FAQs › Acupuncture vs Physiotherapy: Which Is Better for My Conditi
Acupuncture and physiotherapy are complementary rather than competing therapies. Acupuncture is often more effective for pain modulation and systemic conditions; physiotherapy excels in rehabilitation and movement retraining. Many patients benefit from both simultaneously.
Physiotherapy is excellent for rehabilitation after injury or surgery, correcting movement patterns, building strength, and addressing structural biomechanical issues. Manual physiotherapy techniques (joint mobilisation, dry needling, soft tissue work) address local tissue problems directly.
Acupuncture addresses pain through the central nervous system as well as locally, making it particularly effective for chronic pain where central sensitisation is a factor. It also addresses systemic contributing factors — poor sleep, stress, hormonal imbalance, digestive issues — that physiotherapy does not address. For conditions like fibromyalgia, complex regional pain syndrome, or pain with a significant emotional component, acupuncture often produces results that physiotherapy alone cannot.
Many patients with musculoskeletal conditions benefit from both modalities simultaneously. Acupuncture reduces pain and muscle tension, making physiotherapy exercises easier to perform correctly. Physiotherapy corrects the biomechanical issues that, if unaddressed, would cause acupuncture gains to regress.
Rainbow Medicine actively collaborates with physiotherapists, GPs, and other practitioners. We are happy to communicate with your existing treating team.
Book an initial consultation at Rainbow Medicine — we will assess your condition and advise on the optimal treatment combination.
Book a ConsultationCopyright© 2002-2025 visuallink© SaaS - Web Hosted Solutions, Design and Maintenance by Visual Link IT Pty Ltd - Software Solutions