Guest guest Posted December 28, 2006 Report Share Posted December 28, 2006 Divergent views share a fine point: pain relief By Chaityn Lebovits, Globe Correspondent | December 28, 2006 The objective: Learn how to relieve back pain, headaches, and other chronic conditions. Article Tools - [image: PRINTER FRIENDLY]Printer friendly<http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/12/28/divergent_views_sh\ are_a_fine_point_pain_relief?mode=PF> - [image: E-MAIL]E-mail to a friend<javascript:openWindow('http://tools.boston.com/pass-it-on?story_url=http:\ //www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2006/12/28/divergent_views_share_a_fine_poi\ nt_pain_relief','mailit','scrollbars,resizable,width=770,height=450');> - [image: RSS FEEDS]Local RSS feed<http://www.boston.com/news/local?mode=rss_10> - [image: RSS FEEDS]Available RSS feeds<http://www.boston.com/tools/rss> - [image: MOST E-MAILED]Most e-mailed<http://tools.boston.com/pass-it-on/popular> - [image: REPRINTS & LICENSING]Reprints & Licensing<http://www.globereprints.com/> - Share on Facebook<http://www.facebook.com/share.php?u=http://www.boston.com/news/local/ar\ ticles/2006/12/28/divergent_views_share_a_fine_point_pain_relief> - [image: Tag with Del.icio.us] <http://del.icio.us/post> Save this article <http://del.icio.us/post> - powered by Del.icio.us <http://del.icio.us/about/> More: - Globe City/Region stories<http://www.boston.com/news/globe/city_region> | - Latest local news <http://www.boston.com/news/local> | - Globe front page <http://www.boston.com/news/globe/> | - Boston.com <http://www.boston.com/> *Sign up for:* - Globe Headlines e-mail <http://www.boston.com/help/email/headlines/> | - Breaking News Alerts<http://www.boston.com/help/email/breaking_news/> Two rows of examining beds filled the Watertown classroom, where students took turns placing 32-gauge steel needles into their foreheads, backs, feet, and arms. At the New England School of Acupuncture, you'd better trust your lab partner. Across town, at Tufts University School of Medicine, students are taught about needles, too -- but the more familiar kind used for drawing blood or giving injections. The two schools -- a few miles apart in distance, worlds apart in philosophy-- linked up this year for a pioneering program in pain management. " Upon graduation the students will become experts on both the Eastern and Western perspective, " said Dr. Glickman-Simon, who created the joint program. The intention is to widen the arsenal for fighting pain, providing acupuncturists with a grounding in conventional diagnostic and treatment techniques and exposing Tufts students to age-old approaches that practitioners say succeed where modern medicine alone fails. Founded in 1975, the New England School of Acupuncture, or NESA, bills itself as the first school of acupuncture and oriental medicine in the nation. Earlier this month it moved from Watertown to expanded quarters on California Street in Newton. Glickman-Simon chairs NESA's Western Biomedicine Department and is an assistant professor of medicine at Tufts. The 45-year-old Sudbury resident became interested in alternative medicine while in private practice a dozen years ago. Frustrated by the struggles of some patients, he decided to take a " more enlightened " approach. " A lot of the conditions I saw seemed to be stress-related, " said Glickman-Simon. " Treating them with medication didn't get to the root of the problem. I figured that there must be another system other than [traditional] medicine, and that piqued my interest. " Glickman-Simon became involved with the acupuncture school while doing clinical work at Spectrum Medical Arts (now Whole Health New England) in Arlington in the mid-1990s. Its director -- a physician and acupuncturist with close ties to the school -- recruited Glickman-Simon to teach a class. He was named chair of biomedicine in 2000. The same year, Glickman-Simon started teaching compl ementary medicine for Tufts's pain research education and policy master's degree program, exploring topics ranging from medicinal herbs to spiritual healing. He also gives a lecture to second-year medical students called " Faith, " which examines the role of spirituality in healing. When Glickman-Simon first suggested bringing acupuncturists into a Tufts program, some of the medical school trustees were skeptical. They wondered how it would affect the school's reputation as a rigorous scientific institution. He assured them that Tufts itself would not be teaching students to practice the technique, but rather equipping them to answer questions they are bound to get from patients about alternative treatments. " As far as I'm concerned, if patients are seriously interested in these topics, physicians and other health professionals should be too, " he said. Glickman-Simon designed a course on medical acupuncture for the program, which covers the latest research into how it works. But he acknowledges that it's still not entirely known why, say, poking the hand might make the head feel better. If the treatment works, he's willing to live with a little mystery. " This is what the practice of medicine or acupuncture or any health care field is all about --making clinical decisions on behalf of patients, " he said. The joint program began in January, with nine students, all but one from NESA. Kindreth Olsen, 27, who is finishing up a degree in acupuncture and Chinese medicine at NESA, said she saw the benefits of combining alternative and conventional medicine while assisting an acupuncturist at Baystate Medical Center's pain clinic in Springfield. She also worked at an acupuncture clinic in Concord, N.H., treating cancer patients suffering side effects from chemotherapy. " As acupuncture gains acceptance into mainstream medicine, it is necessary for medical doctors and acupuncturists to develop a relationship, " said Olsen, whose Tufts courses included one on the role of drugs in managing pain. Glickman-Simon said he is impressed at how patients have driven the medical establishment into paying attention to alternative medicine. " This program could never have happened 10 years ago, or even five years ago, " he said. Now many hospitals provide acupuncture in their pain clinics, including Newton Wellesley, Children's Hospital, Dana - Farber, and Boston Medical Center, where NESA students practice under the supervision of senior faculty. Still, acupuncture hasn't completely broken down the doors of mainstream medicine. Students in the joint program receive separate degrees, one from Tufts and the other from NESA. The names of the schools do not appear together on either certificate. *For more information on the joint program, visit **tufts.edu/med/prep*<http://tufts.edu/med/prep> *; for more on the New England School of Acupuncture visit **nesa.edu*<http://nesa.edu/> *. ** Chaityn Lebovits can be reached at **Lebovits@...* *. *** © Copyright 2006 Globe Newspaper Company. <http://rmedia.boston.com/RealMedia/ads/click_lx.ads/www.boston.com/news/local/1\ 701767471/BOTTOM/default/empty.gif/30613030666536363435393434626230> -- ~*~~*~ Happy Holidays from me and my family to you and yours! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.