 |
|
Doctor Lisa Moses removes an acupuncture needle from "Ashley", a Moluccan Cockatoo, at the Angell Animal Medical Center in Boston, Massachusetts March 7, 2008.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
by George Bao
LOS ANGELES, June 24 (Xinhua) -- When Dr. Francis Yu
started his acupuncture clinic in California in 1970s, most of his patients were
Chinese. But now, half of his patients are non-Chinese.
"More non-Chinese Americans begin to accept the
Chinese way of treatment, such as acupuncture, cupping and herbal medicine.
Another truth is, at least in California, nearly half of those who have
acupuncture licenses and operate acupuncture clinics are not Chinese but
Americans who do not know Chinese," said Yu who owns his two-storied TCM Healing
Institute in Arcadia in the suburbs of Los Angeles.
Dr. Yu's remarks echoed the recent press reports that
alternative medicine is finding wider acceptance by doctors, insurers and
hospitals in the U.S.
People turn to unconventional therapies and herbal
remedies for everything from hot flashes and trouble sleeping to cancer and
heart disease. They crave more "care" in their health care as more people
distrust drug companies and the government.
California became the first U.S. state to license
qualified acupuncture practitioners as primary care providers in 1978. As
of2004, California has licensed more than 9,000 acupuncturists. Now the figure
is estimated to exceed 15,000. California constitutes nearly half of the
licensed acupuncturists in the U.S.
Dr. Yu told Xinhua that in the early days,
acupuncture was not accepted and respected by the mainstream. Most Americans did
not regard acupuncture as alternative treatment. But as time goes by and when
more U.S. hospitals and research institutions set up acupuncture treatment
centers, more Americans turned to the Chinese acupuncture and herbal medicine to
cure diseases conventional American doctors could not treat.
He said recently one American lady on her 40s came
from Florida to treat her pain on the neck. But Dr. Yu told her she needed to
remove her plaque in her artery. She received cupping treatment for several
times and when she went back to Florida, her doctor told her the plaque was gone
and she felt much better.
She then recommended her friend, a 47-year-woman, to
see Dr. Yuin the hope she can get pregnant. Dr. Yu said the treatment was going
on, and he was not sure whether the lady could get pregnant at her age. But
those cases show that more Americans are willing to try the Chinese way in
medical treatment.
In California and other states, when a doctor has an
acupuncture license, the doctor can give herbal treatment to the patients.
Although traditional Chinese medicine is not legal in California , doctors with
acupuncture licenses can treat patients with cupping and herbal medicine.
The legal use of herbal medicine was made possible 15
years ago when the U.S. Congress decided to allow dietary and herbal supplements
to be sold without Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval. Since then the
number of products soared, from about 4,000 then to well over 40,000 categories
now.
The increasing acceptance of alternative treatment
such as acupuncture and herbal medicine was also made possible by big healthcare
insurances that cover expenses of patients who accept treatment of acupuncture,
cupping and herbal medicine, Dr. Yu said.
Although Dr. Yu said the government regulation seemed
ridiculous for doctors to have an acupuncture license first before they can
practice other Chinese medicine such as cupping and herbal treatment, it
legalizes the practice of acupuncture and other ways to treat patients in the
Chinese way in the U.S.
Increasing numbers of big hospitals and institutions,
including Johns Hopkins Hospital and the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center at
the University of Maryland Medical Center, have established integrative medicine
units that bring together conventional and alternative approaches to care.
The alternative treatment includes stress reducers
like meditation, yoga and massage besides acupuncture and cupping.
Studies show that the number of Americans willing to
try alternative treatments continues to increase. A 2007 survey by the federal
government found that more than one-third of adults and nearly 12 percent of
children in the U.S. used alternative therapies, including acupuncture,
chiropractic, homeopathy and herbal supplements.
But many mainstream physicians continue to be
skeptical of alternative therapies, alleging their efficacy has not been proven
and their successes may be nothing more than variations of the placebo effect.
Concerns over the effectiveness and safety of herbal
supplement have prompted the U.S. FDA to issue its first guidelines for good
manufacturing practices to improve supplement safety.
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission is also filing more
complaints about deceptive marketing in herbal
supplements.