The Role of Research in Guiding Treatment for Women’s Health: A Qualitative Study of Traditional Chinese Medicine Acupuncturists
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology
2.1. Positioning of the Researcher
2.2. Group Interviews
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Findings
3.2. Overview of Themes
3.3. Working with What You’ve Got
3.3.1. “Pragmatic Treatment”
Sometimes you don’t have a lot of time, sometimes they come in, and they’re having an IVF cycle in two weeks’ time. So, you work with what you’ve got. And in an ideal world, I want to work with them a lot longer than that.IG 2 P4
The other thing that I have a little bit of difficulty with is geographic isolation. I treat people from [place name] ….. So, it’s a big catchment. So, women can’t come every week. They certainly can’t come two or three times a week. So, we just have to work with it.IG 1 P 3
I would prefer, like in China, to do five days a week. But when they can only come once a week, or if they’re doing both the woman’s health clinics twice a week at the reduced cost, I’ll still do things like ear points or give them lifestyle advice or herbal medicine so that they’re getting the daily effects of treatment not just once or twice a week.IG 2 P 2
Especially with the fertility patients, you’re making quite a big commitment as a practitioner. I will go in on a Sunday, I’ve even gone in on a New Year’s Day.IG 2 P 4
3.3.2. “Working It Out for Yourself”
I suppose over the long term, this is what works, just doing specific seminars or different books, so you learn overtime what works best.IG 3 P 4
I actually remember when I was at school being told don’t go near pregnant women…So, I pretty much worked out myself, read everything that I could find, which wasn’t a great deal.IG 2 P 3
We’ve got a peer support group going, it’s specifically around women’s health issues that we meet every three months. And at that, we look at what’s new in research. We might discuss a webinar, but it’s all based around educational content. And then aside from those meetings, that also provides a network of practitioners to discuss things. So, we have a Facebook page and we just pick up the phone and call someone, or we might put out to the whole group, “Look, I’ve had this and has anyone else had any experience with this? What do you think about this?” And get this conversation going. I find it really, really helpful.IG 2 P 4
3.4. Finding the Right Lens
3.4.1. “Adapting Research to a Clinic Lens”
One of the major issues with acupuncture research is that the research can’t be individualized to each case.IG 3 P 5
Unfortunately, a lot of our research people are one step away from clinical practice and clinical practice is an enormous resource that I think we underuse. I think we could be doing a lot more with sharing what we actually do in practice. It’s quite different from what they do in a clinical trial.IG 1 P3
If we can obtain with a bit more evidence, say, you do need to come in three times a week, because this bit of research showed that we’ve got far better results than once a week, do you know what I mean? And maybe you’ll alter your costing to make that happen… this condition actually electro-acupuncture is better than the manual—let’s compare some things, what actually does work better or more optimally.IG2 P4
3.4.2. ‘More for the Medics and Patients’
I personally don’t utilize research in my practice, I see more value in research, evidence-based research, for the medics and for the public to see the value of what we are doing.IG 1 P 2
I generally end up explaining why I’m not going to do what the research says, describing individualized treatment and how it’s far more important and how you actually get better results with individualized treatment than you do by using a straight-out protocol.IG1 P3
3.4.3. ‘Making Research Digestible’
Presenting that research to you in a way that you can digest it and in a way that’s really relevant to the patients you see in your clinic, whenever that happens that’s when I’m most interested and most likely to apply that research to my actual clinical practice.IG 3 P 5
It is sometimes hard to understand is this a good piece of research or not? […] So, I think summaries in a newsletter would be—I would personally find useful.IG 2 P 4
3.4.4. ‘Teachers You Can Trust’
I don’t mind reading academic papers. My hesitation is being able to take that data and put it into a clinical context with the patient. So sometimes I look at who’s done the research and if there’s someone that I’m familiar with, who’s got a name in our industry with the experience clinically I am much more likely to take that on board as something that I can apply in my clinical setting, otherwise, I’m more skeptical about taking direct data out of the protocol and just putting that into my patient context.IG 3 P 3
4. Discussion
4.1. Principal Findings
4.2. Strengths and Limitations
4.3. Implications for Clinical Practice and Research
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Group | Interview Group 1 AUS + NZ | Interview Group 2 NZ | Interview Group 3 AUS |
---|---|---|---|
Gender | |||
Male | 0 | 2 | 0 |
Female | 3 | 2 | 4 |
Country | |||
Australia (AUS) | 2 | 0 | 4 |
New Zealand (NZ) | 1 | 4 | 0 |
Years in practice | |||
<5 years | 0 | 0 | 0 |
5–10 years | 0 | 0 | 0 |
>10 years | 3 | 4 | 4 |
Not Mainstream but a Stream | |
---|---|
Themes | Subthemes |
Working with what you’ve got | Pragmatic treatment |
Working it out for yourself | |
Finding the right lens | Adapting research to a clinic lens |
More for the medics and patients than us | |
Making research digestible | |
Teachers you can trust |
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Armour, M.; Betts, D.; Roberts, K.; Armour, S.; Smith, C.A. The Role of Research in Guiding Treatment for Women’s Health: A Qualitative Study of Traditional Chinese Medicine Acupuncturists. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 834. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020834
Armour M, Betts D, Roberts K, Armour S, Smith CA. The Role of Research in Guiding Treatment for Women’s Health: A Qualitative Study of Traditional Chinese Medicine Acupuncturists. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(2):834. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020834
Chicago/Turabian StyleArmour, Mike, Debra Betts, Kate Roberts, Susanne Armour, and Caroline A. Smith. 2021. "The Role of Research in Guiding Treatment for Women’s Health: A Qualitative Study of Traditional Chinese Medicine Acupuncturists" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 2: 834. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020834
APA StyleArmour, M., Betts, D., Roberts, K., Armour, S., & Smith, C. A. (2021). The Role of Research in Guiding Treatment for Women’s Health: A Qualitative Study of Traditional Chinese Medicine Acupuncturists. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(2), 834. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18020834