Traditional Chinese Medicine
Traditional Chinese Medicine is an ancient
method of health care that combines the use of medicinal herbs,
acupuncture, food therapy, massage, and therapeutic exercise. It has
proven effective for many conditions, including chronic
degenerative disease, cancer, infectious disease, allergies,
childhood ailments, heart disease, and AIDS.
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) has been
practiced for over three thousand years and, at present, one-quarter
of the world's population makes use of one or more of its therapies.
A complete system of medicine, it has been selected by the World
Health Organization for worldwide propagation to meet the health
care needs of the twenty-first century.
TCM's approach to health and curing is very
different from modern Western medicine. TCM looks for the underlying
causes of imbalances and patterns of disharmony in the body, and
views each patient as being unique. Western medicine generally
provides treatment for a specific illness, whereas Traditional
Chinese Medicine addresses how the illness manifests in a particular
patient and treats the patient, not just the disease. Roger Hirsh,
O.M.D., L.Ac., Dipl. NCCA, of Santa Monica, California, explains
that the conventional Western physician focuses predominantly on
the pathogenic factor (the disease), rather than the response of the
patient to the factor.