Traditional Chinese Medicine (also known as TCM or
T.C.M.) is a range of traditional medical practices used in China that developed
over several thousand years. These practices include herbal medicine,
acupuncture, and massage. TCM is a form of Oriental medicine, which includes
other traditional East Asian medical systems such as traditional Japanese and
Korean medicine. TCM says processes of the human body are interrelated and
constantly interact with the environment. Therefore the theory looks for the
signs of disharmony in the external and internal environment of a person in
order to understand, treat and prevent illness and disease.
TCM theory is based on a number of philosophical frameworks including the Theory
of Yin-yang, the Five Elements, the human body Meridian system, Zang Fu organ
theory, and others. Diagnosis and treatment are conducted with reference to
these concepts. TCM does not usually operate within a western scientific
paradigm but some practitioners make efforts to bring practices into an
evidence-based medicine framework.
History
Much of the philosophy of traditional Chinese medicine derived from Taoist
philosophy, and reflects the classical Chinese belief that individual human
experiences express causative principles effective in the environment at all
scales. These causative principles, whether material, essential, or spiritual,
correlate as the expression of the fates decreed by heaven.
During the golden age of his reign from 2696 to 2598 BC., as a result of a
dialogue with his minister Ch'i Pai, the Yellow Emperor is supposed by Chinese
tradition to have composed his Neijing Suwen or Basic Questions of Internal
Medicine, also known as the Huangdi Neijing. Modern scholarly opinion holds that
the extant text of this title was compiled by an eponymous scholar between the
Chou and Han dynasties more than two thousand years later than tradition
reports, although some parts of the extant work may have originated as early as
1000 B.C.
During the Han dynasty, Chang Chung-Ching, who was mayor of Chang-sha toward the
end of the 2nd century AD, wrote a Treatise on Typhoid Fever, which contains the
earliest known reference to Neijing Suwen. The Chin dynasty practitioner and
advocate of acupuncture and moxibustion, Huang-fu Mi (215 - 282 AD), also quoted
the Yellow Emperor in his Chia I Ching, ca. 265 AD. During the Tang dynasty,
Wang Ping claimed to have located a copy of the originals of the Neijing Suwen,
which he expanded and edited substantially. This work was revisited by an
imperial commission during the 11th century AD.
However, Classical Chinese Medicine (CCM) is notably different from Traditional
Chinese Medicine (TCM). The Nationalist government at that time elected to
abandon and outlaw the practice of CCM as it did not want China to be left
behind by scientific progress. For 30 years, CCM was forbidden in China and
several people were prosecuted by the government for engaging in CCM. In the
1960's, Mao Zedong finally decided that the government could not continue to
outlaw the use of CCM. He commissioned the top 10 doctors (M.D.'s) to take a
survey of CCM and create a standardized format for its application. This
standardized form is now known as TCM.
Today, TCM is what is taught in nearly all those medical schools in China, most
of Asia and Northern America, that teach traditional medical practices at all.
To learn CCM typically one must be part of a family lineage of medicine.
Recently, there has been a resurgence in interest in CCM in China, Europe and
United States, as a specialty. Jeffrey Yuen, allegedly of the 88th generation of
a sect of CCM has lead this renewed interest in CCM.
Contact with Western culture and medicine has not displaced TCM. While there may
be many sociological and anthropological factors involved in the persistent
practice, two reasons are most obvious in the westward spread of TCM in recent
decades. Firstly, TCM practices are believed by many to be very effective,
sometimes offering palliative efficacy where the best practices of Western
medicine fail, especially for routine ailments such as flu and allergies, and
managing to avoid the toxicity of some chemically composed medicines. Secondly,
TCM provides the only care available to some people when resources are
inadequate to import Western medical technologies.
TCM formed part of the barefoot doctor program in the People's Republic of
China, which extended public health into rural areas. A large motivation behind
the interest in TCM by both individuals in China and the PRC government is that
the cost of training a TCM practitioner and staffing a TCM hospital is
considerably less than that of a practitioner of Western medicine; hence TCM has
been seen as an integral part of extending health services in China.
Attitudes toward TCM in China have been strongly influenced by Marxism and the
May Fourth Movement. The notion of supernatural forces runs counter to the
Marxist belief in dialectical materialism and strikes many Chinese as
feudalistic and superstitious. Modern Chinese descriptions of traditional
Chinese medicine tend to deemphasize the cosmological aspects of TCM and
emphasize its compatibility with modern science and technology.
Uses
In the West, traditional Chinese medicine is often considered alternative
medicine; however, in mainland China and Taiwan, TCM is widely considered to be
an integral part of the health care system. The term "TCM" is sometimes used
specifically within the field of modern Chinese medicine to refer to the
standardized set of theories and practices introduced in the mid-20th century
under the government of Mao, as distinguished from related traditional theories
and practices preserved by people in Taiwan, Hong Kong and by the overseas
Chinese. The more general sense is meant in this article.
TCM developed as a form of noninvasive therapeutic intervention (also described
as folk medicine or traditional medicine) rooted in ancient belief systems,
including traditional religious concepts. Chinese medical practitioners before
the 19th century relied on observation, trial and error, which incorporated
certain mystical concepts. Like their Western counterparts, doctors of TCM had a
limited understanding of infection, which predated the discovery of bacteria,
viruses (germ theory of disease) and an understanding of cellular structures and
organic chemistry. Instead they relied mainly on observation and description on
the nature of infections for creating remedies. Based on theories formulated
through three millennia of observation and practical experience, a system of
procedure was formed as to guide a TCM practitioner in courses of treatment and
diagnosis.
Unlike other forms of traditional medicine which have largely become extinct,
traditional Chinese medicine continues as a distinct branch of modern medical
practice, and within China, it is an important part of the public health care
system. In recent decades there has been an effort to integrate the discoveries
made by traditional Chinese medicine with the discoveries made by workers in the
Western medical traditions. One important component of this work is to use the
instrumentation and the methodological tools available via Western medicine to
investigate observations made and hypotheses raised by the Chinese tradition.
That this effort has occurred is surprising to many for a number of reasons. In
most of the world, indigenous medical practices have been supplanted by
practices brought from the West, while in Chinese societies, this has not
occurred and shows no sign of occurring. Furthermore, many have found it
peculiar that Chinese medicine remains a distinct branch of medicine separate
from Western medicine, while the same has not happened with other intellectual
fields. There is, for example, no longer a distinct branch of Chinese physics or
Chinese biology.
TCM is used by some to treat the side effects of chemotherapy, treating the
cravings and withdrawal symptoms of drug addicts and treating a variety of
chronic conditions that conventional medicine is claimed to be sometimes
ineffective in treating. It has also been used to treat antibiotic-resistant
infection.
A report issued by the Victorian state government in Australia describes TCM
education in China: Graduates from TCM university courses are able to diagnose
in Western medical terms, prescribe Western pharmaceuticals, and undertake minor
surgical procedures. In effect, they practice TCM as a specialty within the
broader organization of Chinese health care.
In other countries it is not necessarily the case that traditional Chinese and
Western medicine are practiced concurrently by the same practitioner. TCM
education in Australia, for example, does not qualify a practitioner to
prescribe scheduled pharmaceuticals, nor to undertake surgical procedures or
diagnose in Western medical terms. While that jurisdiction notes that TCM
education does not qualify practitioners to prescribe Western drugs, a separate
legislative framework is being constructed to allow prescribing Chinese herbs
that would otherwise be classified as poisons by registered practitioners.
TCM Theory
The foundation principles of Chinese medicine are not necessarily uniform, and
are based on several schools of thought. Received TCM can be shown to be most
influenced by Taoism, Buddhism, and Neo-Confucianism.
For over 3000 years (1200 BC - present), Chinese academics of various schools
have focused on the observable natural laws of the universe and their
implications for the practical characterization of humanity's place in the
universe. In the I Ching and other Chinese literary and philosophical classics,
they have described some general principles and their applications to health and
healing:
- There are observable principles of constant change by which the Universe
is maintained. Humans are part of the universe and cannot be separated from
the universal process of change.
- As a result of these apparently inescapable primordial principles, the
Universe (and every process therein) tends to eventually balance itself.
Optimum health results from living harmoniously, allowing the spontaneous
process of change to bring one closer to balance. If there is no change
(stagnation), or too much change (catastrophism), balance is lost and
illnesses can result.
- Everything is ultimately interconnected. Always use a holistic ("systemic"
or "system-wide") approach when addressing imbalances.
Model of The Body
Traditional Chinese medicine is largely based on the philosophical concept that
the human body is a small universe with a set of complete and sophisticated
interconnected systems, and that those systems usually work in balance to
maintain the healthy function of the human body. The balance of yin and yang is
considered with respect to qi ("breath", "life force", or "spiritual energy"),
blood, jing ("kidney essence" or "semen"), other bodily fluids, the Five
elements, emotions, and the soul or spirit (shen). TCM has a unique model of the
body, notably concerned with the meridian system. Unlike the Western anatomical
model which divides the physical body into parts, the Chinese model is more
concerned with function. Thus, the TCM Spleen is not a specific piece of flesh,
but an aspect of function related to transformation and transportation within
the body, and of the mental functions of thinking and studying.
There are significant regional and philosophical differences between
practitioners and schools which in turn can lead to differences in practice and
theory.
Models of the body include:
- Yin or Yang
- Five elements
- Zang Fu theory
- Meridian (Chinese medicine)
- Three jiaos
The Yin/Yang and five element theories may be applied to a variety of systems
other than the human body, whereas Zang Fu theory, meridian theory and three-jiao
theories are more specific.
There are also separate models that apply to specific pathological influences,
such as the Four stages theory of the progression of warm diseases, the Six
levels theory of the penetration of cold diseases, and the Eight principles
system of disease classification.
Macro Approach to Disease
Traditional Chinese medicine has a "macro" or holistic view of disease. For
example, one modern interpretation is that well-balanced human bodies can resist
most everyday bacteria and viruses, which are ubiquitous and quickly changing.
Infection, while having a proximal cause of a microorganism, would have an
underlying cause of an imbalance of some kind. The traditional treatment would
target the imbalance, not the infectious organism. There is a popular saying in
China as follows: Chinese medicine treats humans while western medicine treats
diseases.
A practitioner might give very different herbal prescriptions to patients
affected by the same type of infection, because the different symptoms reported
by the patients would indicate a different type of imbalance, in a traditional
diagnostic system.
Western medicine treats infections by targeting the microorganisms directly,
whether preventively (through sterilization of instruments, hand washing, and
covering bandages), with antibiotics, or making use of the immune system through
vaccines. Conventional medicine does recognize the importance of nutrition and
exercise and reducing stress in maintaining a healthy immune system (and thus
preventing infection). It also faces problems with antibiotic resistance caused
by overuse of chemical agents and the high mutation rate of microorganisms.
Pharmaceutical treatments also sometimes have side effects, the most severe of
which are seen in regimens used to treat otherwise fatal illnesses, such as
chemotherapy and radiotherapy for cancer, and antiretroviral drugs for HIV/AIDS.
The holistic approach of traditional Chinese medicine makes all practitioners
generalists. Western medicine has general practitioners who dispense primary
care, but increasing reliance is placed on specialists who have expertise in
treating only certain types of diseases. Primary care physicians often refer
patients to specialists. Emergency departments are located in large hospitals
where many specialists are available.
Diagnostics
Following the macro philosophy of disease, traditional Chinese diagnostics are
based on overall observation of human symptoms rather than "micro" level
laboratory tests. There are four types of TCM diagnostic methods: observe, hear
and smell, ask about background and touching. The pulse-reading component of the
touching examination is so important that Chinese patients may refer to going to
the doctor as "Going to have my pulse felt".
Modern practitioners in China often use a traditional system in combination with
Western methods.
Traditional Chinese medicine is considered to require considerable diagnostic
skill. This often depends on the ability to observe what are described as subtle
differences. This may be contrasted with a straightforward laboratory test which
indicates an unambiguous cause. A training period of years or decades is said to
be necessary for TCM practitioners to understand the full complexity of symptoms
and dynamic balances. According to one Chinese saying, A good (TCM) doctor is
also qualified to be a good prime minister in a country.
Diagnostic Techniques
- Palpation of the patient's radial artery pulse (Pulse diagnosis) in six
positions
- Observation of the appearance of the patient's tongue
- Observation of the patient's face
- Palpation of the patient's body (especially the abdomen) for tenderness
- Observation of the sound of the patient's voice
- Observation of the surface of the ear
- Observation of the vein on the index finger on small children
- Comparisons of the relative warmth or coolness of different parts of the
body
- Observation of the patient's various odors
- Asking the patient about the effects of his problem
- Anything else that can be observed without instruments and without harming
the patient
Treatment Techniques
Historically, eight branches comprised Chinese medicine treatment:
- Tui na - massage therapy
- Acupuncture and Moxibustion
- Chinese herbal medicine
- Chinese food therapy
- Qigong and related breathing and meditation exercise
- T'ai Chi Ch'uan and other Chinese martial arts
- Feng shui
- Chinese astrology
Today, all of the above except Feng shui and Chinese astrology are routinely
used as part of TCM treatments.
Specific treatment methods are grouped into these branches. Cupping and Gua Sha
are part of Tui Na. Auriculotherapy comes under the heading of Acupuncture and
Moxibustion. Die-da or Tieh Ta are practitioners who specialize in healing
trauma injury such as bone fractures, sprains, and bruises. Some of these
specialists may also use or recommend other disciplines of Chinese medical
therapies (or Western medicine in modern times) if serious injury is involved.
Such practice of bone-setting is not common in the West.
Modern TCM treatments consist of herbal medicine or acupuncture as the primary
method, with other methods such as massage, qi gong, or food therapy playing a
secondary role. Illness in TCM is seen as a lack of harmony, and the goal of all
traditional treatment is to assist the body to regain balance and achieve
homeostasis.
The modern practice of traditional Chinese medicine is increasingly
incorporating techniques and theories of Western medicine in its praxis.
Branches of TCM
Traditional Chinese medicine has many branches (or categories, parties,
schools.). The most prominent two schools are Jingfang and Wenbing. Jingfang
school follows the classic traditional Chinese medicine books from Han and Tang
dynasty such as Huangdi Neijing and Shenlong Bencaojing. On the other hand, a
later Wenbing school's practice is largely based on more recent books including
Compendium of Materia Medica from Ming and Qing Dynasty, though they still
worship the classic books theoretically. There had always been intense debates
between those two schools until Cultural Revolution in mainland China, when
Wenbing school seeked the political power and suppressed the opponent. Recently,
Jingfang school appears to be booming again because of their effective treatment
cases spread by Internet. Several dedicated websites (hantang and 37tcm) have
been established to advocate the traditional Jingfang methods.
Everything started out as Jingfang School but around the end of the Song Dynasty
several doctors concluded that because Southern China has a warm climate, there
is no Shanghang. Shanghang is a disease caused by exposure to dense coldness.
Wenbing concludes that the diseases are caused by warmth so they prescribe
medicines to suppress the warmth with cold-based medicines when it is actually
caused by the cold. That is because of the warm climate and also because after
winter in the springtime, some people would become sick. During the winter when
a person is exposed to cold and it is not treated, the symptoms will come up
during the spring but this is not very common.
TCM and Science
The Question of Efficacy
Much scientific research about TCM has focused on acupuncture. There is no
scientific consensus as to whether acupuncture is effective or only has value as
a placebo. Reviews of existing clinical trials have been conducted by the
Cochrane Collaboration and Bandolier according to the protocols of
evidence-based medicine; some reviews have found efficacy for headache and
nausea, but for most conditions have concluded a lack of effectiveness or lack
of well-conducted clinical trials. The World Health Organization (WHO), the
National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the American Medical Association (AMA)
have also commented on acupuncture. These groups disagree on what is acceptable
evidence and on how to interpret it, but generally agree that acupuncture is
relatively safe (even if not effective) and that further investigation is
warranted. The 1997 NIH Consensus Statement on Acupuncture summarized research
and made a prediction as follows:
...promising results have emerged, for example, efficacy of acupuncture in
adult post-operative and chemotherapy nausea and vomiting and in postoperative
dental pain. There are other situations such as addiction, stroke
rehabilitation, headache, menstrual cramps, tennis elbow, fibromyalgia,
myofascial pain, osteoarthritis, low back pain, carpal tunnel syndrome, and
asthma for which acupuncture may be useful as an adjunct treatment or an
acceptable alternative or be included in a comprehensive management program.
Further research is likely to uncover additional areas where acupuncture
interventions will be useful.
Much less work in the West has been done on Chinese herbal medicines, which
comprise much of TCM. Traditional practitioners usually have no philosophical
objections to scientific studies on the effectiveness of treatments.
Some herbs have known active ingredients which are also used in Western
pharmaceuticals. For example, ma huang, or ephedra, contains ephedrine and
pseudoephedrine. (Due to the risk of adverse impact on the cardiovascular system
and some deaths due to consumption of extracts in high doses, the use of ephedra
is restricted in the United States.) Chinese wormwood (qinghao) was the source
for the discovery of artemisinin, which is now used worldwide to treat
multi-drug resistant strains of falciparum malaria. It is also under
investigation as an anti-cancer agent.
In the West, many Chinese herbal medicines have been marketed as dietary
supplements and there has been considerable controversy over the effectiveness,
safety, and regulatory status of these substances. One barrier to scientific
research on traditional remedies is the large amount of money and expertise
required to conduct a double-blind clinical trial, and the lack of financial
incentive from the ability to obtain patents.
There are a priori doubts about the efficacy of many TCM treatments that appear
to have their basis in magical thinking - for example that plants with
heart-shaped leaves will help the heart, or that ground bones of the tiger can
function as a stimulant because tigers are energetic animals. Such doubts,
however, do not invalidate the efficacy of the medicines themselves. While the
doctrine of signatures does underlie the selection of many of the ingredients of
herbal medicines, this does not mean the substances do not (perhaps by
coincidence) possess the attributed properties. Given the thousand-year
evolution of Chinese materia medica, it is possible that while herbs were
originally selected on erroneous grounds, only those that actually proven
effective have remained in use. In any case, clinical trials of Chinese herbal
medicines will need to be conducted before the question can be considered
resolved.
Mechanism of Action
The basic mechanism of TCM is akin to treating the body as a black box,
recording and classifying changes and observations of the patient using a
traditional philosophy. In contrast to many alternative and complementary
medicines such as homeopathy, practically all techniques of TCM have
explanations for why they may be more effective than a placebo, which Western
medicine can find plausible. Most doctors of Western medicine would not find
implausible claims that qigong preserves health by encouraging relaxation and
movement, that acupuncture relieves pain by stimulating the production of
neurotransmitters, or that Chinese herbal medicines may contain powerful
biochemical agents. However, the largest barriers to describing the mechanisms
of TCM in scientific terms are the difference of language and lack of research.
TCM concepts such as qi and yin and yang are used to describe specific
biological processes but are difficult to translate into scientific terms. Some
research is now beginning to emerge explaining possible scientific mechanisms
behind these TCM concepts.
Safety of Chinese Medicines
Acupressure and acupuncture are largely accepted to be safe from results gained
through medical studies. Several cases of pneumothorax, nerve damage and
infection have been reported as resulting from acupuncture treatments. These
adverse events are extremely rare especially when compared to other medical
interventions, and were found to be due to practitioner negligence. Dizziness
and bruising will sometimes result from acupuncture treatment.
Some governments have decided that Chinese acupuncture and herbal treatments
should only be administered by persons who have been educated to apply them
safely. "A key finding is that the risk of adverse events is linked to the
length of education of the practitioner, with practitioners graduating from
extended Traditional Chinese Medicine education programs experiencing about half
the adverse event rate of those practitioners who have graduated from short
training programs."
Certain Chinese herbal medicines involve a risk of allergic reaction and in rare
cases involve a risk of poisoning. Cases of acute and chronic poisoning due to
treatment through ingested Chinese medicines are found in China, Hong Kong, and
Taiwan, with a few deaths occurring each year. Many of these deaths do occur
however, when patients self prescribe herbs or take unprocessed versions of
toxic herbs. The raw and unprocessed form of aconite, or fuzi is the most common
cause of poisoning. The use of aconite in Chinese herbal medicine is usually
limited to processed aconite, in which the toxicity is denatured by heat
treatment.
Furthermore, potentially toxic and carcinogenic compounds such as arsenic and
cinnabar are sometimes prescribed as part of a medicinal mixture or used on the
basis of "using poison to cure poison". Unprocessed herbals are sometimes
adulterated with chemicals that may alter the intended effect of a herbal
preparation or prescription. Much of these are being prevented with more
empirical studies of Chinese herbals and tighter regulation regarding the
growing, processing, and prescription of various herbals.
In the United States, the Chinese herb Mahuang - known commonly in the West by
its Latin name Ephedra - was banned in 2004 by the FDA, although, the FDA's
final ruling exempted traditional Asian preparations of Ephedra from the ban.
The Ephedra ban was meant to combat the use of this herb in Western weight loss
products, a usage that directly conflicts with traditional Asian uses of the
herb. There were no cases of Ephedra based fatalities with patients using
traditional Asian preparations of the herb for its traditionally intended uses.
This ban was ordered lifted in April 2005 by a Utah federal court judge.
Many Chinese medicines have different names for the same ingredient depending on
location and time, but worse yet, ingredients with vastly different medical
properties have shared similar or even same names. For example, there was a
report that mirabilite/sodium sulphate decahydrate was misrecognized as sodium
nitrite, resulting a poisoned victim. In some Chinese medical texts, both names
are interchangeable. Chinese herbal medicine authorities are working towards
improved standards in this area.
TCM and Western Medicine
Within China, there has been a great deal of cooperation between TCM
practitioners and Western medicine, especially in the field of ethnomedicine.
Chinese herbal medicine includes many compounds which are unused by Western
medicine, and there is great interest in those compounds as well as the theories
which TCM practitioners use to determine which compound to prescribe. For their
part, advanced TCM practitioners in China are interested in statistical and
experimental techniques which can better distinguish medicines that work from
those that do not. One result of this collaboration has been the creation of
peer reviewed scientific journals and medical databases on traditional Chinese
medicine.
The relationship between TCM and Western medicine is more contentious. While
more and more medical schools are including classes on alternative medicine in
their curricula, older Western doctors and scientists are far more likely than
their Chinese counterparts to skeptically view TCM as archaic pseudoscience and
superstition. This skepticism can come from a number of sources. For one, TCM in
the West tends to be advocated either by Chinese immigrants or by those that
have lost faith in conventional medicine. Many people in the West have a
stereotype of the East as mystical and unscientific, which attracts those in the
West who have lost hope in science and repels those who believe in scientific
explanations. There have also been experiences in the West with unscrupulous or
well-meaning but improperly-trained "TCM practitioners" who have done people
more harm than good in many instances.
As an example of the different roles of TCM in China and the West, a person with
a broken bone in the West (i.e. a routine, "straightforward" condition would
almost never see a Chinese medicine practitioner or visit a martial arts school
to get the bone set, whereas this is routine in China. As another example, most
TCM hospitals in China have electron microscopes and many TCM practitioners know
how to use one.
This is not to say that TCM techniques are considered worthless in the West. In
fact, Western pharmaceutical companies have recognized the value of traditional
medicines and are employing teams of scientists in many parts of the world to
gather knowledge from traditional mouth healers and medical practitioners. After
all, the active ingredients of most modern medicines were discovered in plants
or animals. The particular contribution of Western medicine is that it strictly
applies the scientific method to promising traditional treatments, separating
those that work from those that do not. As another example, most Western
hospitals and increasing numbers of other clinics now offer T'ai Chi Ch'uan or
qigong classes as part of their inpatient and community health programs.
Most Chinese in China do not see traditional Chinese medicine and Western
medicine as being in conflict. In cases of emergency and crisis situations,
there is generally no reluctance in using conventional Western medicine. At the
same time, belief in Chinese medicine remains strong in the area of maintaining
health. To put it simply, you see a Western doctor if you have acute
appendicitis, but you do exercises or take Chinese herbs to keep your body
healthy enough to prevent appendicitis, or to recover more quickly from the
surgery. Very few practitioners of Western medicine in China reject traditional
Chinese medicine, and most doctors in China will use some elements of Chinese
medicine in their own practice.
A degree of integration between Chinese and Western medicine also exists in
China. For instance, at the Shanghai cancer hospital, a patient may be seen by a
multidisciplinary team and be treated concurrently with radiation surgery,
Western drugs and a traditional herbal formula.
It is worth noting that the practice of Western medicine in China is somewhat
different from that in the West. In contrast to the West, there are relatively
few allied health professionals to perform routine medical procedures or to
undertake procedures such as massage or physical therapy.
In addition, Chinese practitioners of Western medicine have been less impacted
by trends in the West that encourage patient empowerment, to see the patient as
an individual rather than a collection of parts, and to do nothing when
medically appropriate. Chinese practitioners of Western medicine have been
widely criticized for over-prescribing drugs such as corticosteroids or
antibiotics for common viral infections. It is likely that these medicines,
which are generally known to be useless against viral infections, would provide
less relief to the patient than traditional Chinese herbal remedies.
Traditional Chinese diagnostics and treatments are often much cheaper than
Western methods which require high-tech equipment or extensive chemical
manipulation.
TCM doctors often criticize Western doctors for paying too much attention to
laboratory tests and showing insufficient concern for the overall feelings of
patients.
Modern TCM practitioners will refer patients to Western medical facilities if a
medical condition is deemed to have put the body too far out of "balance" for
traditional methods to remedy.
TCM and Animals
Animal products are used in certain Chinese formulas, which may present a
problem for vegans and vegetarians. If informed of such restrictions,
practitioners can often use alternative substances.
The use of endangered species is controversial within TCM. In particular, is the
belief that tiger penis and rhinoceros horn are aphrodisiacs. Some believe that
this is depleting these species in the wild. Medicinal use is also having a
major impact on the populations of sea horses.
The animal rights movement notes that a few traditional Chinese medicinal
solutions use bear bile. To extract maximum amounts of the bile, the bears are
often fitted with a sort of permanent catheter. The treatment itself and
especially the extraction of the bile is very painful, causes damage to the
intestines of the bear, and often even kills the bears. However, due to
international attention on the issues surrounding its harvesting, bile is now
rarely used by practitioners outside of China, gallbladders from butchered
cattle are recommended as a substitute for this ingredient Bensky, Clavey and
Stoger's comprehensive Chinese herbal text deals with substances derived from
endangered species in an appendix, with an emphasis on recommending
alternatives.
TCM and The Internet
With the popularity of the Internet, an increasing number of TCM doctors are
seeking new approaches to diagnose and treat diseases using remote, non-contact
methods, such as creating online symptom questionnaires and uploading photos.
Some TCM advocates have even established web sites link to provide free herb
prescriptions to patients. These sites are putting in question the traditional
importance placed on direct visual examination and palpation of the patient.
Attempts to Phase Out TCM
Starting from late 19th century, some Chinese scholars with western medicine
background and politicians, have being trying to phase out TCM totally in China.
Some prominent persons and their major arguments are:
- TCM doctors are intentional or unintentional cheaters, by Lu Xun
- TCM does not know anatomy and has no scientific foundation, by Wang
Jingwei
- TCM is a kind of superstition, by Li Ao.
- TCM is pseudo-science and is unsafe because of lack of Double blind tests,
by Fang Shimin nowadays.
The attempts always stir large scale debates but have never succeeded once in
China. On the other hand, TCM is being urged to evolve using modern and
scientific approaches to survive.
The attempt to phase out TCM in Japan partially succeeded after Meiji
Restoration. In the 1920's however there was a movement to restore traditional
medical practice, especially acupuncture. This movement, known as the Meridian
Therapy movement in acupuncture (Keiraku Chiryo in Japanese) has persisted to
this day. Furthermore, despite the movement to eliminate Chinese herbal medicine
in Japan, the Kampo movement, based on the Shang Han Lun tradition of Chinese
herbal medicine, continues to be practiced by Japanese physicians.
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