国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

CHINA> Focus
A(H1N1) gets treatment from TCM
By Thomas Talhelm (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-06-24 10:34

TCM classifies green tea, milk, and ice cream as having a cold nature, so practitioners recommend avoiding them during the summer months.

This year's Chinese medicine response echoes the response to the SARS epidemic six years ago. At the time, Chinese news media reported shortened hospital stays for SARS patients who took traditional medicine, sometimes in combination with Western medicine. Chinese communities in Hong Kong and Singapore also saw throngs of worried citizens rushing to Chinese medicine stores to buy herbs to ward off the disease.

Since the outbreak of H1N1, Chinese media have reported increased sales of Indigowoad Root, known locally as banlangen, and even a 50 percent increase in the price of honeysuckle, both of which are thought to treat the flu.

During regular hospital visits, Chinese patients are much more likely to consult Western medicine, rather than traditional medicine. Statistics reported in the local newspaper Fazhi Wanbao show that out of 5,000-8,000 daily patients to the Beijing Friendship Hospital, only 200-300 consulted the Chinese medicine division.

But in the uncertain face of a modern epidemic, some Chinese are turning to traditional culture and ancient sources, such as the 2,000-year-old Chinese medical guide Neijing Suwen or The Inner Canon of Huangdi for solutions. One blog on the popular portal Sina even uses the text to fix a date to the end of the epidemic: July 23.

 Related readings:
A(H1N1) gets treatment from TCM A(H1N1) Influenza Outbreak

Related readings:
A(H1N1) gets treatment from TCM Mainland reports 27 new A(H1N1) cases
A(H1N1) gets treatment from TCM China produces first A/H1N1 flu vaccines
A(H1N1) gets treatment from TCM Guangdong school closed as 30 pupils get H1N1
A(H1N1) gets treatment from TCM More secondary schools hit by H1N1 flu

A(H1N1) gets treatment from TCM Macao records first case of A (H1N1)

Yet Chinese medicine's effectiveness against SARS was never proven conclusively, and even more uncertainty surrounds H1N1. In a 2003 report of the Institute of Traditional Medicine in Portland, Oregon, director Dr Subhuti Dharmananda concluded, "With a new disease like SARS, it is almost impossible to know if the herbs that may have prevented or treated a similar disease will be effective for this one."

One factor hampering TCM is that many Chinese treatments still lack Western clinical research support. Some doctors of Chinese medicine, like Dr Qi, argue that treatment should continue even without research evidence.

"The outcomes of some physical and chemical tests in Western medicine and their relation to evidence for Chinese medicine are still unclear, so we cannot bother with that for the moment," says Dr Qi. Others argue that Western methods of scientific research aren't suitable for Chinese medicine's focus on individual treatment.

However, even some doctors who practice Chinese medicine are wary of the Ministry of Health's announcement, arguing that Chinese medicine cannot be blanket-prescribed. "Certain groups of people, like the 'young and healthy crowd' susceptible to the swine flu, might have certain commonalities, so preventions may have certain similarities, but this is only an approximation," says Dr Qi.

Dr Fruehauf insists that, to be effective, traditional Chinese treatments must be tailored to the individual: "No responsible Chinese medicine physician would blanket-prescribe the same remedy for thousands of people and expect that it will work for all of them."

   Previous page 1 2 Next Page  

 

 

普定县| 江源县| 南通市| 武平县| 辰溪县| 万安县| 偏关县| 乐东| 浦县| 木兰县| 台中市| 邵阳县| 公安县| 东城区| 乃东县| 孙吴县| 阿瓦提县| 迭部县| 许昌县| 河东区| 祥云县| 常州市| 普兰县| 鸡东县| 县级市| 苍山县| 平安县| 鄂尔多斯市| 万载县| 姚安县| 灵石县| 长寿区| 景宁| 通州市| 竹山县| 江川县| 芮城县| 平潭县| 三亚市| 镇雄县| 中宁县|