Tag Archives: American Acupuncture Council

Fracture

Acupuncture Research: Postoperative Complications in Fracture Patients

Is acupuncture effective in reducing postoperative complications in fracture patients?

Bone fracture is a common orthopedic condition that affects millions of people worldwide.

Patients with fractures often have a risk of developing complications, including pain, inflammation, infection, delayed healing, thrombosis, and organ failure.

A study evaluated individuals hospitalized for their first fracture surgery.

Patients who received three or more acupuncture treatments within one week were compared to those who received none and found a significantly higher survival probability in the acupuncture group.

The study concluded acupuncture appeared to have the potential to reduce postoperative complications in bone fracture patients.

Further large-scale studies are needed to provide stronger evidence.

Remember the American Acupuncture Council (AAC) offers an unparalleled track record in acupuncture risk management.

There is a reason acupuncturists have trusted AAC with their business for 50 years.

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Myofascial Release for the Sinew Channels of the Shoulder

 

So today we’re gonna look at some manual techniques that supplement your acupuncture treatment for shoulder injuries, particularly for something like supraspinatus tendinopathy that would be particularly indicated for that, but really a wide range of shoulder injuries.

Click here to download the transcript.

Disclaimer: The following is an actual transcript. We do our best to make sure the transcript is as accurate as possible, however, it may contain spelling or grammatical errors.  Due to the unique language of acupuncture, there will be errors, so we suggest you watch the video while reading the transcript.

Hi, welcome to another American Acupuncture Council webinar. My name is Brian Lau. I’m an instructor with the Sports Medicine Acupuncture Certification Program. I also have a YouTube channel and movement based program called Jing J Movement Training, where we look at channel send you relationships to movements.

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So today we’re gonna look at some manual techniques that supplement your acupuncture treatment for shoulder injuries, particularly for something like supraspinatus tendinopathy that would be particularly indicated for that, but really a wide range of shoulder injuries. We’re gonna look at some manual techniques that can supplement your acupuncture treatment.

So let’s look at a bone model real quick. Get a an idea of what we’re looking at. Oops, we’re Alan, we’re starting with maybe we should start over.

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So let’s look at a bone model first and we’ll get an idea of what our goals are for the treatment. Then we’ll look at some anatomy slides and then we can look at the actual manual techniques. So I have a scapula, so this is looking at it from the front. This is the right scapula. So we’d be looking through the rib cage.

On the front surface, on the ventral surface of the right scapula spine of the scapula’s on the back. So there’s the back view, but we’re looking at the front view. Here’s the coracoid process for reference. I’m gonna put the ERUs in here. So many times with shoulder injuries, especially with patients, as they start getting older, we have a situation where the head of the humerus rides up in the joint and usually a little bit forward.

So it doesn’t get seeded, it doesn’t set in the joint really well, and it rises up. The big problem with that is, as you can see, is when that humerus rises up, the humerus, especially the greater tubercle, tends to bump into the acromion and pinch anything that’s coming underneath there, like the supraspinatus tendon.

So it tends to ride up and a little bit forward. We’re gonna do several techniques on some of the rotator cuff muscles to help mobilize the head of the humerus back into the joint. And create a situation that allows for better healing. So that’s gonna be our goals. We’ll look at that on the the techniques, but let’s look at a little bit more anatomy first.

So we’ll go to the slides.

So this netter image we have from above. We have the rotator cuff muscles. So the trap trapezius, upper trapezius has taken off. We have a couple other images. We’re looking again at the back surface the posterior surface of the scapula and shoulder girdle, and then we’re looking at the anterior surface.

Pretty much what we just saw a second ago. We’re looking at the anterior surface of the shoulder girdle and the rotator cuff musculature. Let’s start with the upper portion. So we have the supraspinatus, and the supraspinous fossa. SI 12 would be going right into the belly of that muscle into a motor entry point of that muscle for reference.

That muscle then continues lateral. We would have LI 16 getting close to the myo tendonous junction. The supraspinatus is going underneath the acromion to attach to the greater tubercle right there. So this is a common area where it’d get impinged in shoulder impingement syndrome. We can start getting a tendonitis or tendinopathy.

Of that supraspinatus tendon very easily because of instability there can’t really see the in infraspinatus and Terry’s minor super well from this perspective, but we can see ’em wrapping around and going to the greater tubercle also. And then from the front we have the subscapularis on the subscapular fossa going to the lesser tubercle.

So from the back surface there’s a better view. We still have supraspinatus, but a better view of the infraspinatus. Looking at the fiber direction, going up and out. Terry’s minor, we’re not gonna look as much as at Terry’s minor in these techniques, but it’ll cover it somewhat. And then subscapularis from the front also going up and out in its fiber direction.

So just a image with some points in, for some reference, we have SI 12 in the supraspinatus. We have SI 13 in the superspinatus. I 16. All of these are very protected. As long as your measurement’s good, very protect is protected by the subscapular fossa, that needle can go straight down and it’s gonna be protected by bone as long as I’m not way forward and diving the needle down through the trapezius higher, farther forward than the supraspinous fossa that could cause a pneumothorax with deep needling there.

If I’m measured correctly and I’m, relatively close to the spine of the scapula, very safe points. Sometimes people even thread from Ally 16 underneath the acromion towards Ally 15. So it’s an interesting aspect is that we have ally channel points more at the tendon aspect. We have si 12, si 13 much more related to the belly of the muscle.

You can go back and review and recall that the Ally channel intersects. The small intestine channel at SI 12, and you can see that there is quite a relationship there. From the back we have SI 11, 10 and nine, wrapping around the Terrys minor. So you can see the SI channel really relates quite a bit to the the rotator cuff musculature.

And then from a, from the front, we have heart one, an opposing muscle group in the sense that it does similar. Activity that it stabilizes the head of the humerus, but it does internal rotation versus these si channel muscles which do external rotation. So the heart Sinu channel has a slight different capacity in its in its actions, but there’s heart one would go deep into that.

Subscapularis, we can see it almost better from this top image where we would be going through the axilla. The arm wouldn’t be going through the anterior deltoids like this. So the arm would be up, it’d be going into the axilla parallel with the rib cage deep needling into heart. One would access the subscapularis a good technique to really learn in class if you’ve never done it because there is a pneumothorax thorax risk if it’s not done properly.

But we’ll look at a manual technique, which is great practice for this needling technique. And it’s actually a very effective technique in and of its own. So one last image. So this is gonna be our basic goal is we’re gonna. Sink down into the supraspinous fossa for the supraspinatus, and we’re going to slowly spread posterior to anterior.

We’ll do several passes covering the length of the muscle. My goal is gonna be to reduce tension, in the supraspinatus, but particularly that sinking down. I wanna notice that muscle attaches to the greater tubercle. So I want to do the technique in such a way that’s gonna drop descend the head of the humerus.

Same thing with the infraspinatus. I’m gonna sink in and slowly spread cross fiber through the infraspinatus muscle and using that muscle as a lever. I wanna pull down the head of the humerus. So we’re gonna be using the myofascia to move the humerus down so the slow spreading over infraspinatus, slow spreading over supraspinatus.

We’ll have that goal. Descending the head of the humerus. We can almost think about these as ification techniques because these muscles tend to get inhibited and they don’t properly seat the head of the humerus into the joint, into the glenoid cavity. And then the final technique we’ll look at will be face up, will be coming deep in the heart, one pinning the tissue, and as the patient does movement, there’ll be an influence down also to help descend the head of the humerus.

But this will be more of a pin and stretch technique, and it’ll be more of a sedating technique. So very frequently we have a situation where this muscle is in excess, this muscle is overactive, the bully. And it tends to create a little internal rotation, pulls the joint forward, but collectively those rotator cuff muscles are failing to seat the head of the humerus into the joint.

And that sets the situation up for the. Bone to rise up and pinch that supraspinatus tendon. This is something we work with quite a bit in our upper extremity class in sports medicine, acupuncture. So this is something we go through quite extensively in our upper extremity class, in sports medicine, acupuncture.

We go through a lot of the dynamics of this, but we’ll get a flavor of this through the videos that are coming up. So let’s go ahead and watch the first video on supraspinatus and we’ll come back and review some of what I just said with the infraspinatus to set up that next video. Look at some rotator cuff techniques.

First of all, just a little bit of cocoa butter. You can see on my finger, not a whole lot. I’m not even gonna put it on patient, just get it on my hands. So just a little bit of lubrication, but I want it to be mostly grab on the connective tissue. So more shearing type techniques. So not too much lubrication.

For the first one on supraspinatus, I’m gonna have the arm up on the table. There’s the spine of the scapula. I’m gonna move this technique. I’m not gonna use my finger like this. I’ll show the full technique in a second, but I’m gonna move the trap slightly out of the way so I can sink down into the supra spinous fossa.

And my target will be on the supraspinatus, but I wanna see the head of the humerus drop down. So this is primarily a technique to drop the head of the humerus down in the glenoid cavity. Using the supraspinatus as a lever. So I’m gonna come at the head of the table, hands on the spine of the scapula, move the traps out of the way, sink down into the spine.

Supraspinous, fossa, and descend the head of the humerus.

Pushed down. I wanna see that head of the humerus drop down. My thumbs are in contact with the supinate and I’m just gently spreading over it.

Spine of the scapula. The head of the humerus push down

spine of the scapula decent. The head of the humerus push down

and I’m just covering the range of it. So right at SI 12, slightly medial to SI 12. Going closer to SI 13. Moving lateral to the region of Ally 16, and I’m just covering as much of the s spine as fossa as I can my last pass.

Alright, so infraspinatus, just the review, I’m gonna be spreading, sinking in kind of at the spine of the scapula. I’m gonna be spreading down and out going across the fibers, but with that emphasis on pulling downward to help descend the head of the humerus. So it’ll be a down and out slow spread myofascial release type technique through the infraspinatus.

Let’s go ahead and look at that technique. So for infraspinatus, I wanna bring the arm off the table. About 90 degrees, unless the patient has some pain. With that, you can make it a smaller angle, but my preference is to be 90 degrees. I’m gonna come back to the head of the table infraspinatus. The fibers are going up and out, so towards the greater tubercle.

So up and out, I’m gonna do a pass across the fibers of it. Again, it’s like I wanna pull through that muscle to drop the head of the humerus down. This one I often use a knuckle, maybe two knuckles. I turn my ulnar side away. That way my bones are lined up. I can start at that spine of the scapula, sink down into the tissue, move the tissue down and out, and I’m gonna start to slowly spread through the infraspinatus.

So just a slow stroke, waiting for the tissue to soften, not trying to rush through the tissue,

getting small fasciculations along the way. And there we go. So same thing, I’m gonna go slightly medial or lateral. I went medial in this case, sink down into the tissue to the depth of tension and shear down and out.

I’m just covering the infraspinatus, so I’m at the lats now. I’m gonna stop there.

Move slightly lateral down and out.

So one more pass. I can add patient movement with this. So the infraspinatus is an external rotator. I can have them do slight external rotation. Then slight internal rotation as if they’re bringing the arm back onto the table. So just the comfort just to get a little movement as they’re doing it. Go and relax there for a moment.

So I’m gonna sink in first, drop into the tissue, and go ahead and do that slight motion now. External rotation, I’m just holding that barrier. That’s good right there. Internal rotation, go back the other way, and this way it’s gonna start to stretch through that tissue. That might be a little more challenging for the patient.

External rotation, so the hand comes up and hand back.

Good. Do one more. Pass there. Hand up. And then hand back. As he starts going that way, I’m gonna really spread through the tissue.

And there we go. That’s good. Alright, so last video and last technique we’ll look at will be for the subscapularis. Again, this is a really good technique if you’ve never done deep needling into heart, one, not only can you get a lot of results and improvement with patient’s conditions by doing this technique.

Maybe that’s all you ever do, but it also does set up the palpation and the sort of kinesthetic awareness of doing a deep needling technique there. So we’ll look at a manual technique for the subscapularis. I’ll hold off on the needling technique because I think this is best left for classroom in person instruction.

If you’ve not needle the subscapularis deep in the heart, one. It’s a safe technique. If you’re taught properly, you’re pretty close to the rib cage, you’re following parallel to the rib cage and you’re going straight down into the subscapular fossa. So if you don’t have the palpation down, the needle could advance into the between the ribs and into the pleura and causing pneumothorax.

So it’s definitely a technique to learn in person with guidance if you’ve never done it before. This manual technique, however, will be very useful to get the palpation down. And the manual technique is extremely effective in and of itself. So I’m gonna do, just like I would do with the needle technique, I’m gonna reach under the scapula, move the scapula out just a little bit.

It doesn’t move it out much, but it gives you a little bit of extra space. I have the lats peck, I have this little triangle right in there. I’m just gonna come in. A couple tricks with this is I don’t want to grab too much skin. ’cause as I advance down, you can feel how that’s pulling skin and it stops me from going too far down, doesn’t feel great on his end, and then it stops me from doing the technique.

So I need to get the skin out of the way. By that I mean I need to lift it a little bit, move my fingers around, kinda get to where I’m gonna go advance down into that subscapular fossa without pulling a lot of excess skin. So I’m gonna now angle straight down. I can feel the ribs on my fingernail side, and I’m gonna angle straight down into that subscapular fossa cross fiber feeling for bands of that subscapularis muscle.

It’s almost like I’m going to si 11 on the front of the scapula, so this would be deep in the heart one. So once I’m there. One of the things I can do is I can have the patient move their elbow down following the angle of the arm. So they’re making their arm long. That might be enough, but but if they can, then I’m gonna have them start to bring their arm up, keeping the elbow out.

There you go. Keeping that elbow out, bringing the fists slowly over the chest, reaching the elbow out. I really wanna. Push the subscapularis down while they reach the elbow out. Decompress the shoulder joint so as much as they can bring you in by bringing the arm up, the better. So they’re gonna get the hand up.

And now external rotation.

To about there, and then if they can bring the fist down towards the table.

There we go. All right. So JT has pretty good range of motion, so that makes it look a certain way that is not necessarily achievable for somebody who, has limited range of motion and this technique would be too much for ’em. So sometimes you can’t even get the arm up to 90 degrees.

It’s okay to back it off a little bit. I don’t wanna put them in an unstable position. I definitely don’t want that humorous. Can you kinda shrug your shoulders as I do this? I don’t want, yeah, I don’t want that arm to shrug up as I bring their arm to 90 degrees. I’m working at counter purposes, so I need that head of the humerus down.

Maybe I can only get ’em up a certain amount. I can definitely get them to reach the elbow out and decompress, pull the head of the humerus down as I’m pushing the subscapularis medial and freeing the subscapularis. That would be enough for some people. Maybe they can lift their arm up a little bit, so you just have to work with where they are.

But the starting position would be to get into the muscles. Okay, if I do this again, so to get down into the muscle. Feel that subscapularis, I’m cross fiber in it right now. Get on that band. I wanna almost bend that band and just gently reach the arm out, decompressing the head of the humerus.

They could also go into external rotation here, but I like them to be able to bring me in by going into horizontal a deduction to bring me more into the muscle. Maybe that’s as far as they could go. JT can go farther, but I’m just saying maybe a patient you’re working with that’s their end point.

No problem. I can work there, have them reach free. Maybe next week we’ll come back and see if we can go a little farther.

Alright. Very good. Thank you for taking the time to watch those. You can see those techniques take a little bit of time, but not particularly much. A lot of that was me explaining and setting up the techniques. You could easily do this if you had the face down portion. You could take the needles out, do these techniques, spending a couple minutes going through the superspinatus and the infraspinatus to help descend that head of the humerus.

It wakes up the muscles. It helps give them proprioceptive awareness so that they can more appropriately pull down. Head of the ERUs and seat, the head of the humerus in the joint. If you do a second round of treatment and you do whatever on the front, maybe even including the needling for subscapularis, you could follow up with this technique on subscapularis.

Or maybe you don’t do the needling on subscap. This is a really great manual technique to cover that that range of the muscle. Something to consider. My last thought on this is point combinations. Is if there is this excess in subscap and more inhibition sort of deficiency in the small intestine channel muscles.

Infraspinatus, supraspinatus, te minor. A combination I use quite frequently is the source point on the SI channel SI four and the low connecting point on the heart channel heart five. So a source low connecting combination. Feel free to comment. I’d love to hear some other point combinations you guys do that might, you find, give good results and good responses for these types of conditions, or if you use that that low source point combination. Tell me if if you feel like that’s been a useful point, combination for you. Always nice to learn from each other, so I’ll be checking out the comments and maybe we can have a little bit of a conversation about that.

Thanks again for taking the time out and watching this, and thanks to American Acupuncture Council for having me. So it’s always great to be able to do these webinars and I appreciate the opportunity. Hope to see you guys next time.

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Acupuncture Research on Pneumonia in Stroke Patients

Does acupuncture decrease the risk for pneumonia in stroke patients?

Pneumonia is a common medical complication affecting approximately 26% of stroke patients, and potentially affecting up to one-third of survivors.

A study of over 12,000 stroke patients found the patients receiving acupuncture had a lower incidence of pneumonia than those without acupuncture.

The study concluded stroke patients receiving acupuncture had a lower risk of pneumonia than those who did not.

Further randomized control studies are needed to validate the protective effect of acupuncture on the risk of pneumonia among stroke patients.

Remember the American Acupuncture Council (AAC) offers an unparalleled track record in acupuncture risk management.

There is a reason acupuncturists have trusted AAC with their business for 50 years.

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HIPAA – Social Engineering & Psychological Manipulation

 

…we are going to talk about something you may have heard before, social engineering and how it could affect your practice in regards to HIPAA.

Click here to download the transcript.

Disclaimer: The following is an actual transcript. We do our best to make sure the transcript is as accurate as possible, however, it may contain spelling or grammatical errors.  Due to the unique language of acupuncture, there will be errors, so we suggest you watch the video while reading the transcript.

Hey everybody. Good morning, good afternoon, whatever it may be for you. This is Perry Barnhill with the Fearless Acupuncturist. Want to first give a big thanks to the American Acupuncture Council for sponsoring this show, and we are going to talk about something you may have heard before, social engineering and how it could affect your practice in regards to HIPAA.

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Go to slideshow please. Okay. Again, another big thanks to the American Acupuncture Council for bringing this show to you. Okay. Social engineering, you may have heard of this before, so it’s all about, we’ve talked about this in our previous shows. We wanna plan, we want to prepare, and we want to protect ourselves and our practice from things like this, and so it doesn’t happen.

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Or if it does happen, we can mini minimize the effects of it. So why do Julie and I teach hipaa? We understand what it’s like to have practices. We understand what it’s like to be concerned about hipaa. We also understand that HIPAA is a very complicated subject. We try to break it down to help minimize the stress in your offices, because if you know what it is you need to know for hipaa, it makes things much, much better.

Okay, so in the meantime, as people are starting to hop on this show, we want you to look at this and maybe consider taking this little quiz. So this quiz, it’s quick, it’s easy. One of the reason we did this quiz is because so many of the providers are not aware of exactly where they stand with hipaa. And simply by doing this quiz, you can see what your grade is.

It’s a few questions. It doesn’t take long, and it’ll give you a grade. Obviously, if you’re F or D, you need a lot of help. If you’re B, you may still need some help, so make sure you check it out and see where you’re at. You can scan the QR code here, or you can simply go to the website that we got listed below.

So what is social engineering and how does it work? Social engineering, it’s a form of psychological manipulation that tricks users. Users meaning us as providers in our offices and our staff, into making mistakes and giving away sensitive information. What do I mean by sensitive information?

Sensitive information in this context is. Patient information, anything you have on your patients be their name. It could be their address, it could be their email address, not just their conditions or not just a treatment that you provided for ’em. It can literally be any one of those things. So what happens is it relies on human error instead of vulnerabilities and software and in the operating systems by exploiting human emotions.

And here’s some examples. If you got an email that says it’s sent by a quote unquote friend, make sure you double check that before you respond. Messages relaying a troubling story about someone you may know or a message saying that time is running out messages that seem too good to be true, or offers that seem too good to be true and messages or offers of giving you help of things that you had never requested.

The sender, you can’t confirm their identity. So these just, these alone, if you pay close attention to ’em and you avoid clicking on the wrong thing, can save you so much time, so much stress, and a ton of money, and a ton of potential fines when it comes to hipaa. So the impacts to healthcare these days for these hacking incidences, it’s huge.

It’s responsible up to 75%. Of all the incidences in 2022, they include phishing, email, attach, and ransom, and malware incidents. 80% of all breached patient records in 2022, they were caused by hacking. This is why it’s a big deal to avoid this. Here’s the other thing, and if you ever wondered why are they doing this?

Guess what? They can sell files a single medical record. And when I say they, the cyber criminals, the crooks out there that steal this information for 250 bucks a file. So you can imagine 10 files. It’s a lot of money. A hundred files. It’s a lot of money. And most of us have all this information in our offices, so we have to protect it.

Common clues in social engineering, things that they trick you into, revealing information. Again, patient information, they can install malware onto your computers. And like I said earlier, it re relies on human error. Human errors from us as providers, human errors from our staff as well, not the software, the operating systems.

They trick us. They trick our brains. Here’s a little quiz I want you to think about and take hackers like to use social engineering techniques to trick you into making a security mistake like I’ve just talked about. They do this by adding these words or phrases to a message. Select the answer from the list below, sending a message with a sense of urgency.

Be including words that say, quick and time. Is running out c mentioning an illness of a family member or a friend, or what about all of the above? I think most of you probably got this. Yeah. The answer’s all the above. They do all kinds of things. They have this sense of urgency. They trick you into think it’s your family or your friends.

They’ll do anything they can to steal that protected health information. ’cause like I said earlier, it’s very valuable when they get it. What are the most common forms of social engineering? If you’ve watched some of our shows before, we talked about phishing, so make sure you see those things, those shows in the past.

But it’s social engineering uses email or malicious websites to solicit personal information by posing as a trustworthy organization. And now they’re doing this thing called spearfishing, and that’s also a form of folks. Social engineering. It targets a narrow audience, hence the word spear. These attacks, they’re more coordinated these days.

We’re getting SMS, we’re getting text messages, even staff, and they can trick staff through their phones to give things out that they shouldn’t be giving out. That could potentially get yourself some hot water. Here’s some examples. If you’ve ever got these before, whether it’s in an email or whether it’s in your text where they say, Hey, your bank account is locked.

You have, it’s a message claiming to be one of your credit cards. Maybe it’s American Express Chase, or whatever it may be, you know about some activity. That you may won a prize and if you click on it, if you click on any of these things, boom. They may be able to get into your systems. It must be a fake, but it’s also a funny attack.

Sometimes things are funny. You click on ’em and they trick you into going to these sites that we shouldn’t be going to. Unusual activity account messages that say you need to click to secure your data. So these five things here is just some of the things that. I would encourage you to talk to your staff about, so they play, a little extra closer attention to not clicking on the wrong sites or maybe asking you before they click on them.

Here’s a few boxes here. This alone can serve as a HIPAA training for you, yourself and your staff. Make sure you talk to these, your staff about these. And you be aware of these things, recognizing and reporting phishing. So four things to check when you suspect that an email might be a phishing attempt.

I’m not gonna read all the bullet points, but I want you to be aware the sender’s unfamiliar or unexpected, go through those bullet points, read those things, or the message doesn’t look right, it sounds funny, maybe the grammar isn’t correct. Double check those. Check the from address, you know who sent it.

Does it look legitimate? A lot of times you can spot a fake just because it just doesn’t look legitimate at all. Don’t click on that. Inspecting links and attached files. So again, share this with your staff because if we can prevent. An attack from happening, then we never have to report it. But if it happens, guess what?

We have to report it. We even have to tell the patients, sometimes you have to take ads out in newspapers to tell the public it happened depending on the sizes of these things, and that’s not to mention the fines of penalties that could happen as a result of this. Here’s a checklist, and again, this is a really good thing to share with your staff and for you to make mental notes of print it out, talk to the staff about these things, not recognizing the sender, not expecting an email or an attachment.

The from address looks funnier. It doesn’t match it. Invokes or sensing invoking a sense of urgency, not recognizing the destination. URL, is it a accurate website or not asking for login credentials. Bad grammar, bad spelling. It’s a greeting. The signature, is it generic or does it lack contact information?

Again, make sure that you share this with your staff. Now, of course, this isn’t enough to be HIPAA compliant, but again, if we can prevent these things from happening, we’ll be far better off in the end. So what are some next steps that you can do? What about questions? Couple things you can do. You can schedule a demo if you’d like to.

You can get started right away. You can go to fearless provider.com and slash demo, ask for one of the demos. We’re happy to hop on there and show you what we have here with our HIPAA program. You can scan the QR code here. Go right to it. You can get started. Just go to fearless acupuncturist.com. Get started with the HIPAA program.

Or you can contact me at Dr. perry@betterhippoblueprint.com. In the meantime, everybody, I hope you learn from the show here. Please pay close attention to those things and please share this information with your staff. In the meantime, I hope you all have an amazing day.

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Research Supports Acupuncture for Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Research Supports Acupuncture for Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Does scientific research support the beneficial effects of acupuncture for gastrointestinal diseases?

Acupuncture has been shown to decrease disease activity and inflammation, and has demonstrated beneficial roles for all factors that can significantly impact quality of life in patients with inflammatory bowel disease including:

the regulation of gut dysbiosis,

intestinal barrier function,

gut motor dysfunction, and

depression, anxiety,, and pain.

Many clinical trials have investigated the therapeutic effects of acupuncture in ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease; and the data from these trials are promising; however, more studies are needed.

Remember the American Acupuncture Council (AAC) offers an unparalleled track record in acupuncture risk management.

There is a reason acupuncturists have trusted AAC with their business for 50 years.

Not an American Acupuncture Council member? Get a Quick Quote and find out how much you will save! Click here!

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ICD-10 2026 Update – Sam Collins

 

However. Let’s talk about what’s going on now. I CD 10 for 2026. What has happened? As they do every single year. October 1st, there’s some new codes.

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Greetings to all my friends and colleagues. This is Sam Collins, the coding and billing expert for acupuncture for you, your practice, and of course for the American Acupuncture Council. Always wanna make sure that you’re getting paid correctly and to the fullest extent. To make sure that’s gonna happen.

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What is gonna happen coming up? Here’s a riddle. When do the 2026 diagnosis begin? When do they start? You may be thinking 2026 Sam. Not so fast my friends, the 2026 diagnosis codes will update October 1st. So let’s go to the slides. Let’s talk about what’s going on, obviously, and I hope that you’re aware that diagnosis codes, when they update and they update yearly, always update on October 1st.

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In fact, right now is the 10 year anniversary of ICD 10, and so it’s exciting to think wow. It’s been 10 years, so I want everyone to recall. Remember when ICD 10 came, I CD 10 came about and people lost their mind thinking, what the world’s gonna go off? No, it was all fine. In fact, for acupuncturists, I’m excited because you are going to be getting something called ICD 11.

I’m hoping it’s implemented sooner than later because there’s gonna be specific coding directly for acupuncture providers. Are traditional medicine in their descriptions, so it means you’ll be able to code cheese, stagnations, different types of patterns and all other things related to traditional medicine, which just gives a little more granularity of severity.

We’re not there yet, but we’re getting close, so pay attention next year’s seminars. I will deal with that. However. Let’s talk about what’s going on now. I CD 10 for 2026. What has happened? As they do every single year. October 1st, there’s some new codes. This year is no different. In fact, there are now 74,719 diagnosis codes.

And you may think, oh my God, that’s a lot of codes. Are you ever gonna use those, all those codes? Of course not, no. DR. Will, however, realize, keep in mind, we do need to make sure if there’s changes, are there specific to codes we use By example, this year it’s a lot of new codes, 487 new codes. 28 codes were deleted and then 38 revisions, and you’re thinking, Ooh, let’s be careful.

I’m always going to be for you and for our profession, very acentric, I care about the things that are specific to what we do. So by example, let me show you just a little bit of a list of all the codes that have updated and you’ll see here, whoa, malignant inflammatory neoplasm of the breast. And of course these are codes.

You look at this and go Sam I don’t think I’d ever use those. And I would say, you’re probably correct. You can see here primary apraxia of speech, multiple sclerosis. Now, a patient with multiple sclerosis may indeed. Be a patient of yours, but are you treating the multiple sclerosis or treating the symptoms?

Multiple sclerosis would likely just be the comorbidity. So let’s get into what are we doing that is specific to what you do. Now, here’s an important code like last year. Remember if you look at, there were some new codes for disc for the lumbar spine, though they were important. I bet. How many of you used any of those codes this year?

Probably none, but these are some, I think you might. Some of you are probably in likely coding pain codes, specifically pelvic or peroneal pain. The old code is R 10.2, but let me be careful when I say old code. That means as of October 1st, so by example, if you’re treating someone in September or before for pelvic or peroneal pain, you will continue to code R 10.2 for any date of service that was in September or earlier.

Once the data service is after October 1st, then you may begin using the new codes and here they are. So the new codes just get a little bit more specificity. Of course, there’s just the generic unspecified, which is fine, but my hope is when someone has pelvic or peroneal pain, you can identify what part of the pelvis is it?

Is it on the right side? On the left side, is it on both sides or is it more in the pubic area? This allows you to have more specificity and realize pain is gonna be one of the more common things you’re paid for. Certainly this is gonna be one that you add into your arsenal. In addition, there was some deletions of other codes or a deletion of a code here.

Also, the contusion of an abdominal wall. And you might think come on Sam I’m not gonna deal with that. You might, particularly for those of you who deal with personal injury claims, it’s very common. To have injuries to the abdomen from the seatbelt. So now we’re gonna have three new codes, contusion of the abdominal wall.

Then more specifically to the groin and to the flank. So it allows you like if the seatbelt’s going lower across the chest. Now I do wanna highlight, I hope you’re all noticing, I’m only using the A designation for this sprain strain or contusion code that A is indicating the initial visit. And it also indicates all visits with active care, which means that’s the one you’re commonly gonna use.

However, let’s say someone had a contusion and it’s six months old. That’s when you would use the S or the sequelae where there’s residuals. I think the important thing here is just making sure if you have been, or thinking you may be using contusion based on trauma, it’s updated when it comes to abdominal.

Another update here is again, some common pain codes for abdominal pain. Now, there is a code still you can save from multiple sites, and they’ve always had the quadrants, but now they’re getting more to flank and it’s not pain. Notice it’s going to be tenderness. Part of it, but then you’ll notice there’s also codes specific to pain.

So what’s the difference? Tenderness means that upon palpation, it’s tender. Where is pain is whether you palpate or not. There’s pain. I’ve put a little chart here too of what each of those mean, but the point will be if you’re using codes for abdominal pain, there has been some updates. So make sure you update your list.

This is again, those ones for the contusion. Make sure you’ve updated those again, contusions happen. And keep in mind, there’s some other ones. You’re gonna go well. Sam, I don’t know if I use this one. I doubt it. And here’s my point. Sometimes codes update of varus deformity or myositis. O Ossific hands.

Think of it. If someone has myositis o ossific hands in the upper shoulder, which means that’s the bone. What’s gonna be their symptom pain in the upper arm? So that’s probably the more likely code. The same would apply with cost of vertebral tenderness. If someone has cost of vertebral tenderness, that’s a symptom.

What is that probably gonna mean? Cost of vertebral is part of thoracic spine. I would argue that’s gonna be M 54 6. So keep in mind, it’s always nothing wrong with being specific to your profession because by example, I brought up the one for multiple sclerosis already. But are we gonna treat that directly?

There is a bunch of new codes. Are those gonna be ones you commonly use? I do not think so. So what I’m gonna say is just be conscientious of diagnosis, severity, specificity. Don’t throw spaghetti at the wall and do all types of codes. One of the things that I focus on at our seminars and with my network members is making sure you’re using the codes that are payable by insurance.

So network members expect from me, you’re gonna get a nice list because the best practice of coding. Is always gonna be giving me something about the pain, the symptoms, the signs, and there’s other codes that have within that. But what do each one pay? Get that list. That’s one for Aetna, for Cigna, what I’m gonna say is.

Let me be your advocate. Help me help you. We not only do programs like this for you that don’t cost anything, but we also do tons of seminars and other one-on-one with you to make sure your office is up to date. Again, network members expect from me, you’re getting your email with all the updates for everyone else.

I hope you be part. In fact, if you look coming this Saturday, or excuse me, Sunday for acupuncture, we’ll be doing a whole coding and update seminar. But until then, fr friends, I wish you well and see you next time.

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