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NADAbrochure Final

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NADA offers

Membership

Public Education
Workshops, demonstrations, and trainings regionally,
nationally, or at your location.
Annual Conference for updates and sharing (Continuing Education Units available).

NADA is a not-for-profit corporation under the guidance


of a diverse and dedicated volunteer Board of Directors. It is
not necessary to be a NADA trainee, acupuncturist or health
care professional to be a member.
By joining NADA, you will provide direct support for
accessible and responsible acupuncture-based treatment.
Communities request access to the NADA group ear
acupuncture model and NADA members respond with
their skills and advice to help create new programs and
support ongoing treatment.
Membership dues directly support our mission of making
NADA treatments barrier free and accessible worldwide
within behavioral health settings, psychiatric hospitals,
recovery programs, and disaster relief care.

Advocacy
Guidance from the NADA Board and administrative
office in collaboration with regional advocates to expand
access to NADA treatment.
Support for preparing meetings with legislators,
policy makers, and regulatory agencies.
Resources
The NADA Literature Clearing House offers articles
and DVD/videos on addiction-related research and
clinical topics such as the treatment of pregnant women
and people with HIV, cultural sensitivity, setting up a
new program, and dual diagnosis.
Guidepoints: NADA member newsletter covers clinical
issues, member news, international usage, research, and
public policy.
Consultation and Technical Assistance
Consultation for integrating the acupuncture component with existing services.
Opportunities to observe local programs.
Consultation for treatment of diverse populations.
Assistance in establishing acupuncture-based programs
in Drug Courts and other criminal justice systems.

Dues:
$65 per year, or $40 if you are a student
Membership Benefits
Bimonthly subscription to member newsletter
Guidepoints: News from NADA
Support for starting and sustaining an acupuncturebased public health, addictions, psychiatric or disaster
relief program
Assistance with collecting outcomes, researching,
assimilating and publishing data on NADA programs
Opportunities to apprentice and become a NADA
Registered Trainer
Discount on annual conference registration and
purchases from our online bookstore.
To join, go to the Membership page on our website:
www.acudetox.com, call the NADA office at (888) 765NADA or send an email to nadaoffice@acudetox.com.

NADA Office
PO Box 1066
Laramie, WY 82073

In 2011, trainees in Joplin, MO learn how to respond to


communities in crisis.

ADA

Fax: (573) 777-9956


Local phone: (307) 460-2771
Toll-free phone: (888) 765-NADA
Website: acudetox.com
E-mail: NADAOffice@acudetox.com

ADA
National
Acupuncture
Detoxification
Association

NADA Mission statement


The National Acupuncture Detoxification Association
(NADA), a not-for-profit training and advocacy organization, encourages community wellness through the use
of a standardized auricular acupuncture protocol for
behavioral health, including addictions, mental health,
and disaster & emotional trauma. We work to improve
access and effectiveness of care through promoting policies
and practices which integrate NADA-style treatment
with other Western behavioral health modalities.

What NADA does


Trains health providers to use a simple, safe and
standardized ear acupuncture protocol to treat addictions,
behavioral health, trauma and disaster relief.
Provides education, technical support and assistance
in establishing and sustaining ear acupuncture services
within behavioral health and addiction treatment
programs.
Advocates for public policies that increase access to
NADA ear acupuncture.

ADA

What is the NADA model?


A non-verbal approach to healing that involves the gentle
placement of up to five small, sterilized disposable needles
into specific sites on each ear. The recipients sit quietly in a
group setting for 30-45 minutes.
NADA ear acupuncture is an adjunct therapy which is
clinically effective, cost-efficient, drug-free and compatible
cross-culturally. It can easily be established within behavioral
health, addictions or disaster relief settings or in any location
that a group of people can sit together. The combined
application of acupuncture with counseling, education,
medical support and self-help groups such as AA and NA
enhances opportunities for success.

Benefits show:

Reduced cravings for alcohol and drugs, including


nicotine
Minimized withdrawal symptoms
Increased calmness, better sleep, and less agitation

Relief from stress and emotional trauma


An easier connection with counseling
A discovery of inner quiet and strength
An intention for recovery

Training
NADA trainers worldwide lead workshops and trainings on
the use of acupuncture in the field of mental health, addictions,
recovery and as part of disaster relief efforts. Trainings are also
provided through public and private agencies and hospitals,
within acupuncture and medical school.
Who conducts NADA training?
In the U.S., NADA Registered Trainers are various health
professionals including social workers, nurses, licensed
acupuncturists and medical doctors as well as professors at
universities and colleges.
Who Can be Trained? (Depending on State Laws)
Addictions & harm reduction counselors
Mental health therapists & social workers
Correctional officers & drug court personnel
Disaster relief teams and trauma support center staff
First responders, health promoters, nurses, and EMTs
Acupuncturists, medical doctors

State laws and regulations for the practice of the NADA


protocol by non-acupuncturists vary state by state. Please
check with your local authority to find out if you are eligible
to practice in your state.
For an updated calendar of current trainings, visit:
acudetox.com/nada-protocol/training/4-training-calendar.html.

History
For centuries, various cultures around the world have placed
needles in precise locations on the body to relieve pain
and treat disease. Only since 1972, when a Hong Kong
neurosurgeon, H.L. Wen, M.D., discovered that acupuncture
could alleviate the symptoms of opiate withdrawal, has this
method been used for detoxification and relapse prevention.
In the United States, acupuncture detoxification was
first introduced on an outpatient basis in 1974 at Lincoln
Hospital, a city facility in the South Bronx area of New
York City. By the mid-1980s, the success of this unique
procedure had become so evident that treatment facilities
across the United States began incorporating acupuncture
into their substance abuse programming.
Diagnostic assessment was found to be unnecessary for
an effective treatment to be delivered. Therefore trainees
need not attend Oriental medical school for years in order
to learn the technique. In 1985, the National Acupuncture
Detoxification Association (NADA) was established to
promote education and training of clinicians in the NADA
ear acupuncture protocol.
In 1987, Bullock, Culliton and Olander published the first
of many research reports now available on the effectiveness of
acupuncture in treating addiction. Acupuncture detoxification
has grown rapidly, evolved and is now used effectively for acute
and prolonged withdrawal as well as relapse prevention.
More than 1,000 programs in the United States and
Canada now use acupuncture and NADA is proud to have
contributed to their success. It is being used as an aid for
stress reduction in people with psychiatric illness, sickle
cell, and HIV.
NADA has trained more than 25,000 clinicians in North
America and worldwide. Affiliated NADA groups exist in
over 40 nations in Europe, the Middle East, Asia, Africa and
Latin America. The protocol has since become understood
to have less of one specific effect on addictions or any single
behavioral health condition, rather as a stress reduction and
calming technique beneficial as an adjunct to many different
conditions. Globally it is utilized by various international
acupuncture and medical aid groups as a capacity building
tool for disaster relief, refugee and international health care.

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