CLINICAL UNIT I:
20-24 March 2009 - Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
and
CLINICAL
UNIT II:
20-24
May 2009 - Tempe, Arizona
INTRODUCTION
Acupuncture today has become a highly respected and popular
modality of medical treatment in the United States. The growing acceptance
by physicians and patients is in large part due to the successful
work of graduates of the Medical Acupuncture for Physicians program. This
course is the most convenient and reliable training program for busy
physicians to acquire acupuncture clinical skills.
5,000
physicians have completed the program, which has been taught regularly
since 1983 through the Office of Continuing Medical Education, David
Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. (Since 2006, the course has been
offered in association with Stanford University School of Medicine
as well.)
It
is a comprehensive program, and has earned the reputation of
conscientiously accomplishing its teaching goals and creating
clinically competent physician acupuncturists. Medical Acupuncture
for Physicians is the oldest coordinated training program
in acupuncture for physicians in North America. The curriculum
was developed and tested in 1978 and 79, and the program was
inaugurated as a 200 hour CME activity in 1980. A decade later
it was accredited for 300 hours to more accurately reflect the
work involved. It is the only fully comprehensive and integrated
acupuncture training developed for physicians.
WHY
THIS COURSE ?
As chairman of the Medical Acupuncture for Physicians course,
I would like to tell you why my teaching colleagues and I think that
this program is the finest learning opportunity for physicians to
acquire the knowledge and skill of this new discipline. I am speaking
from the perspective of thirty years of full time acupuncture practice,
and twenty-eight years of teaching experience. During this time,
my colleagues in the Helms Medical Institute and I have had the privilege
and pleasure to constantly revise and refine the program. We are
satisfied that we have created the gold standard in acupuncture training.
The
program is comprehensive in that its teaching content is not
restricted to one school of acupuncture theory and practice.
The teaching approach is grounded in contemporary western medicine
and bioscience, yet addresses the full tradition of acupuncture
as derived from classical Asian texts. All major disciplines
of acupuncture that have practical clinical value are represented
in the program, from pragmatic neuroanatomical treatments for
chronic pain to elegant energetic treatments for functional and
internal medicine problems.
| FEES |
Before
October 31 |
After
October
31 |
300-HOUR COURSE TUTION FOR UNITS 1, 2, and 3
(Fee includes the Acupuncture Energetics textbook) |
$6,600 |
$6,750 |
| 220-HOUR
COURSE TUITION FOR UNITS 1, 2, and 3 |
$6,300 |
$6,450 |
EXTRA CLINICAL INTENSIVE DAY, December 8 (optional)
|
$600
|
$700 |
ADDITIONAL
CLINICAL UNIT (For graduates of prior courses, or new students
wanting to take both pathways) |
$2,000
|
$2,000
|
20% DISCOUNT FOR RESIDENTS OR FELLOWS
(must be full-time through the conclusion of this course)
300-HOUR COURSE
220-HOUR COURSE |
|
|
| EXPOSURE
PROGRAM* |
$1,600* |
$1,750* |
*The exposure program
is for residents, fellows, and program administrators who wish
to learn some fundamentals but are not at the point in their
careers to embrace the entire discipline. The exposure program
tution includes the Acupuncture Energetics textbook and the introductory
weekend, but does not include the clinical intensive day. This
tuition is deductible from the full course tuition when the participant
applies to complete the training.
ADMISSION
PROCEDURE
This
program is only open only to physicians (all
MDs and DOs) licensed to practice in their
state or province of residence or work. DDSs,
DPMs, DMDs may apply with verification that
acupuncture is included in the scope of practice
of their state license. Acceptance into the
program is not automatic upon application.
It is based upon professional training and
current practice environment, intended use
of this specialty, geographic location, and
timely receipt of the application and required
documents.
It is possible for you to attend two clinical
units in one season to gain extra experience,
or to return for an additional clinical
unit in a later season, and to view the
video lectures of either clinical pathway
following the conclusion of the formal
program.
Your
application should contain, in addition to the attached form:
a resume of formal training, including acupuncture background, if
any, and
a thoughtful statement of plans (at least two paragraphs) for your
use of acupuncture;
a photocopy of your current, active professional license.
A letter of recommendation from a course graduate is encouraged but
not required. The completed application form and documentation should
be submitted along with the full tuition fee. Please indicate your
first and second choices for the clinical units.
Please apply early in order to receive the preparatory reading and
viewing material well in advance of the introductory weekend. Tuition
amounts increase after October 31, 2008.
.
Choose the clinical unit carefully, as it is very difficult to change
the assignment after the application deadline. Because of class size
limitations, early application is requested for the clinical intensive
or an additional clinical unit.
Each scheduled clinical unit will be filled to capacity on a first-come,
first-served basis, after which time you will be assigned, if possible,
to your second choice. If all clinical units are filled when your
application is received, you may secure a position in the subsequent
class, and, if requested, be placed on the waiting list for openings
in the current class.
REFUNDS
Helms
Medical Institute and the Office of Continuing Medical Education,
David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, reserve the right to cancel
the course or any of its clinical units, and to change the dates
or venue of the units. If you are not accepted into the course,
a full refund of the tuition is given. If a clinical unit is canceled,
you must be available to attend an alternate unit. A full refund
is given if the course is canceled, discontinued, or rescheduled.
A minimum service charge of $100 is withheld from all other refunds.
Requests for refund must be in writing and postmarked before the
introductory weekend, after which time the fee is not refundable.
ACCOMODATIONS
The
Introductory Weekend course is held at the Tempe Mission Palms Hotel,
A group rate of $152/night plus tax has been arranged for you:
Tempe Mission Palms Hotel
60 East Fifth Street
Tempe, Arizona 85281
(480) 894-1400
A
credit card is required to guarantee a room for arrival after 6pm.
When reserving, please indicate that you are attending the HMI ACUPUNCTURE
COURSE in order to receive the group rate. The hotel is a 15-minute
taxi or shuttle ride from Phoenix Airport.
CHANGE
OF CLINICAL UNIT
You
must be available to attend the two 5-day clinical units as scheduled.
If you miss one or the other of these units, your course completion
cannot be guaranteed. Placement in a clinical unit of the subsequent
course is contingent on availability of space. The fee to postpone
a clinical unit if space is available is $2000. If the course has
not been completed following a re-scheduling of clinical unit(s),
the participant reverts to new applicant status, and is required
to pay the full tuition for re-enrollment in the course.
WHY
THIS COURSE AND NOT ONE OF THE OTHERS?
This
is a question often asked by prospective Medical Acupuncture
for Physicians participants. The most succinct answer is integrity.
The Helms Medical Institute team has been teaching for over twenty-five
years, all the time refining our curriculum and teaching skills.
We are dedicated to ensuring that every student completing the course
is competent in this new discipline, and ready to incorporate it
into practice. There is no other course in the country that invests
as much attention and energy into each student.
Read
a few evaluation comments and letters from students who have partcipated
in both our course and other programs promoted as “comprehensive”
and “balanced,” and you’ll understand this point:
"I recently
completed the HMI training course as the most recent part of my
seven-year pursuit of an acupuncture education. My past efforts
included a TCM school, independent CME courses in a variety of acupuncture
subspecialties, and a six month course whose format seemed to be
a copy of the HMI training. The bottom line is: For any physician
who desires the opportunity to learn a very complex discipline in
an amazingly short period of time, the Helms Medical Institute Medical
Acupuncture for Physicians is your best choice.
"It took me several years of independent study, training, and
clinical experience to attain a level of competence in acupuncture
that I felt equivalent to my allopathic skills. During the HMI course
I realized that my practice of acupuncture was finally focused,
efficient, and effective. Also, I was impressed that the other doctors
finishing the HMI course successfully attained the knowledge and
skill that enabled them to be comfortable starting to practice a
very sophisticated and effective acupuncture.
"The academic framework of
the Medical Acupuncture for Physicians course allowed me
to understand and organize the intricacies and details of acupuncture
without the frustration and confusion that I experienced in the
other programs. That confusion lingered -- even after I finished
the competing six month course -- until the HMI program, when I
finally felt comfortable diagnosing and treating patients in a logical
and consistent manner. I wish I had taken this course first."
Tom Ritchie, MD, Scottsdale, Arizona.
"I have attended other courses
in acupuncture, and only the HMI training gets a five-star ranking.
It is very well organized, and complex materials are condensed into
straightforward teaching that is easy for the brain to ingest and
digest. The preceptors are outstanding. They guide you every step
of the way in the learning process, and they never make you feel
that you won’t be a good acupuncturist by the end of the course.
I wish I had taken this course earlier!
Ernesto Uy, MD, Lakeland, Florida.
PROGRAM
ORGANIZATION
The
teaching material and style are integrated to allow the student
to receive greatest benefit from the different modalities employed.
The information in the teaching is complex, yet it presented in
an understandable and digestible style. Teaching starts from the
biomedical foundation familiar to all physicians, and progressively
incorporates tenets from the classical texts. Each step in learning
is anchored to pragmatic applications and realistic clinical situations.
The lecturing, live and on home study videos, follows the same format
of progressive layering of information, constantly integrating the
new information into the student's existing knowledge matrix.
Different
media are used to reinforce the learning process: live and videorecorded
lectures, textbook and printed syllabus, clinical demonstrations,
and hands-on experience. The teachers are trained and qualified
through the Helms Medical Institute. They have demonstrated that
they posses a solid knowledge of their material, a consistent competence
in their clinical skills, and a teaching style conducive to optimum
learning during the time available. No other program has teaching
expertise or course organization as refined as Medical Acupuncture
for Physicians.
The
course is compact and dense. It respects the participant's dedication
to learning the new discipline in the context of a busy professional
schedule. Time is not wasted teaching what will not be clinically
useful, yet the creation of a sophisticated theoretical foundation
is not compromised. The small groups at the clinical sessions have
a preceptor-to-student ratio of 1:3 to 1:6. Such exposure provides
generous attention to each student's learning needs. And, because
we enjoy teaching, we all have fun in the learning process.
Medical
Acupuncture for Physicians is a basic course. It is typically
the first serious exposure the student has to acupuncture. Its scope,
depth, and organization, however, provide participants with the
comprehensive training they need to practice good acupuncture. For
participants with ambition to learn more in acupuncture, the course
provides the firm foundation on which to develop skills in specialty
applications or microsystems.
THE
CURRICULUM
Medical
Acupuncture for Physicians presents the fundamentals of acupuncture
theory, channel and point location, approaches to diagnosis and
therapy, needling techniques, and patient management. It is a practice-oriented
program that creates a sophisticated structure for the intelligent
use of acupuncture. The course gives full dignity to both the medical
tradition found in classical Chinese texts and to contemporary biomedical
science, and encourages you to creatively adapt acupuncture into
your specialty practice and clinical environment.
The
training is organized into three units that involve lectures, home
study and videocourse viewing, and supervised clinical training.
The introductory weekend and core videocourse curriculum are the
same for all participants, while the specialty videocourse curriculum
and clinical units are offered in the following two pathways:
The
primary care pathway focuses on applications of acupuncture to the
broad range of clinical problems that are evaluated and treated
by the primary practitioner. These problems can range from premorbid
functional and stress-related disorders, to organic lesions, to
musculoskeletal pain. The acupuncture models presented in the primary
care videocourse and clinical units span from rarefied equilibration
treatments aimed at reestablishing homeostasis, to dense neuromuscular
stimulation.
The
pain management pathway emphasizes acupuncture as treatment for
patients referred to pain management specialty practices. This pathway
addresses the pain of acute trauma, musculoskeletal problems such
as myofascial pain and muscle tension headaches, pain of diskogenic
lesions and peripheral neuropathies, and pain of organic and malignant
lesions.
There
is about an 85% overlap between the two pathways. The theoretical
foundation for both pathways is identical: the introductory weekend,
palpation and needling, core video course, textbook, syllabus, and
handouts. The difference between the pathways is in the specialty
videocourse lectures, and in the practical emphasis in the clinical
unit. Because physicians practicing acupuncture rarely treat only
primary care or only pain management patients, participants following
the primary care pathway are also introduced to pain management
techniques, and, likewise, participants following the pain management
pathway are familiarized with the full spectrum of medical applications.
There
are two format options for the full program. Both involve the introductory
weekend and one clinical unit. The comprehensive HMI curriculum
represents 300 hours of formal instruction in the medical acupuction.
There is also a reduced 220-hour format of the essential HMI curriculum,
which involves fewer home study videos than the comprehensive curriculum.
Participants in the essential format will be able to responsibly
integrate acupuncture into their medical practices at the conclusion
of the program, but will not have the breadth or depth of theoretical
and clinical information that participants in the comprehensive
format have.
There
is a special exposure program for residents, fellows, and hospital
administrators who wish to learn some fundamental skills in medical
acupuncture, but who are not at the point in their careers to embrace
the entire discipline. This program includes just the four-day introductory
weekend, and will enable participants to understand the range of
acupuncture application for a collection of uncomplicated symptoms.
Exposure program participants will receive a copy of the Acupuncture
Energetics textbook, but none of the video material.
UNIT
1: INTRODUCTORY WEEKEND
You
will receive a copy of the Acupuncture Energetics textbook upon
acceptance into the program, and are required to read sections of
the book prior to attending the introductory weekend. In Philadelphia,
course chairman Dr. Joseph Helms begins the program with an historical
and scientific overview of acupuncture, and explains its context
in modern medicine. He discusses the traditional models of acupuncture,
including the circulation of Qi energy, characteristics and symptoms
of the energy axes, the action of command points, and the five phases
model. He talks about the realistic application of acupuncture to
primary care and to pain management problems. The introductory weekend
is a preview of all the material that is covered in the course.
Its goal is to create an intellectual structure to organize the
new information.
Sections
addressing palpation and needling skills are integrated into the
introductory weekend to initiate learning the manual skills of acupuncture.
This involves lectures on the anatomy of major acupuncture points,
and small group work palpating trigger points, acupuncture channels,
and acupuncture points. Basic needling technique is also taught.
You are requested to watch one videotape of the acupuncture points
and channels prior to attending.
OPTIONAL
CLINICAL INTENSIVE WORKSHOP
An
optional one-day program follows the introductory weekend for those
physicians who wish to begin needling simple cases while completing
the full training program. This day offers supervised training at
the treatment table on point anatomy, palpation, and needling, and
will enable you to safely treat uncomplicated acute musculoskeletal
pain. Enrollment is limited. Please apply early.
UNIT
2: HOME VIDEO STUDY
The
core videocourse curriculum involves the precise identification
of the acupuncture channels and points. The integration of gross
anatomy, physiology, pathology, and therapy in acupuncture becomes
progressively clear as you learn the locations and indications of
the points. You are expected to read the textbook during this study
period.
Specialty
videocourse lectures are provided for each clinical pathway. These
explore either classical or specialty applications of acupuncture,
such as auricular acupuncture, traditional Chinese acupuncture,
and techniques of pain management with acupuncture. These videotapes
may be watched at the same time as, or following the core curriculum
tapes. A brief test must be completed for each videotape and book
chapter, and be submitted prior to participation in the clinical
unit.
UNIT
3: CLINICAL EXPERIENCE
The
clinical units brings the acupuncture learning process to practical
clinical thinking and application. The first five-day unit involves
a supervised review of channel and point locations, needling technique,
and patient evaluation. The second five-day unit is an intensive
hands-on session where you gain experience as both an acupuncture
patient and an acupuncturist. Practice management is addressed in
this session.
STUDY
EXPECTATIONS
The
ideal time to complete the course is within six to nine months of
the introductory weekend. You must be prepared to devote a regular
period each week to study the videotapes and locate points on yourself
and on family and friends. The complete 300-hour curriculum requires
approximately five to seven hours of study every week. These requirements
are reduced by 40% if you take the 220-hour curriculum. You are
also encouraged to reserve at least six hours of weekly study time
for the month following the course to review the videos.
PROGRAM
GOAL
The
goal of the Medical Acupuncture for Physicians program is to enable
you to employ acupuncture in your medical practice immediately after
the clinical unit, and to be well prepared for later study in any
specialized or advanced aspects of acupuncture. Three to six months
of serious independent clinical integration following the final
unit will ground your experience and allow you to gain confidence
in this new modality.
COURSE
CHAIRMAN
Dr.
Joseph Helms is considered to be the Father of Medical Acupuncture
in the United States. He has taught physicians since 1978 when he
coined the term “medical acupuncture” for his first
workshop. In 1980 he created the “Medical Acupuncture for
Physicians” program for the Office of Continuing Medical Education
at the UCLA School of Medicine, and he has chaired the program since.
5,000 physicians have completed this rigorous training and over
eighty percent of them use acupuncture regularly in their practices.
Dr.
Helms is the author of the most widely used professional textbook
on medical acupuncture, Acupuncture Energetics: A Clinical Approach
for Physicians (Medical Acupuncture Publishers, Berkeley, 1995).
He also undertook and published the first rigorously designed, controlled
research study in medical acupuncture in the U.S. (“Acupuncture
for the Management of Primary Dysmenorrhea,” Obstetrics and
Gynecology, 69, 51-56, 1987), and thereby established the gold standard
for clinical research and publication in acupuncture. His latest
book is Getting To Know YOU: A Physician Explains How Acupuncture
Helps You Be The Best YOU (Medical Acupuncture Publishers,
Berkeley, 1995).
Dr. Helms is founding president of the American Academy of Medical
Acupuncture, the national professional society that has established
training and practice standards for medical acupuncture. He served
as consultant on the World Health Organization’s acupuncture
scientific advisory committees that have established international
training and practice standards. He was instrumental in organizing
the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine at
the National Institutes of Health, and designing the NIH Consensus
Development Conference on Acupuncture in 1997. He was a participant
in the White House Commission on Complementary and Alternative Medicine
Policy in 2001. With his teaching colleagues, Dr. Helms created
the Helms Medical Institute in 1999 to train and certify the clinical
faculty involved.
LETTERS
OF ENDORSEMENT
The
following excerpts are from program evaluations and
letters received from participants in previous courses:
| I
have never before participated in such an intense, stimulating,
and consistently excellent learning experience. This was the most
exciting and best presented course I have ever had, including
everything since beginning medical school thirty-two years ago.
It is a model worthy of being included in every medical school.
|
| |
C.
Norman Shealy, MD, PhD
Neurosurgery
and Pain Management
Springfield, Missouri |
|
| I
have never enjoyed a course more than this one. The physicians
interact with each other with such respect and enthusiasm. I returned
home and began helping my patients more than I had since starting
practice. |
| |
Cynthia
L. Smith, MD
Physical
Medicine
Dallas, Texas |
|
| No
other training program in complementary medicine combines scientific
practical knowledge with the rigor of this course. I returned
to my practice with the intellectual models and manual skills
to integrate acupuncture. |
| |
Jeff
Nichols, MD
Behavioral
Medicine
Topeka, Kansas |
|
| This
is an excellent program. Dr. Helms integrates conventional western
medicine with the eastern constructs on a very accessible level.
The approaches taught are very useful for patients who present
with the vague disease states that our conventional modalities
do not touch. I now use acupuncture to treat an array of simple
and complex patient problems. |
| |
Theresa
Hom, DO
Osteopathic
Medicine
Columbus, Ohio |
|
| The
acupuncture perspective on symptoms helps me put aside the blinders
of conventional medicine. I can listen to patients and believe
them rather than dismissing them because what they are saying
doesn't make sense from a conventional perspective. |
| |
James
W. Haefemeyer, MD
Family
Medicine
Minneapolis, Minnesota |
|
| It
is remarkable how much one can learn in an intensive course. It
was a melting pot of different specialties, and I learned much
from the other doctors. I arrived at the clinical unit with a
major question mark over my head and left with an exclamation!
The course made me rethink my approach toward medicine; I've rediscovered
my hands. |
| |
David
Lee, MD
Neurology
Lamberton, New Jersey |
|
| The
course has provided a solid foundation that enables me to evaluate
patients and formulate treatment plans in a very coherent manner.
I have been incorporating acupuncture into my primary care practice,
and my experience had been rewarding since the results have been
mostly successes. |
| |
Ivan
Iriarte, MD
Associate
Professor
of Family Medicine
Ponce School of Medicine,
Puerto Rico |
|
Anyone,
whatever their level of previous training in acupuncture, or for
that matter in any other field of
medicine, will greatly benefit from the UCLA course. I learned
a great deal of new material that beautifully complements my 15+
years of training and practice in acupuncture. |
| |
Richard
G. Petty, MD
Neuropsychiatry,
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
|
I
recently mentioned to another course participant my calculations
for the total true cost of taking the
acupuncture course. His response was, "That is a small price
for preventing professional burn-out". Very true! Adding
acupuncture to my practice has been the most refreshing and invigorating
thing I have done in years. |
| |
Alan
Spanos, MD, MA
Pain
Management
Raleigh, North Carolina |
|
| The
course was intense and demanding, and required the most time and
focused attention of any course I've encountered since medical
school. And, given the wealth of acupuncture material presented,
the time was well spent. Dr. Helms has assembled a cadre of preceptors
who enhanced the clinical experience with wisdom from their own
practices. |
| |
Kathleen
Moore Bishop, MD
Anesthesia
Tucson, Arizona |
|
This
course gave me direction in my acupuncture journey. The first
weekend presented an overview of
acupuncture. The videotapes distilled the concepts and principles
in a form that was easy to understand. The clinical experience
stimulated a vibrant chord that continues to play its music. In
the month after the course, I reviewed some tapes for a more precise
understanding of the subject. I have no doubt that acupuncture
has a revivifying effect on the patient as well as on the physician.
|
| |
Abegael
N. Lorico, MD
Primary
Medical Services for Women
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
|
| I've
read these brochures for years, but nothing in the quoted endorsements
prepared me for how good the course is. |
| |
Paul
B. Juergens, MD
Pain
Management
Marian, Illinois |
|
| This
experience has been one of the highlights of my professional career.
It provided me with the opportunity to expand my scope as a physician,
in ways I never could have imagined. |
| |
Debra
L. Braverman, MD
Physical
Medicine University of Pennsylvania Health System
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
|
| In
addition to getting the material across, the professors exhibit
a sensitive concern for our confusion, and a willingness to repeat
and reinforce material evenly, gently, and with an unusual sense
of patience. This brings back an element of joy to the learning
process, and rekindles the original love for the practice of medicine.
|
| |
Bryan
L. Frank, MD
Anesthesia
and Pain Management
Richardson, Texas |
|
| Thorough,
hands-on, and practice-oriented. It prepares one to enter into
a clinical acupuncture practice. As a repeat student, I found
this refresher of inestimable value. |
| |
Mike
Acord, MD
Kaiser
Permanente
Harbor City, California |
|
| I
am genuinely heart-warmed by the generosity of the clinical preceptors,
and feel that I have had a major career experience here. I have
learned so many skills and new ways to approach my patients. |
| |
Meg
Hayes, MD
Family
Medicine
Portland, Oregon |
|
| This
was the most exciting learning opportunity I have encountered
in my life. I am loving my acupuncture practice, and continue
to be amazed by the wonderful results in most of my patients.
I have started getting referrals from other subspecialists, including
a once very skeptical neurologist. |
| |
Tapan
K. Chaudhuri, MD
Internal
Medicine
Kansas City, Missouri |