How to Keep Your Patients: Stabbing Them with Needles Everyday plus Drenching Them with Herbs
By now we know that the so-called Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) acupuncture is by no means “traditional” but is a modern product newly invented in a very short period between 1957 to 1964 within the frame of Maoist communist ideology and nationalism. It was a result of a political task imposed on Chinese herbalists who had to study acupuncture from scratch. The therapeutic efficacy was not a concern at all when the task was performed.
A Needle Therapy Cut to Fit A Herbal Cage
Then how effective the beautiful-looking TCM acupuncture is in a clinic? Let Dr Jake Fratkin give you some idea. He is an excellent American needle healer, an awardee of Acupuncturist of the Year in 1999, Acupuncture Teacher of the Year in 2006, and once trained in TCM hospitals in Beijing, China as well.
“TCM acupuncture is a recent construct. In the first decade of the People’s Republic of China (1950s) ... The herbalists were firmly in control, and promoted a style of acupuncture that corresponded with the TCM herbal approach, … Other acupuncture styles, including Nan Jing Meridian Therapy, disappeared, but were able to survive in Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Singapore”, Fratkin wrote.
“TCM acupuncture follows the herbal model, with point combinations assigned for the various differentiations. … I would have to say, however, that as a stand-alone therapy, TCM acupuncture is less successful”.
A Needle Therapy Practitioners Uncertain Whether It Works
During 1991 - 2003, Linda Barnes, a medical anthropology professor of Boston University School of Med, interviewed 72 acupuncturists in Boston about how they evaluate the efficacy of their practice. The interview did not see any acupuncturist who had experienced prompt effectiveness.
On the contrary, most of them advised their new patients “to plan for treatments for 6 to 8 weeks and, only then, to decide if acupuncture has worked for them”. Most practitioners agreed ...”they do not have to, for the patients to feel that healing has occurred.”
A 5-Elements theory follower acupuncturist flatly refuses to talk about curing people: .. “Here is my experience of headaches. I don’t know what will happen… I don’t talk about cures”.
Too Painful, Too Simplistic
In terms of problems with TCM acupuncture, Fratkin says, “First, it was very painful for the patient. Needling was deep, with rotations that would grab fibers and cause pain with twisting. Appreciated as de qi, ...Second, TCM acupuncture is effective in China in no small part because patients come to the clinic three times a week”.
The third problem, as Dr Fratkin saw, is TCM acupuncture uses “an all-inclusive single [herb-originated] zang-fu differentiation” to address patient's multiple complaints. He concluded that TCM acupuncture was too painful and too simplistic for the typical patient in the USA. He then recommended Japanese style acupuncture.
Dr Fratkin's preference of Japanese style is justifiable. Japanese acupuncture is very close to the basics of Neijing acupuncture prior to 600 AC, while TCM acupuncture is primarily based on the post-1600s acupuncture texts particularly Yang Jishou's Zhenjiudachen (1601) which had already strayed far away from Neijing acupuncture.
Stabbing Everyday for Months on End: Authentic TCM
Dr Fratkin noticed a patient is needled three times per week in TCM acupuncture. In fact, if you truthfully follow the authentic TCM acupuncture as described in today's textbooks used in China, then the patients would get stabbed every day for 10 days as one course, with 2-4 courses (20-40 days in total) required; and the needles would need to be twisted every 5 minutes to get patient tortured for “de-qi”, and in addition, cupping, EMS, glucose injection etc may need to be combined with needles... (Shi Xueming, 1994).
In Dr Fratkin's experience, by using Japanese style needling, the patient should not feel any discomfort, and the patients new to his clinic always remarked that they all had negative experiences with TCM style.
Can You Keep Patients by Making Them Screaming Everyday?
In China, the patients may have a higher tolerance to being stabbed everyday and they are more familiar with the hard-to-swallow herbal decoctions. Now a question for an acupuncturist outside of China particularly in North American and Europe:
Can you easily keep your patients by aggressively stabbing them everyday for months on end plus requesting them to take the hard-to-swallow herbs?
References
Fratkin, J.P., WHY I USE THE ACUGRAPH Part 1: Choosing Meridian Therapy Over TCM, https://drjakefratkin.com/why-i-use-the-acugraph-part-1/
Barnes, Linda, 2005, American Acupuncture and Efficacy: Meanings and Their Points of Insertion. MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY QUARTERLY, Vol. 19, Issue 3, pp. 239–266.
Shi Xueming, Acupuncture Therapy 针灸治疗学, 1994