TCM & WM
Within China, there has been a great deal of cooperation
between traditional Chinese medicine (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 inte rest
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, wher eas
this is routine in China. As another example, most TCM hospitals
in China have eletron 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 Taijiquan 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 to far out of "balance" for traditional methods
to remedy.
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