Title: Acupuncture safety: what patients report on adverse events
1Acupuncture safety what patients report on
adverse events
- Hugh MacPherson
- Foundation for Traditional Chinese Medicine
- York, UK.
2The 2001 safety survey
- York acupuncture safety study prospective
survey of 34,000 treatments by traditional
acupuncturists - Published BMJ 2001323486-7
32001 safety surveysample size
- 574 (31) British Acupuncture Council
practitioners participated - Almost all patients self-funded
- Adverse events reported over a one month period,
covered 34,407 treatments -
42001 safety survey results
- No serious adverse events
-
- 43 significant minor adverse events, a rate of 12
per 10,000 treatments - 10,920 mild transient reactions (1 in 3
treatments)
52001 safety survey BMJ editorial
- Acupuncture is safe in the hands of competent
practitioners - Charles Vincent BMJ 2001323467-8
6But what do patients say?
- .the one source of experience that remains
largely ignored . - Patients have a key role to play in
identifying adverse events ..
Vincent Coulter QSHC 2002 11 76-80
7What about delayed conventional diagnosis?
- Since acupuncture is used as a complete medical
system, . a sinister underlying cause. (may be)
missed - Ernst E. 2001 Desktop Guide to Complementary
Alternative Medicine
8What about delayed conventional treatment?
- With depressing regularity we hear of.delayed
access to potentially life-saving conventional
treatment. - Ernst E. 2001 Desktop Guide to Complementary
Alternative Medicine
9What about acupuncturists advising a change to
prescribed medication?
- (Practitioners) . have the unfortunate habit of
doing this. - Ernst E. 2001 Desktop Guide to Complementary
Alternative Medicine
10Aims of new survey to..
- Find out from patients their experience of
adverse events - Identify adverse events associated with
- Delayed conventional diagnosis or treatment
- Advice from acupuncturists about prescribed
medication
11What we planned to doa prospective patient
survey
- All 1955 practitioners of the British
- Acupuncture Council invited
- Identify up to 60 consecutive patients each
- Patients sign consent forms and send to centre
- Three month questionnaires sent direct to
patients from centre - Target of 30,000 consultations
12Patient consent form
- Demographic data (age, sex)
- First time acupuncture?
- Treatment self-funded?
- Contact with General Practitioner?
- Experience of acupuncturist
- Any short-term reactions?
13Three month questionnaire
- Checklist of significant adverse events
(derived from previous surveys) - Details about nature, severity, duration and
outcome
14Three month questionnaire
- Was the adverse event serious?
- Hospitalisation?
- Permanent disability?
- Life-threatening?
- Over the three months
- Number of treatments
- Contact with General Practitioner
15Survey results
- 638 BAcC practitioners participated (33)
- 9,408 patients consented
- 6,348 three-month questionnaires received (67)
- reports covered 30,196 treatments
16About the patients
- 76 female 24 male
- 52 years average age
- 4 acupuncture paid by state
- 11 not had acupuncture before
17Main conditions being treated
18Pathway to acupuncture
19Serious adverse events over three months
-
- Three events occurred
- Hospital admission 1
- patient, with advanced breast and secondary
cancer, severe pain (8244) - Life threatening 2
- patient became severely ill, experience was
cathartic (3265) - patient, two days after treatment, fell asleep at
the wheel and crashed her car (5721) - Permanent disability 0
20Commonest significant events
Patients n 6348 No. events 1044
21Did your acupuncturist advise you to reduce or
stop taking medication prescribed by your doctor?
- 196 (3) patients reported yes of whom 6
patients reported adverse consequences - - hydrocortisone skin cream (4704)
- - antidepressant Seroxat (7122)
- - antidepressant Seroxat (7248)
- - antidepressant Setraline (8851)
- - hormone replacement therapy (8995)
- - medication unknown (9355)
22Did your acupuncturist advise you to consult
your GP or hospital specialist?
- 660 (10) reported yes
- 5527 (87) patients reported no, of whom 2
patients report adverse consequences - - 1 patient cost of ineffective
acupuncture for jaw pain, subsequent tooth
extraction (3611) - - 1 patient prolonged urinary tract
infection, subsequent antibiotics (6348) -
23Absolute risk
24Relative risk
25Would you be willing to have acupuncture again?
- 40 (0.6) of all 6348 patients
- had an adverse event
- and
- wouldnt want to have acupuncture again
26Patients short-term reactions to acupuncture
(n9408)
27Comparison of the two surveys
28Comparison of serious events
29Comparison of numbers of significant adverse
events
30Comparison of frequency of short-term reactions
31Limitations of the survey
- Not all practitioners participated
- Self-reporting by patients
- Sample too small for rare events
- No assessment of risk-benefit
32Conclusions
- Serious adverse event rate is very low
- Low risk of indirectly caused adverse events
- Patients outside state health system are not at
higher risk - Despite adverse events, almost all willing to
continue with acupuncture
33Acknowledgements
- Â
- 9,408 Patients
- 638 Practitioners
- Research Team
- Â
- Hugh MacPherson
- Tony Scullion
- Kate Thomas
- Stephen Walters