By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Acupuncture Intake Forms: What Licensed Acupuncturists Need to Capture at Patient Intake

Acupuncture operates at the intersection of two medical frameworks. A patient presents with lower back pain, and the Western chart notes lumbar radiculopathy while the TCM assessment identifies Kidney qi deficiency with Blood stasis in the Bladder meridian. Both framings inform the treatment plan, and both need to be documented before the first needle is placed. An intake form that only captures one side — a standard medical history without TCM assessment fields, or a TCM-only form that skips medication interactions — leaves the practitioner working with half the picture.

Most acupuncture practices cobble together a generic medical intake with a few TCM questions stapled to the back. That is not a system — it is a workaround. A purpose-built acupuncture intake form captures Western medical history, TCM diagnostic assessment, contraindication screening, treatment preferences, informed consent, and insurance details in a single structured document. Here is what that form should include and why each section matters clinically and legally.

Chief complaint: bridging Western and TCM framing

The chief complaint section in an acupuncture intake needs to do more than record "headaches" or "knee pain." It needs to capture the complaint in enough detail to support both a Western differential and a TCM pattern differentiation from the very first visit.

Start with the patient's own words — their description of the problem, when it started, what makes it better or worse, and what treatments they have already tried. Then layer in the fields that let you begin TCM assessment before the patient is even on the table:

Health history: current conditions, medications, and surgical history

Acupuncture practitioners need the same comprehensive health history that any primary care intake requires, with additional fields that reflect the realities of an integrative patient population. Many acupuncture patients are simultaneously seeing Western physicians, taking prescription medications, and using herbal supplements or over-the-counter remedies that the prescribing physician may not know about.

TCM-specific assessment: tongue, pulse, and pattern differentiation

This is the section that separates an acupuncture intake from a generic medical form. TCM assessment fields are clinical documentation tools — they record the diagnostic findings that justify your treatment plan and demonstrate the medical necessity of acupuncture to insurers who require TCM diagnostic codes.

Pain mapping: location, quality, triggers, and TCM differentiation

Pain is the most common reason patients seek acupuncture, and a pain mapping section does more than note "right shoulder." It captures the detail that drives both point selection and pattern differentiation:

Lifestyle factors: diet, sleep, stress, and emotional state

TCM treats the whole person, not the isolated symptom, and lifestyle factors are diagnostic data in this framework — not background information. A patient who craves cold drinks, sleeps hot, and feels irritable is presenting Heat signs. A patient who is fatigued after meals, bruises easily, and feels heavy in the limbs is presenting Spleen qi deficiency with possible Blood deficiency.

Contraindications: what must be screened before treatment

Acupuncture is low-risk when performed by a licensed practitioner, but "low-risk" is not "no-risk." Contraindication screening at intake is both a clinical safety measure and a liability shield. Your form needs to flag the following before the patient reaches the treatment room:

Treatment preferences: needling, modalities, and patient comfort

Acupuncture encompasses a range of modalities, and patients have preferences and aversions that affect compliance and outcomes. A patient who dreads electroacupuncture will tense up if you apply it without discussion, undermining the treatment. Capture preferences at intake so the first session is not spent negotiating:

Informed consent: risks, alternatives, and scope of practice

Informed consent in acupuncture must address risks that are specific to the modality. A generic medical consent form does not cover the risks of needling, and a patient who signed a form that mentions "possible complications" without specifying what those complications are has not given informed consent in any meaningful sense.

Insurance and billing: acupuncture-specific requirements

Acupuncture insurance billing has its own set of complexities that a general medical billing section does not address. Coverage varies dramatically by state, payer, and plan, and patients who assume their insurance covers acupuncture are frequently surprised by denials or visit limits:

HIPAA acknowledgment

Acupuncture practices are covered entities under HIPAA when they transmit health information electronically — which includes electronic insurance billing, email communication with patients, and electronic health records. Your intake must include a HIPAA acknowledgment confirming that the patient has received your Notice of Privacy Practices and understands how their protected health information will be used, stored, and disclosed. This is not optional and it is not a formality — it is a federal compliance requirement that carries penalties for non-compliance. For a deeper look at HIPAA intake requirements across healthcare specialties, see our guide to HIPAA-compliant intake forms.

Documentation that supports the medicine

Acupuncture intake documentation serves three audiences simultaneously. It serves the practitioner — providing the clinical data needed to formulate a TCM diagnosis and treatment plan. It serves the patient — establishing informed consent, setting expectations, and creating a record of their baseline condition that tracks progress over a course of treatment. And it serves the regulatory and insurance environment — demonstrating medical necessity, documenting contraindication screening, and satisfying HIPAA compliance requirements.

A form that handles all three audiences does not need to be long. It needs to be structured — organized so that clinical data, consent elements, and administrative fields each have a defined place, and nothing gets skipped because the practitioner was running behind on a busy clinic day. That structure is what turns intake from a paper-shuffling exercise into a clinical tool that improves care and protects the practice.

Practitioners building documentation across multiple healthcare specialties can find acupuncture alongside 20 other healthcare intake form sets in the Healthcare Bundle. For related bodywork documentation, see our guide to massage therapy intake form essentials.

Acupuncture intake forms — $19.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Chief complaint, health history, TCM assessment, pain mapping, contraindications, treatment preferences, informed consent, insurance details, and HIPAA acknowledgment. Built for licensed acupuncturists and TCM practitioners.

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