‘Alternative’ treatment for neck pain (From York Press)
Get in touch: send your photos, videos, news & views by texting YORK to 80360 or send an email»
‘Alternative’ treatment for neck pain
11:17am Monday 23rd April 2012 in Health & Wellbeing
PEOPLE with chronic neck pain in the York are being offered the chance to take part in a major clinical trial into the effectiveness of Alexander Technique lessons and acupuncture sessions.
Run by the University of York and funded by a grant of £720,000 from Arthritis Research UK, the ATLAS trial will look at the effectiveness of the techniques in alleviating neck pain compared with normal GP care.
York GP practices are contacting patients who have previously seen their GP with chronic neck pain, inviting them to take part in the study.
The year-long study which is run by the Complementary Medicine Research Group in the University’s Department of Health Sciences in conjunction with the York Trials Unit, will recruit up to 500 patients in York, Leeds, Sheffield and Manchester.
Chronic neck pain is a common condition in the adult population. As well as being painful and disabling, it is associated with significant costs to the individual, their families, the NHS and society in general.
The research aims to determine how effective Alexander Technique lessons and acupuncture are for chronic neck pain when used as an addition to standard GP care.
The ATLAS trial is led by Dr Hugh MacPherson, a Senior Research Fellow in the University of York’s Department of Health Sciences.
He said: “Our research will provide data which will help patients, practitioners, providers and policy-makers make informed choices about care. If the evidence from the new trial justifies it, then both interventions should be offered routinely as referral options to patients within the NHS, which would mean that patients would no longer have to pay for these interventions themselves.”
At the end of the study, the University of York will publish the findings on its website at york.ac.uk/healthsciences/research/trials.htm
For more information on the trial, phone Janet Eldred, on 01904 321837 or 0800 138 8117 or Lucy Revell on 01904 321389 or 0800 138 8117.