The Mastery of Acupuncture arises from it’s ability, consciously, to sculpt the Mystery of Healing.
— paul hougham, atlas of the mind body & spirit

What is Acupuncture?

Acupuncture is the insertion of fine single use stainless steel needles into predetermined points on the body for therapeutic affect.  Moxibustion, a heat treatment, Gua Sha, Cupping and Ear Seeds (applied to points on the ear) may also be used in the treatment.  Traditional Chinese medicine shows there are pathways called meridians with acupuncture points which connect the pathways to particular organs and functions.  Chinese Medicine views the body equally at the level of body, mind and spirit. 5 Elements Acupuncture balances the systems with each element, Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal and Water.

Acupuncture benefits fertility, weight management, detox, immune system, inflammatory issues, digestion, nervous system, anxiety, skin disorders, covid and long covid symptoms. Acupuncture is available in-person.

  • Acupuncture is the insertion of pre-sterilised, single use, acupuncture needles in the skin.  It is a safe method of treatment.  A feeling of deep relaxation is typically felt. 

    It is recommended that you eat, hydrate and relax soon after treatment.  

  • Research concludes that acupuncture causes a release of endorphins, the body’s naturally produced painkillers. This release causes beneficial effects to the body’s immune and endocrine systems and has profound neurophysiological effects.

  • Acupuncture is effective for conditions including:

    • Fertility, Gynaecological and Menstrual issues

    • Pregnancy nausea, insomnia and pelvic pain

    • Stress, Anxiety & Emotional Health

    • Nausea caused by anesthesia or chemotherapy

    • Headaches and Migraines

    • Carpal Tunnel, Tennis and Golfers elbow

    • Fibromyalgia

    • Myofascial pain

    • Osteoarthritis

    • Low back pain

    • Asthma

    • Rosacea, acne and skin disorders

  • Many people have a healthy fear or anxiety about needles. Each persons experience of that sensation is unique.

    During the session we work with the breath and begin, with your permission, with 1 needle.

    Acupuncture needles are very fine, like a strand of your hair.

    5 Elements technique is a subtle needling style where there is a slight sensation felt.

  • Generally first treatment is 1 hour to give the system time to detox and address the main complaint. 60, 45 and 30 minute treatments are available depending on the main complaint. If it is an Acute injury and during pregnancy 30 minutes will suffice.

  • A dull ache, sensation or pressure is felt when the needle is inserted.  The needle can be removed immediately or left in place for some time, depending on the treatment goal.  Deep relaxation is felt afterwards, as if having had a good nights sleep.

  • If there is existing injuries or health issues a number of sessions will be required. This is determined after the health consultation, then after each treatment, with an overall review after 4 or 6 treatments.

    For good general health and immune support, 4 weekly treatments are recommended with 6 week follow ups.

    For acute injury, 2-4 weekly treatments are recommended, with a 3-6 month follow up.

    For chronic health issues, 4-8 weekly treatments are recommended with 4-6 week follow ups.

    For cosmetic, 12-18 weekly treatments are recommended, with monthly follow ups.

  • Acupuncture supports the natural and assisted fertility journeys.

    See more on Fertility Acupuncture here.

  • Acupuncture is completely safe during all stages of pregnancy.

    It supports the many physical and emotional transitions that happen during pregnancy. Acupuncture is beneficial for nausea, to treat musculo-skeletal pain as the body develops during pregnancy and to prepare for labour.

    It is additionally beneficial as there are very few medications safe to take during pregnancy.

  • Science has the proven there are many benefits of acupuncture. The Acupuncture Evidence Project explains further.

    The Acupuncture Council of Ireland and the World Health Organisation recommends acupuncture for these diseases, symptoms or conditions, because acupuncture has been ‘prove[d] – through controlled trials – to be an effective treatment’:

    -Adverse reactions to radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy

    -Allergic rhinitis (including hay fever)

    -Biliary colic

    -Depression (including depressive neurosis and depression following stroke)

    -Dysentery, acute bacillary

    -Dysmenorrhoea, primary

    -Epigastralgia, acute (in peptic ulcer, acute and chronic gastritis, and gastrospasm)

    -Facial pain (including craniomandibular disorders)

    -Headache

    -Hypertension, essential

    -Hypotension, primary

    -Induction of labour

    -Knee pain

    -Leukopenia

    -Low back pain

    -Malposition of fetus, correction of

    -Morning sickness

    -Nausea and vomiting

    -Neck pain

    -Pain in dentistry (including dental pain and temporomandibular dysfunction)

    -Periarthritis of shoulder

    -Postoperative pain

    -Renal colic

    -Rheumatoid arthritis

    -Sciatica

    -Sprain

    -Stroke

    -Tennis elbow

    Diseases, symptoms or conditions for which The World Health Organisation recommends acupuncture because its therapeutic effect has been shown, although further proof is needed:

    -Abdominal pain (in acute gastroenteritis or due to gastrointestinal spasm)

    -Acne vulgaris

    -Alcohol dependence and detoxification

    -Bell’s palsy

    -Bronchial asthma

    -Cancer pain

    -Cardiac neurosis

    -Cholecystitis, chronic, with acute exacerbation

    -Cholelithiasis

    -Competition stress syndrome

    -Craniocerebral injury, closed

    -Diabetes mellitus, non-insulin-dependent

    -Earache

    -Epidemic haemorrhagic fever

    -Epistaxis, simple (without generalised or local disease)

    -Eye pain due to subconjunctival injection

    -Female infertility

    -Facial spasm

    -Female urethral syndrome

    -Fibromyalgia and fasciitis

    -Gastrokinetic disturbance

    -Gouty arthritis

    -Hepatitis B virus carrier status

    -Herpes zoster (human (alpha) herpes virus 3)

    -Hyperlipaemia

    -Hypo-ovarianism

    -Insomnia

    -Labour pain

    -Lactation, deficiency

    -Male sexual dysfunction, non-organic

    -Ménière disease

    -Neuralgia, post-herpetic

    -Neurodermatitis

    -Obesity

    -Opium, cocaine and heroin dependence

    -Osteoarthritis

    -Pain due to endoscopic examination

    -Pain in thromboangiitis obliterans

    -Polycystic ovary syndrome (Stein–Leventhal syndrome)

    -Postextubation in children

    -Postoperative convalescence

    -Premenstrual syndrome

    -Prostatitis, chronic

    -Pruritus

    -Radicular and pseudoradicular pain syndrome

    -Raynaud syndrome, primary

    -Recurrent lower urinary-tract infection

    -Reflex sympathetic dystrophy

    -Retention of urine, traumatic

    -Schizophrenia

    -Sialism, drug-induced

    -Sjögren syndrome

    -Sore throat (including tonsillitis)

    -Spine pain, acute

    -Stiff neck

    -Temporomandibular joint dysfunction

    -Tietze syndrome

    -Tobacco dependence

    -Tourette syndrome

    -Ulcerative colitis, chronic

    -Urolithiasis

    -Vascular dementia

    -Whooping cough (pertussis)

    Diseases, symptoms or conditions for which only individual controlled trials report some therapeutic effects. The World Health Organisation recommends acupuncture for these when treatment by conventional and other therapies is difficult:

    -Chloasma

    -Choroidopathy, central serous

    -Colour blindness

    -Deafness

    -Hypophrenia

    -Irritable colon syndrome

    -Neuropathic bladder due to spinal cord injury

    -Pulmonary heart disease, chronic

    -Small airway obstruction

  • Professor J.R. Worsley (1923 – 2003) is credited with bringing Five-Element Acupuncture to the West.

    Jack Reginald Worsley, known as “JR”, was born on September 14th, 1923 in Coventry, Warwickshire. The son of an engineer, he was first introduced to acupuncture through his father’s interest in ancient Chinese philosophy. Educated locally, he left school at age fourteen to work in a factory but joined the armed forces when war broke out in 1939.

    After the war Worsley practiced physiotherapy and began to study osteopathy, naturopathy and acupuncture. In the early 1950s he traveled to Taiwan, Singapore and Korea to further his studies and was awarded a Doctorate in Acupuncture. It was during his time there that he first came across the Five-Element system of acupuncture and was drawn to the way it looked at every aspect of a person’s physical, mental and spiritual well-being in order to diagnose the root cause of his or her imbalance.

    After studying under his Five-Element teachers Ono and Hsui, in 1955 Worsley was awarded the title of “Master” of Five-Element Acupuncture. The following year he returned to Britain and founded the College of Traditional Acupuncture in Kenilworth, Warwickshire. This was followed by the setting up of a number of institutes in America, including, in 1988, the Worsley Institute of Classical Acupuncture in Miami, Florida.

    In 1971 acupuncture became something of a cause celebre in the United States after the official visit to China of President Nixon’s then Secretary-of-State, Henry Kissinger. James Reston, a journalist covering the trip had developed appendicitis and during an emergency operation, Chinese surgeons used acupuncture to anaesthetize him. Suddenly it was all the rage.

    While there was a great deal of attention given to symptomatic treatments, Worsley’s methods were rooted in the study of anatomy and Chinese philosophy, which he taught and practiced all over the world in conjunction with countless hospitals and western doctors.

    Throughout the 1970s Worsley’s popularity grew and he traveled extensively, conducting seminars and consultations. His teaching inspired many others to adopt the Five-Element system which he taught, could benefit people of any age.

    Despite two heart attacks, Worsley continued to travel to and from the United States and was still seeing patients two weeks before his death in Miami, Florida, on June 2, 2003.

    As well as his numerous articles for medical journals, Worsley published many books including Is Acupuncture for You?, Talking About Acupuncture in New York, Meridians of Ch’i Energy-Point Reference Guide, The Five Elements and The Officials, and Traditional Acupuncture (Traditional Diagnosis).