What Happens When You Visit a TCM Practitioner?
Usually when people go to visit a healthcare provider, they are feeling sick or something is wrong. In the world of Chinese medicine, people are encouraged to consult with a TCM doctor before something goes wrong so that they may be advised how to maintain their health, optimize their well-being, and prevent illness.
This is a lot easier to do if you are relatively healthy to begin with. Why wait till you are thirsty before digging a well? But most of us wait, often times to our detriment.
How does a TCM practitioner make a diagnosis?
If
you were to visit a TCM practitioner with a specific complaint, the
practitioner would assess your situation in its entire context.
First,
a typical TCM practitioner will gather data. She will listen to your
story, as well as gather information from "nonverbal elements," such as
your demeanor, movement, voice, bodily sounds, and complexion. She will
examine your tongue, take your pulse and temperature, and then feel
your skin, muscle tone, internal organs, etc, as appropriate.
Your
TCM provider is working under a set of diagnostic principles that
strive to identify imbalance. This imbalance is made manifest by
patterns of disharmony (known as bian zheng). An example of imbalance
made manifest might be a headache.
The TCM provider would look at the headache in a large context, seeking to find if this disharmony is caused by excess (like too much stress or activity) or deficiency (like not enough food or sleep). For more information, see What Is Qi? (and Other Concepts).
How does a practitioner decide on treatment options?
Once
the TCM practitioner has recognized the pattern of disharmony and made
a diagnosis, she works with you to resolve the disharmony. The guiding
treatment principle is to create harmony between yin and yang in the
easiest and least invasive way possible without creating further
disharmony.
In other words, the TCM practitioner seeks to remove what is excessive and to replenish what is deficient.
The
focus is always on you, the patient, not the disease. As a result, the
treatment strategy is highly personalized, taking into account not only
your condition, diet and lifestyle, but your family situation,
community status, and environment.
What are some of the options?
Your TCM practitioner can select from a number of treatment options and will usually employ a combination of several methods, ranging from acupuncture and herbal medicine to patient education and lifestyle counseling. Some treatment modalities are used in the clinic (such as acupuncture, moxibustion, and therapeutic massage).
Many TCM
practitioners also prescribe herbal formulations for a certain length
of time to help facilitate recovery or to maintain health and prevent
disease. Click on the links to the right for more information about
specific treatment practices.
In addition to the clinic
treatments, you will need to practice most of the methods that restore
and cultivate harmony at home and in your daily life. Such "home
practice" methods include dietary and lifestyle suggestions,
meditation, self massage, stretching and various physical exercises.
To experience a visit to a TCM practitioner, do the activity called Visit a TCM Practitioner.
Further Reading
- Eisenberg, David. Encounters With Qi: Exploring Chinese Medicine. New York, NY. Viking Penguin Inc. 1987
- Farquhar, Judith. Knowing Practice: The Clinical Encounter of Chinese Medicine. Boulder, CO. Westview Press. 1994.
- Wu,Yan and Fischer, Warren. Practical Therapeutics of Chinese Medicine. Brookline, Mass.: Paradigm Publications. 1997








