Acupuncture in Australia: regulation, education, practice, and research

Acupuncture was introduced to Australia as early as in the 1880s, and is a form of complementary and alternative medicine in this country. In the past 2 decades since the 1990s, acupuncture has experienced a rapid growth. Today, nearly 4000 acupuncturists are registered with the Chinese Medicine Boa...

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Main Author: Zhen Zheng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2014-09-01
Series:Integrative Medicine Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213422014000420
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spelling doaj-67284040668b4397bff5157deda81f902020-11-24T23:55:35ZengElsevierIntegrative Medicine Research2213-42202014-09-013310311010.1016/j.imr.2014.06.002Acupuncture in Australia: regulation, education, practice, and researchZhen Zheng0School of Health Sciences, RMIT University, Bundoora, Victoria, AustraliaAcupuncture was introduced to Australia as early as in the 1880s, and is a form of complementary and alternative medicine in this country. In the past 2 decades since the 1990s, acupuncture has experienced a rapid growth. Today, nearly 4000 acupuncturists are registered with the Chinese Medicine Board of Australia. “Acupuncturist,” “Oriental medicine practitioner,” and “Chinese medicine practitioners” are protected titles for registered acupuncturists. A bachelor's degree of 4 years in related fields is the minimal requirement for registration in Australia. Three public universities and three major private colleges offer nine undergraduate and three postgraduate programs that are approved by the Chinese Medicine Board of Australia. Those three universities also offer Master-degree and Doctor of Philosophy programs. Acupuncture is well accepted by the Australians, with 10% having received this treatment and 80% general medical practitioners referring their patients to acupuncture service. All private health insurance schemes provide rebates to patients receiving acupuncture treatment, and third-party payment is also available in six of eight Australian states and territories. Research output in acupuncture has increased greatly since 2000. A majority of research focuses on acupuncture and Tai Chi as treatment modalities, and mainly investigates their mechanism of action, associated pain, and gynecological and respiratory conditions. The future direction of acupuncture in Australia is to introduce this medicine in hospitals and gain access to the medical benefit scheme so that acupuncture can be accessed by a wider community, in particular those who come from a disadvantaged background. In conclusion, improved education, regulation, and research of acupuncture in Australia put this country in a leading position among Western countries with respect to acupuncture services.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213422014000420Acupuncture in AustraliaRegistrationRegulationAcupuncture researchAcupuncture practice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zhen Zheng
spellingShingle Zhen Zheng
Acupuncture in Australia: regulation, education, practice, and research
Integrative Medicine Research
Acupuncture in Australia
Registration
Regulation
Acupuncture research
Acupuncture practice
author_facet Zhen Zheng
author_sort Zhen Zheng
title Acupuncture in Australia: regulation, education, practice, and research
title_short Acupuncture in Australia: regulation, education, practice, and research
title_full Acupuncture in Australia: regulation, education, practice, and research
title_fullStr Acupuncture in Australia: regulation, education, practice, and research
title_full_unstemmed Acupuncture in Australia: regulation, education, practice, and research
title_sort acupuncture in australia: regulation, education, practice, and research
publisher Elsevier
series Integrative Medicine Research
issn 2213-4220
publishDate 2014-09-01
description Acupuncture was introduced to Australia as early as in the 1880s, and is a form of complementary and alternative medicine in this country. In the past 2 decades since the 1990s, acupuncture has experienced a rapid growth. Today, nearly 4000 acupuncturists are registered with the Chinese Medicine Board of Australia. “Acupuncturist,” “Oriental medicine practitioner,” and “Chinese medicine practitioners” are protected titles for registered acupuncturists. A bachelor's degree of 4 years in related fields is the minimal requirement for registration in Australia. Three public universities and three major private colleges offer nine undergraduate and three postgraduate programs that are approved by the Chinese Medicine Board of Australia. Those three universities also offer Master-degree and Doctor of Philosophy programs. Acupuncture is well accepted by the Australians, with 10% having received this treatment and 80% general medical practitioners referring their patients to acupuncture service. All private health insurance schemes provide rebates to patients receiving acupuncture treatment, and third-party payment is also available in six of eight Australian states and territories. Research output in acupuncture has increased greatly since 2000. A majority of research focuses on acupuncture and Tai Chi as treatment modalities, and mainly investigates their mechanism of action, associated pain, and gynecological and respiratory conditions. The future direction of acupuncture in Australia is to introduce this medicine in hospitals and gain access to the medical benefit scheme so that acupuncture can be accessed by a wider community, in particular those who come from a disadvantaged background. In conclusion, improved education, regulation, and research of acupuncture in Australia put this country in a leading position among Western countries with respect to acupuncture services.
topic Acupuncture in Australia
Registration
Regulation
Acupuncture research
Acupuncture practice
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213422014000420
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