News Release

Allina receives NIH grant to study real world usage of integrative therapies

Grant and Award Announcement

Allina Health

The National Institutes of Health has awarded $2.4 million to Allina Hospitals & Clinics to study the impact of integrative and mind/body therapies on pain management for patients at Abbott Northwestern Hospital in Minneapolis, Minn.

The Penny George Institute for Health and Healing and the Center for Healthcare Innovation at Allina received the grant and will conduct the study.

"Integrative medicine emphasizes a full range of personalized healthy lifestyle approaches that tend to physical, emotion, social, and spiritual well-being. This is right in line with Allina's mission and strategy to extend beyond responding to illness to a new level of supporting optimal health and preventing illness," said Penny Wheeler, MD, chief clinical officer, Allina Hospitals & Clinics.

According to the group's 2010 article in the Journal of Patient Safety, integrative therapies reduced pain by 56 percent, and 33 percent of patients reported complete pain relief after one visit by an integrative therapist.

But that study left questions that researchers hope this study will answer: which patients benefit best from which therapies and for how long can pain be managed with non-pharmacologic methods?

"This study will give us data to help anticipate the needs of patients and provide integrative therapies when and where they are most effective," said Jeffery Dusek, PhD, the principal investigator of the grant and Allina's research director for integrative medicine.

Instead of a randomized controlled trial, this observational study will examine the impact of integrative therapies as they are used for pain management in the real world of a hospital setting.

"We have to look at integrative therapies in the context of a complex medical environment. Patients are hospitalized for a variety of clinical reasons, receive a number of therapies and experience and respond to pain differently," Dusek said.

The Penny George Institute for Health and Healing at Abbott Northwestern Hospital is the nation's largest inpatient integrative program and has served more than 19,000 patients since 2004.

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About Allina Hospitals & Clinics

The Penny George Institute for Health and Healing, the Center for Healthcare Innovation and Abbott Northwestern Hospital are part of Allina Hospitals & Clinics, a not-for-profit system of hospitals, clinics and other health care services, that provides exceptional care throughout Minnesota and western Wisconsin.

As the largest hospital in the Twin Cities, Abbott Northwestern is recognized nationally and locally for its exceptional expertise and care. Each year, the hospital serves more than 200,000 patients and their families from across the Twin Cities and Upper Midwest.

The Penny George Institute for Health and Healing provides a range of services in both the inpatient and outpatient environments, including such therapies as acupuncture, biofeedback, music therapy, nutrition consultations and massage therapy. The George Institute also conducts leading-edge research and education programs.

The Center for Healthcare Innovation researches new care models and treatments to transform health and health care and advance Allina's strategic vision to improve patient care and serve as a catalyst for change in health care locally and nationally.

More information about Allina can be found at www.allina.com.


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