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RESEARCH AND PRACTICE |
At the time of the study, Dominicus W. So, PhD, was with the Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, College Park.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Dominicus W. So, PhD, Howard University, Department of Psychology, Room N-269, CB Powell Building, 525 Bryant St, NW, Washington, DC 20059 (e-mail: dso{at}fac.howard.edu).
| ABSTRACT |
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Objectives. To explore whether treatment outcomes are associated with a patients degree of general hopefulness, expectations regarding treatment, attributions of health status, beliefs about mindbody dualism, and patientprovider relationship factors, I studied acupuncture patients goal attainment.
Methods. Sixty-two acupuncture patients were interviewed before and after acupuncture regarding goal attainment, mindbody beliefs, hopefulness, and attributions of health status. Demographics, acupuncture treatment, and health care usage information was also collected. Acupuncturists provided 3 months of treatment.
Results. Patients reported treatment goal attainment from acupuncture. Their perceived outcomes were not associated with previous treatment, patient demographics, or the expected and actual numbers of needle insertion. Successful outcomes were related positively to number of different CAM treatments used in the past year but negatively to patients expectations and the "Powerful Others" health locus of control dimension.
Conclusions. Perceived acupuncture outcomes seem not to be related to placebo effects and patient expectations, but rather to clientpractitioner relationship factors. (Am J Public Health. 2002;92:16621667)
| INTRODUCTION |
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Many Americans who seek Chinese medicine for relief of biological, musculoskeletal, and psychosomatic symptoms that are commonly managed by family physicians, chiropractors, or mental health professionals do so because they are dissatisfied with medical treatment (55.7%) or need a last resort (9.2%). Others (33.5%) are curious, pressed by friends, or attracted to holistic treatment.5 A survey of 200 first-time users of Chinese medicine in San Francisco indicated that only about 10% of the patientsubjects were referred to an acupuncturist by a medical doctor (1%) or nonmedical health care professional (8%); most (91%) of these users were referred by acupuncture student practitioners (28%), people in their lives (41%), or published advertisements and articles (15%), or were self-referrals (8%).5
Acupuncture embraces mindbody holism, pragmatism, naturalism, harmony of the opposites, and the manipulation of qi or chi.67 According to acupuncture theory, qi, the life energy, flows in the body through channels called the Meridian (jing-luo). Any disharmony or blockage of qi will lead to dysfunction. Acupuncture involves inserting needles into acupoints in the Meridian. Acupuncture and qi are incredible to some scientists, who wonder if acupuncture users are just collectively deluded; other critics cite the placebo effect as the reason for acupunctures alleged positive outcomes. Randomized clinical trials, however, have demonstrated acupunctures promising results and efficacy in adult postoperative pain, chemotherapy, pregnancy-related nausea, emesis, and postoperative dental pain.812 Even the least promising clinical findings suggest that acupuncture should be included in a comprehensive treatment program for substance abuse and asthma.1314
High-quality anecdotal reports of acupuncture outcomes are now required, and a forceful debate has begun to challenge the total reliance on randomized clinical trials to control placebo effects.1517 It is important to determine whether any confounding variables, such as placebo effects, patient expectations, clientpractitioner relationships, and other general factors such as demographics and sociopolitical issues, may affect patients perceived outcomes. This study attempted to explore how health and acupuncture treatment goals and outcomes may be affected by a patients degree of hopefulness, treatment expectations, health locus of control (i.e., attributions of health status), beliefs about mindbody dualism, health maintenance behaviors, and other relationship factors in treatment.
| METHODS |
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All of the participants were recruited from an acupuncture institute and private practitioners in the metropolitan areas of Baltimore, Md and Washington, DC, through advertisements posted at acupuncture clinics and solicitation letters sent to acupuncturists. A snowballing sampling procedure was also used to ensure that the acupuncture treatments stemmed from the same technique, called Five Elements Traditional Acupuncture. A standard project description and confidentiality assurance procedure were used in the participant recruitment process. Patients who underwent more than 3 pre-enrollment needling sessions were excluded.
Two standardized, structured interviews were conducted with each participant privately. The initial 40-minute interview covered the background questionnaire and pretest measurements. A standard course of acupuncture was then administered by the participants acupuncturist. After 9 sessions or 90 days from the initial interview, whichever came first, the researcher recontacted the participant for a brief interview to complete the posttest. In both interviews, participants were reminded that acupuncturists had no access to their responses.
Measures
Whereas all 5 measures were administered at the baseline interview, only 1 measure was administered at the posttest follow-up.
of .71 for this scale.20
-coefficient of .97, a 2-week testretest reliability of .91, and well-established criterion-related validity for this index.2122
coefficients ranging from .67 to .77 for this instrument, as well as reliability ranging between .83 and .86.23 For this study, I used the term "physicians" instead of "health professionals." | RESULTS |
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The contribution of the second acupuncture treatment variable, patients anticipated frequency of treatments, to goal attainment was examined because higher expected treatment frequency often implies more severe conditions. Seventy-four percent of our participants anticipated weekly sessions in the first 2 months of treatment. The average anticipated frequency was 3.77 sessions per month. The Pearson r showed no association between anticipated treatment frequency and goal attainment, which implies that patients chances of attaining their treatment goals did not depend on the severity of their conditions.
To examine whether the number of acupuncture treatments received would predict goal attainment, an analysis of covariance was conducted with GAS as the dependent variable and number of needling sessions between the initial and follow-up interviews as the predictor variable. The main effects for number of needling sessions were adjusted for a covariate: number of different types of health care used during the 12 months preceding the study. Although the analysis failed to demonstrate significant main effects for number of needling sessions, it again showed a significant effect for number of different health care modalities used in the 12 months preceding the study (F1 = 4.59; P = .04). One interpretation of these results is that the number of treatments received is not as important as the fact that patients received some acupuncture treatment.
Sociodemographics of Sample
Another series of analyses was conducted to examine the determinants of patients perceived positive outcomes. In analyses of the associations between the sociodemographic variables and acupuncture treatment outcome, GAS did not correlate with participants sex, age, race, education level, place of birth, or first language. To examine the possible sociopolitical influences of competing health care systems, I analyzed 2 clientpractitioner relationship variables hypothesized to influence patients perceptions of positive acupuncture outcomes. In the context of the first of these variables, patients willingness to tell their physicians that they are receiving acupuncture treatment, "physicians" refers to the physicians whom patients consulted about the same health issues.
Many acupuncture patients, disappointed with conventional Western biomedicine, try acupuncture as an alternative, long-term health care approach. As previously mentioned, only about 1% of acupuncture patients are referred to an acupuncturist by their physicians.5 Although at the outset of this study some patients reported that they had minimal contact with their physicians, most (77%) reported that they had already told or would tell their physicians that they were receiving acupuncture treatment. Patients willingness to tell their physicians about such treatment depends at least partly on their confidence in their health care providers (both physicians and acupuncturists). Our analysis did not find any association between goal attainment and patients willingness to inform their physicians about their acupuncture treatment, which indicates that patients who were willing to inform their physicians of their acupuncture treatment were not more likely to perceive positive outcomes from acupuncture.
The second clientpractitioner relationship factor examined was physician gender. Whereas most of the patients in the sample were female, about two thirds of the patients physicians were male. Most of the acupuncturists were female. An inference could be made that the female patients in the current study were dissatisfied with the maledominated biomedical health care system and thus were more likely to report positive outcomes from acupuncture, a field in which women are much better represented as both providers and clients. However, in another correlation analysis, goal attainment was not associated with physician gender.
Use of CAM Treatments
Patients use of CAM treatments was also examined. Forty-one percent of participants had used 4 or fewer different types of health care services in addition to acupuncture in the previous year, and 59% had used at least 5 different types of such services. A test of association conducted with the point-biserial correlation coefficient (rpb) indicated a significant relationship between GAS and number of different CAM treatments used in the past year (rpb = .36; P = .004), which means that high goal attainment correlated with use of a high number of intervention types. This predictive utility of prior use of CAM interventions raises the question of whether acupuncture patients goal attainment depends on current acupuncture treatment or past CAM interventions. One possible explanation for the associations observed is the presence of a spurious correlation between goal attainment and number of CAM treatments used in the previous year. A more probable interpretation is the presence of other important confounding factors. For example, patients who engage in a higher number of health maintenance activities may be more aware of changes in their health and thus more ready to report positive outcomes. Their illness recovery may also have been enhanced by their positive coping strategies or by the CAM health care, or both.
I attempted to identify which types of CAM interventions might have contributed to perceived acupuncture outcomes. Among the 24 types of CAM interventions and self-care activities on our list, only 12 were used by more than 10% of the patients: chiropractic (19%), exercise (68%), dietary/nutrition therapy (26%), herbs (23%), homeopathy (14%), medical care with medical doctor (59%), psychotherapy (23%), prayer/meditation (48%), support group/12-step program (15%), tai chi/yoga/qigong (14%), therapeutic massage (31%), and vitamins/minerals (57%). The association between each modality and acupuncture goal attainment was evaluated by an analysis of variance (ANOVA) for each of the 12 CAM interventions. Each of these ANOVAs used GAS as the dependent variable and presence/absence of each type of treatment as the predictor variable. Only use of homeopathy in the past year was found to be significantly associated with GAS (F 1,61 = 5.82; P = .0188). This association is interpreted below, with cautions upon future analyses.
Correlates of Acupuncture Outcomes
I hypothesized that acupuncture goal attainment would be associated with beliefs regarding mindbody dualism, degree of hopefulness, treatment expectations, and health locus of control. Use of homeopathy and of other CAM interventions were added as control variables. Table 1
shows the following significant correlations: (1) GAS is correlated with patients expectations from acupuncture, use of homeopathy in the preceding year, and number of different CAM treatments used in the preceding year; (2) hopefulness is also correlated with the "Chance" health locus of control dimension; (3) expectations from acupuncture are correlated with the "Powerful Others" health locus of control dimension and with homeopathy use; and (4) among the health loci, chance is correlated with the "Internal" and the "Powerful Others" health locus of control dimensions.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Our findings also indicate that acupuncture patients perceived positive outcomes were consistent across sociodemographic subgroups. Patients reports of improvement were influenced by only a few of the treatment variables, patient variables, and practitioner variables that I checked in our analyses. Nonetheless, the fact that number of CAM interventions used in the past year correlated with goal attainment raises the question of which variable was most important in determining acupuncture goal attainment: current acupuncture treatment, previous use of CAM interventions, or other confounding factors. Because I found a negative correlation between positive expectations from acupuncture and goal attainment, I conclude that the higher a patients treatment expectations, the less favorable his or her outcome.
I explain this paradoxical finding by speculating that those with very high expectations about acupuncture are more likely to be disappointed with its results and thus are less likely to perceive and report positive outcomes than those who use acupuncture only as a last resort. A second, alternative interpretation is that perceived positive outcomes cannot be a placebo effect, because if they were, the more patients expected from acupuncture, the more, not less, positive their outcome would have been. Five Elements Traditional Acupuncture, the type of acupuncture received by our participants, emphasizes the clientpractitioner relationship. This negative relationship between patient expectation and perceived outcome may be specific to Five Elements Traditional Acupuncture, because this technique requires patients to actively cooperate with treatment rather than passively await treatment results. The finding on the "Powerful Others" health locus of control dimension appears to support this second interpretation.
The negative relationship between acupuncture goal attainment and the "Powerful Others" health locus of control dimension suggests that the more control a patient assigns to the treatment provider, the less likely that patient is to achieve his or her treatment goals. Again, I speculate that because of the collaborative emphasis in Five Elements Traditional Acupuncture, the treatment would not be as effective for a patient who believes that the acupuncturist has sole responsibility for improving the patients health. The implication for health promotion is that if patients want to reach their health-related goals, they should not passively expect from health care providers but instead actively cooperate with them. Therefore, health care providers and educators should emphasize providerpatient collaboration and promote patients self-care health behavior.
Study Strengths
A major strength of this study is that it was based on community field research involving people in realistic clinical situations. Nonintrusive procedures were employed, and patients were interviewed in treatment rooms where they normally receive treatment. I did not attempt to manipulate any of the clinical variables and environments. Thus, this study has high generalizability and good face validity for acupuncture effectivenessthat is, positive perceived outcomes and self-reported improvement in quality of life. Studies of acupuncture efficacy, by contrast, address the question of improvements in placebocontrolled, experimental conditions, using objective outcome measures. Because our project did not propose to examine the question of acupuncture efficacy, our methodology was not designed to strictly control many clinical variables, as in randomized clinical trials. However, this study achieved more than a user satisfaction study can because its flexible use and standardized adaptation of the GAS allowed us to elucidate each acupuncture seekers specific definitions of treatment goals.
Recommendations
Because all of our research participants received Traditional Acupuncture, a method that emphasizes the Five Element approach in Chinese medicine, interpretation and generalization of our findings should be done cautiously. It is also recommended that future research explore acupunctures long-term impact, because acupuncture is often used both for long-term health maintenance and for short-term symptom reduction. Additionally, it seems appropriate to investigate further the clientpractitioner relationship and relational factors involved in health care. The negative relationship between treatment expectation and perceived outcome and the relative salience of the "Powerful Others" health locus of control dimension should draw our attention to the clientpractitioner relationship as well as factors such as trust, interpersonal style, rapport, and self-care. Better ways of measuring clientpractitioner relationship and rapport are needed. Finally, patientfocused effectiveness research should be continued with qualitative methods to tap into treatment efficiency, but balanced with randomized clinical trials and placebo-controlled laboratory experiments to tap into treatment efficacy. All in all, I recommend that further research evaluate general factors across treatment modalities and integrate variables in realistic situations in addition to isolating factors in laboratory experiments.
| Acknowledgments |
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Human Participant Protection
The University of Maryland Department of Psychology Human Subject Review Committee determined that participants in this study were not at risk and approved this study.
| Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication June 6, 2002.
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