Action | Practice of dry needling |
Stage | NOIRA |
Comment Period | Ended on 12/30/2015 |
I oppose dry needling by PT's.
PT's have demonstrated unethical malpractice already when they have expanded the scope of dry needle to beyond just muscle trigger points for pain. They have started doing distal (none trigger point acupuncture), retaining of the needle after insertion (dry needle should be quickly withdrawn after insertion) and electric stimulation to acupuncture needles (while retaining). They now promote dry needle for treating sinus issues and for cosmetic facial rejuvenation. This expansion of scope beyond pain is simply a move towards practicing preeminent acupuncture techniques without the understand of acupuncture physiology behind it. This is unethical and simply malpractice.
In regards to PT's training of dry needle.
Physical Therapy’s own math indicates insufficient training of dry needle technique.
In other words, a Physical Therapist still needs to have 14% additional clinical education hours of training to be sufficient in the practice of Dry Needle technique.
Clinical hours do not exist in a vacuum. Behind them exists the didactic course and curriculum, which according to The CAPTE Aggregate Program Data 2014 -2015 Fact Sheet Figure 4 there is approximately 79.6 % of didactic / lab work in proportion to 20.4 % clinical education.
Therefore additional didactic study for the dry needle technique would require an almost additional 800 hours to the 198 hours of clinical dry needle training.
In general (with variance amongst states), for a Physical Therapist to practice the dry needle technique 27-54 hours training are required in the use of needles. With a portion of those hours allowed to be home / online study[iii].
[i] Analysis of Competencies for Dry Needling by Physical Therapists, Joseph Caramagno Leslie Adrian Lorin Mueller Justin Purl, July 10,2015 page 13
[ii] http://www.capteonline.org/uploadedFiles/CAPTEorg/About_CAPTE/Resources/Aggregate_Program_Data/AggregateProgramData_PTPrograms.pdf
[iii] http://www.keepacupuncturereal.com/
[iv] http://www.liveoakacupuncture.com/dry-needling - “My experience at the “Dry Needling Certification” Course
[v] ibid
[vi] http://www.kinetacore.com/physical-therapy/Trigger-Point-Dry-Needling-Level-II-Training/page18.html