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I was wondering if anyone had seen this article on the WHO

standardizing Chinese, Japanese, and South Korean acupoints:

http://story.news./news?

tmpl=story & u=/afp/20050110/hl_afp/healthacupuncturechinajapanskorea_05

0110100820

 

I would be interested to hear any responses.

 

Tim Northwood

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a Japanese colleague forwarded the Asahi Shinbun page to me

 

http://www.asahi.com/national/update/0110/011.html

 

there are graphics comparing the locations of P4, TB9 and LR14.

 

Ultimately i think it won't make much difference to current practitioners in the

three

countries (as well as in the West) as they will continue to locate points the

way they were

taught. Whether it makes a difference in the way programs are taught from here

on out

remains to be seen... I tend to doubt it actually; most sources I've seen have

yet to adopt

the WHO point nomenclature from 1993. One teacher in the AS article mentioned

that

among the various Japanese schools of acupuncture in history that point location

hadn't

varied much, and i would be surprised if everyone in Japan just threw out

Kinoshita in

favor of the new standards.

 

In any case, point location is an art within an art and most Japanese

practitioners use the

anatomical location as a guideline for where to palpate to locate the exact

point for

treatment. Ultimately clinical outcomes determine the correctness of one's

point location,

no matter what some committee might say.

 

robert hayden

 

Chinese Medicine , " tim_northwood "

<running_wolf@s...> wrote:

>

>

> I was wondering if anyone had seen this article on the WHO

> standardizing Chinese, Japanese, and South Korean acupoints:

> http://story.news./news?

> tmpl=story & u=/afp/20050110/hl_afp/healthacupuncturechinajapanskorea_05

> 0110100820

>

> I would be interested to hear any responses.

>

> Tim Northwood

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Well said.

 

Anne

 

 

> <http://www.asahi.com/national/update/0110/011.html>Ultimately

> clinical outcomes determine the correctness of one's point location,

> no matter what some committee might say.

>

> robert hayden

>

> Chinese Medicine , " tim_northwood "

> <running_wolf@s...> wrote:

> >

> >

> > I was wondering if anyone had seen this article on the WHO

> > standardizing Chinese, Japanese, and South Korean acupoints:

> > http://story.news./news?

> > tmpl=story & u=/afp/20050110/hl_afp/healthacupuncturechinajapanskorea_05

> > 0110100820

> >

> > I would be interested to hear any responses.

> >

> > Tim Northwood

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

 

 

 

 

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  • 2 weeks later...

Tim:

 

My first response is that there are only some 360 points? My little

Chinese-English pocket book has at least 450.

 

On my own research over the past year, I've discovered others. My

Chinese teacher doesn't know about some of the points I've found.

 

Best, Jack

 

In Chinese Medicine , " tim_northwood "

<running_wolf@s...> wrote:

>

>

> I was wondering if anyone had seen this article on the WHO

> standardizing Chinese, Japanese, and South Korean acupoints:

> http://story.news./news?

>

tmpl=story & u=/afp/20050110/hl_afp/healthacupuncturechinajapanskorea_05

> 0110100820

>

> I would be interested to hear any responses.

>

> Tim Northwood

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Chinese Medicine , " mojavecowboy "

<mojavecowboy> wrote:

>

> My first response is that there are only some 360 points?

 

this is a reference to the number found in Zhen Jiu Jia Yi Jing, which has been

the basis for

classical acupuncture study since it was compiled in 282.

 

rh

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