On Saturday, June 25th, 2022, I hosted a live, virtual presentation, “How to Hire and Credential LAcs in Your Healthcare System: Focus on Revenue Capture and Clinician Retention,” for the Hospital Handbook Project (HHP), a nonprofit community resource.
This was the first public presentation from the HHP’s Employment Practices Workgroup.
The event materials (pdf of slides and recordings of the presentation and the Q&A session) are now available in our Issues in Hospital-based Practice webinar series online resource.
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In 2022, the HHP is hosting a dedicated virtual discussion space with colleagues working in the inpatient setting. This is our Inpatient Acupuncture Discussion group.
Read this article to learn more about
how to support this dedicated and unique discussion space for our inpatient acupuncture community
how to join this discussion group
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This Paths to Practice interview is with Dr. Annie Budhathoki, DAOM, LAc, doctor of acupuncture and Oriental medicine, and licensed acupuncturist at the Linda B. and Robert B. Wiggins Wellness and Integrative Health Center, Huntsman Cancer Hospital and Clinics, the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah.
The Wellness Center is an outpatient acupuncture practice inside the cancer hospital. The acupuncturists treat the side effects and symptoms of cancer and cancer treatment [such as] neuropathy, pain, nausea, insomnia, and hot flashes. Dr. Annie Budhathoki also does inpatient acupuncture for hospitalized oncology patients.
The Wellness Center is a Place Where Patients Regain Their Power
minute 22
Annie: You know, the Wellness Center [is amazing; ] we have all this programming. At Huntsman, we have a supportive oncology team. Dr. Anna Beck is the director of supportive oncology; when she came to Huntsman [she reshaped] the models for integrative medicine.
This wellness center is a place where people are empowered to take charge of their health while going through cancer treatment and beyond into survivorship.
As providers, we have the opportunity to support people affected by cancer to overcome various health and wellness obstacles. We ensure each person feels empowered to improve and maintain their individual health despite their cancer diagnosis or former health status. When championing the best care of each specific symptom, we work together as an integrative team supporting the goals and betterment of each patient. Often this includes referring them into various programs that also support their needs, knowing that this is how they can continue to regain their power.
In the Wellness Center, we are supporting the basic health needs and daily quality of life issues which affects a person’s ability to function. We manage symptoms like nausea, fatigue or sleep while their physicians are working on the cellular level to attack their cancer or on a surgical level to get things taken care of.
[In oncology the side effects of chemotherapy, radiation, surgery can be disempowering] for a patient because medicine takes over. And rightfully so in many cases so that those specific diseases can’t become chronic illnesses or can be cured if you will. But in wellness and integrative health and especially acupuncture and massage, fitness, nutrition—this is where patients really get a chance to shine on their own; to regain their power.
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Acupuncturists working in the Emergency Department of the Aurora Health System, Wisconsin: A Success Story
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