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ABOUT CHINESE MEDICINE
INTRODUCTION
Chinese medicine is a literate, professionally practiced
system of medicine that has roots dating back over 2500
years. The term Chinese medicine refers to the various
styles and modalities that have evolved in China during this
time period. Because China is a very large land mass, with
culturally diverse regions and a long history, there is not
one thing that defines Chinese medicine. It was not until
the Cultural Revolution in China that this mass of
information was organized and systematized.
BASICS
Chinese medicine is one of the oldest, continually practiced
systems of medicine in the world. It is utilized by more
people than any other system of medicine. Chinese medicine
has origins that date back thousands of years. As a
coherent, literate style of medicine, Chinese medicine is
2500 years old. Some of the oldest written medical texts
belong to Chinese medicine, and are still available and in
use today.
Chinese medicine is a large topic to explain, and it is
worth saying something about this. Chinese medicine has
evolved over a long time, in the very culturally diverse and
vast landscape of China. The study of Chinese medicine
involves understanding the theories and premises not only of
the medical system, but also of Chinese philosophy, thought,
and logic, and the context in which these have arisen. There
is no one thing that is Chinese medicine. What we lack in
the West is familiarity with all of this. We have
familiarity with, not understanding of, our own medical
system. This too, is subject to historical development and
built in cultural assumptions that we do not even realize we
have. When someone has a set of symptoms, and they are given
a diagnosis of diabetes, for example, they feel comfortable
that they have an explanation. They probably do not know
what a pancreas is, what the Islets of Langerhan do, the
details of glucose metabolism, the biochemical structure of
a carbohydrate, etc. But they do have familiarity with the
language, and that is all that is needed. Because Chinese
medicine seems foreign, most people have a desire to
understand it more, and that is a good thing.
There are two main pieces of information I feel that people
need to understand at the beginning. First, Chinese medicine
is different than modern western medicine. This is true not
just because acupuncture needles and herbs are used instead
of pharmaceuticals and surgery, but because Chinese medicine
thinks differently than western medicine. The concepts of
physiology, health and disease, organ function, diagnosis,
treatment strategies, etc., are all different. Not better,
just different.
Second, Chinese medicine diagnoses and treats people not
only according to disease diagnosis, but also according to
pattern diagnosis. Diseases are culturally determined, and
change with time and knowledge. This is not widely
understood by the general public, but it is true. Chinese
medicine recognizes many of the same diseases as western
medicine, but each system considers diseases that the other
does not. Most treatment in western medicine is based on
disease discrimination. That is, if a person has a certain
disease, they receive a certain treatment for it.
Chinese medicine also considers pattern discrimination.
Patterns are fundamental disease mechanisms, not limited to
the specific symptom being treated. They describe basic
physiological imbalances that are responsible for producing
diseases. There are often many possible patterns for a given
disease, and they occur in different combinations for
different people. This means that Chinese medicine has a
very individualized system of diagnosis, and thus treatment,
for what can appear to be the same problem in different
people.
DIAGNOSIS
Chinese medicine is a collection of theories that have
evolved over time, and today are collectively part of a
coherent system of medicine. The most important part of
practicing Chinese medicine is accurate diagnosis. The
process of Chinese medicine begins with gathering
information. This is done through a specified system of
diagnosis that includes observation through history taking,
physical observation and examination, and Chinese pulse and
tongue examination. This information is processed trough the
diagnostic filters of Chinese medicine to arrive at the
appropriate disease and pattern diagnoses. From these
diagnoses logically follows a discussion of causality,
treatment principles, treatment strategies, and finally,
treatment.
TREATMENT
Treatment is divided into two categories. The category of
remedial care is what most people come for – what treatment
gets done to you. This includes some of the modalities
described below. The other category is self care. The
discussion of causality in Chinese medicine leads to
appropriate recommendations that people can follow at home.
As a practitioner of Chinese medicine, my primary role is to
teach people why they are sick, and how to take care of
themselves so that they can get better and stay well.
Traditionally, preventative treatment was the main function
of Chinese doctors. Treatment was administered only if
relief could not be achieved by self care remedies.
MODALITIES
Acupuncture is the main modality of Chinese medicine that is
known in this country. It is very important to understand
that acupuncture is not just a technique. It is not a set of
tricks that you add to what you do to fix problems.
Acupuncture is a treatment modality that is part of the
larger system of Chinese medicine. Treatment is the last
step of the way in Chinese medicine, after the other
diagnostic work has been performed. Three of the main
modalities of Chinese medicine that I use in my practice are
listed below.
About Acupuncture
About Herbology
About Dietary Therapy
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Copyright 2006 Robert Keller. All rights reserved.
The information in this website is for informational
purposes only, and is not intended to diagnose or treat
any illness.
Robert Keller, C.A. 1949 Route 70 East,
Suite 8 Cherry Hill, NJ 08003
856-751-3444
rk@robertkellerca.com |
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