Message from the AAMA Board

The Qi of Good Strategy

— Joseph Walker, III, MD, DABMA

When you step into the treatment room, strategy is already at work. Not the kind printed in a 200-page spiral-bound instructional manual, but the quiet, focused kind that lives in your head and hands. You begin by identifying the diagnosis — not merely an ICD code, but the deeper question: What is the core obstacle standing between this patient and better health?”

It could be unrelenting low back pain, but the real challenge is the fear of movement. It may be post-stroke spasticity, but the actual barrier is the patient’s loss of confidence in their ability to recover. Strategy begins with seeing clearly.

Richard Rumelt, in Good Strategy / Bad Strategy, calls this the “kernel” — a three-part process: diagnose the challenge, craft a guiding policy, and take coherent, coordinated actions. It’s as accurate for one patient in front of you as it is for an organization or an entire profession. Without a clear diagnosis, you can’t choose the right points or the right conversation. Without a guiding policy, you’re just improvising. Without coherent actions, your treatment plan is a disconnected list of good intentions.

In medicine, and especially in medical acupuncture, bad strategy is easy to spot. It looks like trying to treat everything at once, relying on the comfort of routine, or mistaking broad intentions (“I’ll just do a NADA or 4 Gates protocol”) for an actual plan tailored to the moment. Good strategy requires the discipline to choose — to commit to one approach over others, at least for now — and the courage to adjust when the results tell you to.

This isn’t just about technique. It’s about presence. A strategic treatment is mindful: every point selected, every needle manipulated, every minute spent is part of a coherent whole aimed at overcoming the central obstacle. That is how, visit by visit, you move someone from a stuck state toward movement, from pain toward relief, from fragmentation toward integration.

Now imagine scaling that process up — from one patient to our entire field.

Medical acupuncture in North America is a small but diverse community. Physicians, dentists, veterinarians, physical therapists, and other licensed practitioners all bring acupuncture or acupuncture-related skills into their work. Each discipline sees through a slightly different lens — neuroanatomy, orthopedics, rehabilitation, traditional medicine, systems biology — and each has techniques the others can learn from. Too often, our strategies for the field are vague aspirations: “Grow the profession,” “Increase public awareness,” “Support members.” These are goals, not strategy.

A good collective strategy for medical acupuncture starts the same way as for an individual patient: with a clear-eyed diagnosis. What is the real obstacle? Is it the lack of new trainees? Fragmented credentialing standards? Limited reimbursement? The public perception that acupuncture is “alternative” instead of integral? The answer may differ depending on your perspective, but until we name the central challenge, our actions will remain scattered.

From there, we need a guiding policy — a shared approach that says, in effect, “Given our resources, our position, and our obstacles, here is the way forward.” That policy might focus on building cross-disciplinary alliances, amplifying evidence-based outcomes, and mentoring the next generation. Then come the coherent actions: targeted recruitment at medical schools, collaborative research projects with other health professions, advocacy for inclusive reimbursement codes, and interprofessional training programs. Each step coordinated, each step reinforcing the others.

When you work this way — diagnosis, guiding policy, coherent actions — you’re not just helping your patients; you’re helping shape the future of medicine. The patient in front of you benefits from your strategic clarity. The profession benefits from our collective clarity. And the health care system benefits when we show, through results and relationships, that medical acupuncture belongs at the table.

The exact process that can heal a single shoulder can help heal an entire system. The needle is just a tool — the strategy is what moves the qi.

Upcoming Professional Development & Educational Opportunities

HMI Course: Medical Acupuncture in Geriatric Care
Virtual Course
Register now thru September 17

Workshop: The Dance of Diagnosis and Treatment in Acupuncture: Utilizing Tools from Manual Medicine
October 11-12, 2025
Ann Arbor, MI

ICMART World Congress on Medical Acupuncture
November 7-9, 2025
French Riviera, Antibes Juan-les-Pins, France

AAMA Annual Symposium
April 23-26, 2026
Denver, CO
SAVE THE DATE!

AAMA Website: Education Listings
The AAMA maintains an ongoing calendar of educational events and professional development opportunities related to medical acupuncture. The calendar is accessible on the AAMA website. Members are encouraged to share events and calendar items from their regions and about educational topics that may be of wider interest among peers and fellow AAMA members.

AAMA News & Announcements

Welcome Our New AAMA Members

Please join us in welcoming the following new members who became part of the Academy in July 2025:

  • Andrew Janicki, MD, of Galveston, TX
  • Leora Esterra, MD, of Newberry, FL
  • Carlos Rached-Richa, MD, of Guaynabo, PR

And a warm welcome back to the following returning member:

  • Mary Colpoys, MD, of East Haddam, CT

If you have peers or colleagues who aren’t currently members of the AAMA, please encourage them to learn more about the benefits of membership by visiting the website or contacting Russell Corcoran, the membership committee chair.

DON’T FORGET: If you would like to sponsor a medical student member for $75/year, please email AAMA today and let us know.

Physicians Complete 10-Year ABMA Recertification Process

Congratulations to the following physicians who have completed the process set by the American Board of Medical Acupuncture (ABMA) to be re-certified as a Diplomate for another 10 years:

  • David J. Bilstrom, MD, FAAMA of Idaho Falls, ID
  • Glenn M. Ho, MD, DABMA of Arcadia, CA
  • Kelly Hsu, MD, FAAMA, Lac of Scottsdale, AZ
  • Naykala A. Ruse, MD, DABMA of Cullman, AL
  • Tammy Lindsay, MD, FAAMA of Van Buren, MO
  • Danny G. Whu, MD, MPH, FAAMA of Loxahatchee, FL

AAMA Dues Renewal – LAST CHANCE

If you haven’t yet renewed your AAMA membership, your invoice is now past due and your membership is at risk of cancellation. Please log in to the member portal and renew now. Don’t risk the loss of your member benefits, which include:

  • Live and Virtual Educational Events
  • State and National Advocacy Initiatives
  • Patient Referrals
  • Research Support & Updates

Your membership also supports the practice of medical acupuncture on a national and international scale — building the evidence base for its use in clinical settings.

Renew now and help us strengthen medical acupuncture! 

HMI Course: Medical Acupuncture in Geriatric Care

The Helms Medical Institute is offering an online graduate-level course called “Medical Acupuncture in Geriatric Care.” In total, it is a 6-hour CME offering, with 4.5 hours of streaming video lectures on various topics in geriatric care, plus a 1.5-hour Q&A webinar. Enrollment is open through September 17, 2026, and video access to lectures is available now. https://hmieducation.com/graduate-webinar-10/

AAMA Member, Louis Kazal, Jr, Publishes Case Study: Long COVID Response to Chinese Medicine

Published in the April 2025 issue of Integrative Medicine, our colleague Dr. Kazal shared the following:

Background: Long COVID remains a significant burden for patients, clinicians, employers, and the U.S. healthcare system. Despite substantial resources and scientific studies directed at understanding and treating long COVID, its cause, and thus targeted treatment remains elusive. Conventional medicine focuses on symptom evaluation to rule out other etiologies. Intervention typically offers the patient current understanding and education and provides reassurance and context for their symptoms. Treatment is mostly supportive care directed at symptom management to improve quality of life, including occupational and physical therapy, breathing exercises, pulmonary rehabilitation, and mental health therapy. Classical Chinese Medicine (CCM) can help make sense of an individual’s response to COVID-19 infection, as each pathophysiological change caused by COVID can be correlated with CCM principles, therefore a corresponding treatment approach is available.

Conclusion: There is no single treatment for long COVID in Western or Chinese medicine. Western medical treatment centers around reassurance and supportive care, whereas CCM treatment can be more directly targeted and individualized to underlying causes and increase the probability of recovery. These cases indicate the potential of CCM for treating long COVID. However, more research is needed to evaluate the effectiveness of this approach to long COVID recovery.

Read the full article: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40171061/

Minnesota Public Radio: State Grant Aims to Counter Opioid Epidemic with Physical Therapy, Acupuncture

Can physical therapy, chiropractic care and acupuncture help combat the opioid epidemic? The Minnesota Department of Human Services awarded a grant to a Twin Cities-based physical medicine provider as a means to doing just that. Plymouth-based Fulcrum Health will operate a mobile clinic beginning fall 2025 in Anoka, Hennepin and Ramsey Counties. MPR News host Lisa Ryan spoke with Patricia Dennis, CEO of Fulcrum Health, about the mobile clinic. Listen now.

One Month Left for Access to the Annual Symposium Online CME Package!

On-demand recordings from the Annual Symposium are still available. The 2025 On-Demand Recording Package provides access to the event app platform that was used during the in-person meeting that now contains recordings from the sessions.

What Does the On-Demand Package Fee Cover?
  • Symposium Session recording access
  • Up to a maximum of 23.75 CME credits (must complete quiz for each session for credit where applicable)
  • Ability to download all symposium documentation and materials
  • Exhibit company access

Access to the On-Demand Recording Package is available through September 30, 2025. Learn more and register for the On-Demand Recording Package.

Are You Following Us?

Join the conversations online with fellow physician acupuncturists from around the country! You can find AAMA on:

There’s even a closed group on Facebook for discussion between members:

 

In Case You Missed It Last Month

Reminder: Enroll to Provide Services to Veterans Through the VA

If you’re interested in providing medical acupuncture through the VA in your community, there is a process to enroll and receive permission to provide care. Here are some resources to get you started:

How to Become a VA Community Provider (VA)

Policy Information Regarding Integrative Medicine and Health (VA)

Community Care – Provider Overview (VA)

Whole Health – Acupuncture – Policy Background

Special Interest Group: Do you work with the VA or DOD?

Physicians who wish to incorporate medical acupuncture into a practice face unique challenges specific to their own practice situation. AAMA member, Michael Freedman, MD, FAAMA, invites those of you serving in the DOD or employed by the VA to connect in a networking group to address those issues together. “We likely share similar challenges more than we do with our colleagues in other practice settings. At the last symposium we discussed starting an online group to occasionally meet and discuss our experiences. If you weren’t at the Symposium and/or interested in participating, please email me. I’d like to arrange our first meeting in July sometime.”

New Scientific Research Related to Acupuncture 

Comparative Effects of Two Acupuncture Protocols in the Management of Chronic Insomnia: A Randomized Controlled Trial
[Nature and Science of Sleep]
Conclusion: Acupuncture is an effective and safe treatment to improve sleep as well as daytime functioning for chronic insomnia. The protocol using HT7, BL15, LR3 and BL18 may offer added benefits for reducing anxiety and depressive symptoms.

Cost Sharing for Acupuncture Therapy in Commercial Insurance Plans
[Global Advances in Integrative Medicine and Health]
Conclusion: Cost sharing had an inconsistent impact on acupuncture utilization. Our fndings suggest that access to in-network acupuncturists is more important than cost sharing when it comes to increasing acupuncture utilization.

Acupuncture versus cognitive behavioral therapy for anxiety among cancer survivors with insomnia: an exploratory analysis of a randomized clinical trial
[Integrative Medicine Research]
Conclusion: Both acupuncture and CBT-I effectively manage comorbid anxiety and insomnia in cancer survivors. Acupuncture may address these symptoms independently, while CBT-I may improve them in an interconnected manner.

Total remission of primary hyperhidrosis following ear acupuncture: a case report
[Acupuncture in Medicine]
Heat and acupuncture restore mobility in knee osteoarthritis (HARMOKnee): A pragmatic integrated care, randomized controlled study

Heat and acupuncture restore mobility in knee osteoarthritis (HARMOKnee): A pragmatic integrated care, randomized controlled study
[Complementary Therapies in Medicine]
Conclusions: HARMOKnee provides short-term pain-management benefits to KOA patients compared to standard care alone, particularly in patients with Kidney yang deficiency with phlegm and blood stasis syndrome.

A Case Report on Home-Based End-of-Life Care with Traditional Korean Medicine Acupuncture and Herbal Medicine for an Elderly Patient with Parkinson’s Disease
[Journal of Palliative Medicine]
Conclusion: This case suggests that acupuncture and herbal medicine may serve as valuable adjunctive therapies for managing symptoms in patients with PD receiving HBPC. Notably, their integration into end-of-life care may help alleviate terminal dyspnea and support a peaceful death. These findings warrant further research and policy support to establish their role in palliative care for neurodegenerative diseases.

Note: Some of these news sources may require you to create a free account to read their content, while others may have a paywall.