would produce a consolidated medicine that could satisfy the nation’s health needs and it was Mao himself who enabled the modified version of the traditional medicine to be saved. Certainly, his own doctor, in a controversial 1995 biography, describes Mao as rejecting it when ill and saying ‘even though I believe we should promote Chinese medicine, I personally do not believe in it. I don’t take Chinese medicine’. [18]

Mao’s ideas took shape in the slogan ‘the scientification of Chinese medicine and popularisation of Western medicine’ which was to dominate Chinese medical policy in subsequent years. In post-revolutionary China The New Acupuncture by scientifically trained doctor Zhu Lian became the principal acupuncture manual and placed Maoist propaganda at acupuncture’s heart. [19] Though interest acupuncture had dwindled in the first half of the twentieth century, Zhu Lian believed that it had the right qualities, both practical and political, to serve the Chinese Communist Party. She completed the book in 1949 just as the Communists finally won the civil war and, as Kim Taylor demonstrated, uses military and administrative metaphors throughout. Shu Lian’s acupuncture diagrams show the body in divisions or parts rather than the integrated whole it had been represented as in the past. For the first time acupuncture points are arranged in divisions and straight lines. ‘Internal body parts are ascribed a bureaucratic role in the functioning unit of the body, with the heart ascribed the role of ruler, the lung that of ministers, and so on, in hierarchical order.’ The New Acupuncture is full of these administrative and political metaphors to the extent that ‘a direct image of the Chinese Communist Party has been superimposed on the body,’ says Taylor.

-snip-

The standardised new acupuncture developed in the 1950s was formally disseminated through the textbooks given to the ‘barefoot doctors’ and other students of TCM. Crucially, these were the acupuncture manuals that were translated into English and became the basis of the acupuncture taught and performed outside China, such as the Barefoot Doctors Manual published in America in 1977. [21]

13. Interview with Dr Paul Unschuld, Acupuncture Today, 2004
18. Zhisui Li, The Private Life of Chairman Mao: The inside story of the man who made modern China, Chatto and Windus, 1994
19. Shu Lian, 2nd edition of The New Acupuncture, People’s Medical Publishers, 1954
21. Barefoot Doctor’s Manual, English translation of the official Chinese paramedical textbook, Running Press, 1977


p. 63:

Ear acupuncture was invented in the 1950s by a French doctor working in Lyons called Paul Nogier. The rather implausible story goes that Nogier encountered several people who claimed to have been cured of sciatica after having their ears cauterised by healers (known as guerissseurs) in Marseilles. This somehow led him to theorise that the ear was in some way correlated to every other part of the body. It is thought that the Chinese learned of Dr Nogier’s work and then developed their own auricular mappings. ‘This correspondence system was easy to teach “barefoot doctor” acupuncture technicians to readily assimilate into their paramedical practices,’ according to the American journal of Medical Acupuncture. [52] Dr George Ulett has noted that the vagus nerve, which is linked to all the major body organs, supplies the central sections of the ear, but this anatomical fact may be irrelevant since there is little research evidence for the efficacy of ear acupuncture anyway. [53]

52. Bryan I. Frank and Nader Soliman, ‘Shen Men: a critical assessment through advanced auricular therapy’, Medical Acupuncture Physicians’ Journal, 1998
53. George A. Ulett and SongPin Han, The Biology of Acupuncture, Warren H Green Inc, 2002


And let’s also hope that those students manage to examine some of the issues raised in this PowerPoint presentation by the late veterinary surgeon, Robert Imrie. For example:
From slide 100:

Do Acupuncture Points Really Exist?

Thanks to “transposition” from humans to animals, horses have been blessed with a gallbladder meridian even though they don’t have gallbladders!


From slide 111:

What about efficacy? Does acupuncture “work”?

An appropriate response might be:

“Does which acupuncture work?... and what exactly do you mean by ‘work’?”


From slide 115:

Some traditions call for the passage of electrical current through needles. Others call for the use of dermal pad electrodes with no skin penetration at all.

Therapeutic touch over acupuncture points is really therapeutic non-touch. I.e., it merely involves therapeutic hand-waving over said points.

Practitioners of all of these traditions claim substantial clinical efficacy… just as therapeutic phlebotomists did for bleeding prior to the mid-19th century.

The fact that efficacy is claimed for all these variants strongly suggests that acupuncture has no specific, above placebo, beyond distraction, etc., effects.


From slide 135:

The evidence for efficacy in veterinary medicine is far more dubious. It consists almost entirely of “case studies” and a handful of small and poorly designed clinical trials – almost all in horses.

Curiously, almost none of the studies performed in horses have evaluated filiform needle acupuncture; rather, they have looked at electrical stimulation of putative acupuncture points (‘electroacupuncture’).This is consistent with the majority of acupuncture research performed in the veterinary field.

One problem with such studies is that control nonacupuncture points are almost never used; therefore, it is essentially impossible to separate effects that may be due to interventions at putative acupuncture points from simple nonspecific responses to an electrical stimulus.


http://drspinello.com/altmed/acuvet/acuvet_files/frame.htm


…and that they might end up reaching the same conclusion about acupuncture as neurologist, Steven Novella...
The acupuncture literature in general tends to be negative and is solidly negative with regard to the reality of chi, meridians, and acupuncture points. The literature is also contaminated by many studies…that are not actually looking at acupuncture but at other things, such as electrical nerve stimulation. The net effect of such studies is not to improve the practice of medicine or increase our knowledge of biology or medical treatments, but as a source of misdirection in order to promote demonstrably false and unscientific beliefs to the public.

Acupuncture and misdirection
http://www.theness.com/neurologicablog/index.php?p=103


...but I somehow doubt it. :(
 
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Blue Bubble, the report no longer seems to be available via the link you provided, however the BBC covers the story here:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/nol/ukfs_news/hi/newsid_7570000/newsid_7576800/7576808.stm

From the article:
Veterinary students from Edinburgh University are to study traditional acupuncture techniques to help animals.

Thirty students will travel to China next month to study the subject at the national agricultural university.

-snip-

Veterinary surgeon, Samantha Lindley, of Edinburgh University's hospital for small animals, trains about 100 vets a year in acupuncture.

She said: "Acupuncture can be used to treat any animals - mostly cats and dogs, but also rabbits, birds, reptiles, horses and farm animals.”


I wonder if she’s enjoyed a jaunt to Japan yet…
Their prized terriers are given samba-dancing lessons, their choicest beef herds are treated to daily massages and now, in an effort to produce the most delicious sushi in the world, Japanese tuna are to be given acupuncture.

-snip-

The treatment was exhibited at the International Japan Seafood Show but where the needles are inserted remains a secret.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/food_and_drink/article4393369.ece

(Nice to see Randi making an appearance in the comments section.)


…or even to Singapore:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/02/28/health/main677019.shtml

For a photo of the elephant receiving its treatment, see here:
http://images.google.co.uk/imgres?i...images?q=acupuncture+elephant&um=1&hl=en&sa=N
 

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