The regulation of acupuncture in France and the UK: Shifts and fragmentation in contrasting healthcare systems
Author(s) -
Cloatre Emilie,
Ramas Francesco Salvini
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
medical law international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.185
H-Index - 11
eISSN - 2047-9441
pISSN - 0968-5332
DOI - 10.1177/0968533220903373
Subject(s) - acupuncture , health care , corporate governance , healthcare system , political science , alternative medicine , public administration , public relations , sociology , medicine , law , management , economics , pathology
This article explores the regulation of acupuncture in the UK and France. It focuses on the dilemmas such regulation has raised, and the effects of two contrasting approaches to the regulatory organisation of acupuncture within healthcare systems on practices and care. Although the question of how acupuncture, like other complementary, alternative or traditional therapies, should be regulated has often been reduced to a question of scientific knowledge, it is also dependent on the intricacies of national health system governance, state rationales and professional identities. France and the UK provide exemplary instances of contrasting systems, in which each of these factors has come to shape the regulation of the highly heterodox practice that is acupuncture. Overall, exploring the challenges of regulating acupuncture provides useful perspectives on how the make-up of legitimate therapies is constituted in particular healthcare contexts.
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