Smith, CA & Crowther, CA (2009) Acupuncture for induction of labour, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 1, 1-26
The pregnant woman is induced when the pregnancy is becoming dangerous either for herself or for the unborn child. Generally done by drugs, Smith and Crowther (2009) reviewed the effects of induction that has been impelled by acupuncture which has been historically used to help induce labor and to reduce labor pain. Smith and Crowther (2009) conducted a review that included three trials involving 212 women. They concluded that clinical evidence of the effectiveness of acupuncture as applied to this situation is limited, although some qualitative small studies do suggest that women who receive acupuncture receive fewer methods of induction than do women who receive the standard care of induction.
This article is particularly significant given that we are living in a period when increasingly more people turn to holistic or alternative medicines for help in curing their symptoms, in treating pain, or in preventing certain symptoms (MacLennan, 2002). On the whole, however, science has provided us with very little clinical evidence about the effects of alternative medicine, and much of this is mixed. Some practitioners state acupuncture to be helpful. Acupuncture may not be helpful for chronic or intense pain, but it has been conclusively revealed to diminish nausea and certain types of pain, but otherwise several review articles conclude it to have a placebo effect (Ernst, 2006). In this way, medical practitioners are skeptical about the medical effects of acupuncture and are cautious in prescribing it. Given these mixed reviews and given the potentially significant effect of acupuncture to the medical...
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