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but western medicine can cure my ailments.
Western medicine is generally the use of synthetically manufactured single
compounds that are administered to the body in highly
concentrated doses. These drugs can obviously
be highly effective and cure many diseases. Interestingly,
many conventional synthetic compounds are derived from
plant materials. Aspirin and Cisplatin (one of
the world's leading anti cancer drugs) are both derived
from trees.
Chinese herbal medicine uses lower dosages of more dilute herbal extracts to help the body retain or maintain its balance in a step-by-step fashion. Perhaps the philosophy of Chinese medicine is best expressed by the writings of one 7th-century physician: Superior treatment consists of dealing with an illness before it appears. Mediocre treatment consists of curing an illness on the point of revealing itself. Inferior treatment consists of curing the illness once it has manifested itself.
what's the difference?
Conventional Western medicine and traditional Chinese medicine take different approaches to health and diseases. Each medicine develops its advantage in some areas, such as chronic diseases and syndromes; functional and emotional disorders; pain conditions; gynecological, neurological, muscular, and gastrointestinal problems for traditional Chinese medicine; trauma, acute conditions, and catastrophic problems for conventional Western medicine.
Traditional symptom-based approaches to disorders such as cough, palpitations, constipation, insomnia, vomiting, and pain are treated holistically using TCM internal medicine.
To determine when an herb, a food or an acupuncture
point is appropriate for a patient, recognition of the
right pattern from the patient's constitutions, main
complaints, general body conditions, and tongue and
pulse is fundamental.
how did it come to the west?
There has been a record of significant interaction between Eastern and Western medical systems for several hundred years. References to acupuncture and pulse diagnosis occurred in the writings of Dutch physicians in the 17th century.
Much of what is now known as Swedish massage originated from China and there has been a long history of exchange in herbal products with Cinnamon bark being exported from China to ancient Rome and herbs such as American Ginseng being incorporated into the Chinese tradition in the nineteenth century.
The first part of the twentieth century however was
very much a one way flow of information as the developments
in Western medicine flooded into China and, in the spirit
of progress threatened to overwhelm what was then perceived
as a rather dated looking system of traditional medicine.
Things slowly started to change in the second half of the last century and a process of government support and medical standardisation began which has now resulted in the current situation in China and other Asian countries where TCM now operates in large teaching hospitals, side by side with the latest developments of Western medicine.
so why is it so popular now?
In Western countries TCM was relatively unknown until President Nixon's groundbreaking
visit to China in 1971 and the accounts of the use of
acupuncture for pain control appeared in the New York
Times.
Since then there has been a rapid growth in the awareness and use of TCM in Western countries so that currently Universities around the world are now teaching degrees in TCM and in the UK there are several thousand practitioners offering herbal medicines, acupuncture and other techniques within a Western clinical setting. (links to UK unis and colleges)
There are several reasons for this rapid rise in popularity.
The initial appeal of the exotic was replaced by anecdotal
and increasingly research reports indicating the effectiveness
of TCM treatments. The groundbreaking studies on the
successful use of Chinese herbal medicines in the treatment
of eczema at Great Ormond Street Hospital hit the national
headlines and learned medical journals (Sheehan
MP, Rustin MHA, et al. Efficacy of traditional Chinese
herbal therapy in adult atopic dermatitis. Lancet 1992;340:137).
TCM is now frequently used for this and many other forms of skin disease. Alongside the evidence supporting the use of TCM there was also a growing sense of dissatisfaction with the limitation s of modern medical treatments. The lack of a holistic perspective, short consultation times and the often debilitating side effects of pharmaceutical drugs have meant that more and more people are seeking additional forms of health care.
In recent years improved standards of education and professional organisation, and a new emphasis on quality control have meant that now there is a network of well qualified TCM practitioners offering the benefits of this ancient tradition to the Western public. Sen primarily works with the Register of Chinese Herbal Medicine who support Government efforts on self-regulation of practitioners.
To find out more about the RHCM, click on this link, www.rchm.co.uk and it will open their website in a new window
so why should I come to Sen?
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