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Tess Lugos - Chinese Medicine
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Want to quit smoking?

12/1/2020

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Ah, new year, new resolutions. Whether it's dry January or Veganuary, lots of us want to start the year right by starting a healthy habit or kicking old ones.

I like supporting patients who want to stop smoking, or indeed any addictive substance. I use points on the ears as well as on the body. Why the ears? In the mid-1970s an auricular (ear) acupuncture protocol was developed in New York to treat many common drug addictions. The protocol is now referred to as the NADA protocol (NADA stands for the National Acupuncture Detoxification Association), which involves the insertion of small, stainless steel and disposable acupuncture needles into five points on the outer surface of the ears.
 
When the auricular points are combined with acupuncture points on the body, the treatment aims to relax the patient, relieve anxiety, regulate the autonomic nervous system, and strengthen the lungs and immune system, among other things. There is even a point on the wrist that makes cigarettes taste bad. 

As with all these things, acupuncture is not the one magic bullet that replaces all the hard work. It is one tool at your disposal, along with having a strategy in place, getting a buddy to help you, or getting behavioural counselling.

Photo by Paweł Czerwiński on Unsplash

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A safer alternative to opioids

14/10/2019

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I recently wrote about my friend Maria, who came to visit and stayed for two weeks while I gave her intensive acupuncture treatment for chronic fatigue and fibromyalgia. One of the things that struck me was how for years, she was prescribed very strong opioids like OxyContin. Opioids are a class of drugs that are prescribed to relieve persistent or severe pain, and include morphine and codeine. We know now that opioids are addictive and side effects are numerous, including increased pain. The US is in the grip of an opioid crisis, and abuse of these drugs has caused tens of thousands of deaths a year.

Part of the response in the US has been to push non-pharmaceutical options for pain control. This is when Chinese medicine can be invaluable. For example, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine (NASEM) recommend acupuncture as a first-line therapy for coping with the opioid crisis because it is found to be effective, safe and cost-effective for numerous types of acute and chronic pain.

In the UK, there is no official support for acupuncture or other unconventional treatment options to opioids. Acupuncture primarily sits outside the National Health Service, so people usually pay privately for treatment. But people come for treatment because they hear about it from friends and family. The evidence is also clear about the effectiveness of acupuncture for 117 conditions.

In my day-to-day practice, about a third of patients come for pain, usually for musculoskeletal or neurological reasons. It is wonderful seeing someone walk out of clinic a different person, one in less pain, more relaxed, and with a smile on their face. Because this is what I do every day I sometimes take acupuncture for granted, but it is a truly remarkable system of medicine.

​Photo by Dima Vishnevetsky from FreeImages

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Quit smoking with acupuncture

24/4/2017

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​What if I were to tell you that there is an acupuncture point on the wrist that helps make cigarettes taste bad? Aha, now that I have your attention, let me add that acupuncture not only helps with quitting smoking but with other addictions as well.
 
I like to use points on the ears as well as on the body. Why the ears? In the mid-1970s an auricular (ear) acupuncture protocol was developed in New York to treat many common drug addictions. The protocol is now referred to as the NADA protocol (NADA stands for the National Acupuncture Detoxification Association) and calls for the insertion of small, stainless steel and disposable acupuncture needles into five points on the outer surface of the ears.
 
When the auricular points are combined with acupuncture points on the body, the treatment aims to relax the patient, relieve anxiety, regulate the autonomic nervous system, and strengthen the lungs and immune system, among other things. And, yes, to make cigarettes taste bad!

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    Tess' blog

    ... or a record of a Filipina's adventures in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). 

    I am a practitioner of traditional acupuncture based  at Violet Hill Studios in St. John's Wood and in Hampstead Garden Suburb, both located in north London.

    ​I am registered and fully insured with the British Acupuncture Council. I studied Chinese Medicine at the Confucius Institute of TCM (within the London South Bank University) and at the First Affiliated Hospital of Heilongjiang University of Chinese Medicine in Harbin, China.

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