I went to a friend's dinner party / birthday party last night. I think I accidentally ticked off one of the other guests. Here's the conversation:
Me: My coworker was trying to suggest that Hubby [who was also there] go to a chiropractor that does acupuncture to help him quit smoking.
Guest1: I've heard that works, but you really have to believe it.
Me: Well, sure. I suppose it would work about as well as a placebo.
Guest1 gives me a look like that's not what she meant.
Guest2: Acupuncture works for a whole lot of things. Just about anything you name, acupuncture can help with it.
Me: (thinking) How do you use acupuncture to help an amuptation?
Hubby: Acupuncture's been around for thousands of years. It must do something.
Me: Not necessarily. I'd love to see studies done to test the effectiveness of acupuncture.
At this point, they started discussing whether acupuncture hurts and what kinds of things it's used for, so I just kept quiet.
From what I've read, acupuncture works no better than a placebo. It really bothers me that these two mental health professionals were discussing an unproven form of treatment as if clinical studies had shown its effectiveness. I try to say something, and I either get ignored or treated as a pariah. I suppose that's why I don't get invited to more dinner parties.
Me: My coworker was trying to suggest that Hubby [who was also there] go to a chiropractor that does acupuncture to help him quit smoking.
Guest1: I've heard that works, but you really have to believe it.
Me: Well, sure. I suppose it would work about as well as a placebo.
Guest1 gives me a look like that's not what she meant.
Guest2: Acupuncture works for a whole lot of things. Just about anything you name, acupuncture can help with it.
Me: (thinking) How do you use acupuncture to help an amuptation?
Hubby: Acupuncture's been around for thousands of years. It must do something.
Me: Not necessarily. I'd love to see studies done to test the effectiveness of acupuncture.
At this point, they started discussing whether acupuncture hurts and what kinds of things it's used for, so I just kept quiet.
From what I've read, acupuncture works no better than a placebo. It really bothers me that these two mental health professionals were discussing an unproven form of treatment as if clinical studies had shown its effectiveness. I try to say something, and I either get ignored or treated as a pariah. I suppose that's why I don't get invited to more dinner parties.
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