Guest guest Posted May 16, 2006 Report Share Posted May 16, 2006 Hi All, Some AP practitioners believe that acupoints MUST be needled in a specific ORDER to obtain the best result. I have seen no published evidence that the ORDER of point needling is important. Does such evidence exist. Is it published in peer-reviewed journals? Where? Similarly, classical practitioners believe that point Supplementation (in Xu use Bu) or Dispersion (in Shi use Xie) is important. I have seen no published evidence that the BU/XIE methods of point needling are better or worse than neutral (even) needling. Does such evidence exist. Is it published in peer-reviewed journals? Where? Best regards, Phil Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 16, 2006 Report Share Posted May 16, 2006 Chinese Medicine , " " < wrote: > > Hi All, > > Some AP practitioners believe that acupoints MUST be needled in a > specific ORDER to obtain the best result. > > I have seen no published evidence that the ORDER of point needling is > important. Does such evidence exist. Is it published in peer- reviewed > journals? Where? > > Similarly, classical practitioners believe that point Supplementation (in Xu > use Bu) or Dispersion (in Shi use Xie) is important. > > I have seen no published evidence that the BU/XIE methods of point > needling are better or worse than neutral (even) needling. Does such > evidence exist. Is it published in peer-reviewed journals? Where? > > Best regards, > Phil > There are no RTC's supporting evidence that TCM can do many things. But we continue treating patients with very good results despite the " evidence. " The proof is in the proverbial pudding. Don Snow, DAOM, MPH, L.Ac. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 16, 2006 Report Share Posted May 16, 2006 Hi Don, & All, Don wrote: > There are no RTC's supporting evidence that TCM can do many things. > But we continue treating patients with very good results despite the > " evidence. " The proof is in the proverbial pudding. Don Snow, DAOM, > MPH, L.Ac. A parable of Zhuangzi, says: One cannot speak to a frog in a well about the sea, as he cannot see beyond his hole. One cannot speak to a summer fly about the ice, as the fly knows only one season. One cannot speak about Tao to a scholar, as he is walled in by his scholarliness. " As practitioners, we all are products of our past - nation, culture, family, school(s), teacher(s), personal study (reading, discussion with peers, etc), and clinical experience. Don, with respect, as practitioners we use many levels of " proof " to justify our methods. Personal experiences (and good clinical results) are fine for that purpose but they are useless as proof for sceptical medical colleagues, uncommitted scientists or sincere students who want to COMPARE the results of different methods. Don, you are correct that: > There are no RTC's supporting evidence that TCM can do many things ... However, if we want to advance as a profession and argue the validity of our methods (and results) with colleagues in other med / vet / healing professions (or with politicians or policy-makers), we MUST be able to cite some reputable published work in support of our methods. That brings me back to my original mail: > I have seen no published evidence that the ORDER of point needling is > important. Does such evidence exist. Is it published in peer-reviewed > journals? Where? > I have seen no published evidence that the BU/XIE methods of point > needling are better or worse than neutral (even) needling. Does such > evidence exist. Is it published in peer-reviewed journals? Where? In the absence of good research on those questions, the decision to use them is based mainly on the school(s) / teacher(s) that one follows. That poses several problems for me. Am I alone in thinking that way? Best regards, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 16, 2006 Report Share Posted May 16, 2006 If the order of needling is not important then why are the ancient texts written a certain way? Why are Li Shi Zhen's protocols a certain way only? Why are the Ghost points used in a specific protocol, 1st trinity, 2nd trinity etc? You think that a medicine that describes 20+ needling techniques, which places an onus on practioner intent, would ascribe anything, specifically needling order to whimsy or to what is closest to the acupuncturist's body as they are working? David Appleton L.Ac --- < wrote: > Hi Don, & All, > > Don wrote: > > There are no RTC's supporting evidence that TCM > can do many things. > > But we continue treating patients with very good > results despite the > > " evidence. " The proof is in the proverbial > pudding. Don Snow, DAOM, > > MPH, L.Ac. > > A parable of Zhuangzi, says: One cannot speak to a > frog in a well about the > sea, as he cannot see beyond his hole. One cannot > speak to a summer fly > about the ice, as the fly knows only one season. One > cannot speak about > Tao to a scholar, as he is walled in by his > scholarliness. " > > As practitioners, we all are products of our past - > nation, culture, family, > school(s), teacher(s), personal study (reading, > discussion with peers, etc), > and clinical experience. > > Don, with respect, as practitioners we use many > levels of " proof " to justify > our methods. Personal experiences (and good clinical > results) are fine for > that purpose but they are useless as proof for > sceptical medical colleagues, > uncommitted scientists or sincere students who want > to COMPARE the > results of different methods. > > Don, you are correct that: > > There are no RTC's supporting evidence that TCM > can do many things ... > > However, if we want to advance as a profession and > argue the validity of > our methods (and results) with colleagues in other > med / vet / healing > professions (or with politicians or policy-makers), > we MUST be able to cite > some reputable published work in support of our > methods. > > That brings me back to my original mail: > > I have seen no published evidence that the ORDER > of point needling is > > important. Does such evidence exist. Is it > published in peer-reviewed > > journals? Where? > > > I have seen no published evidence that the BU/XIE > methods of point > > needling are better or worse than neutral (even) > needling. Does such > > evidence exist. Is it published in peer-reviewed > journals? Where? > > In the absence of good research on those questions, > the decision to use > them is based mainly on the school(s) / teacher(s) > that one follows. > > That poses several problems for me. Am I alone in > thinking that way? > > Best regards, > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been > removed] > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 16, 2006 Report Share Posted May 16, 2006 Needling in order does have a significance, but then diagnosing by channel is the most important thing. In Tung's Acupuncture, we do Dao Ma Zhen - needling in succession along a channel and vary according to tissue depth, always trying to stack the odds in our favor. Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, PhD chusauli www.chusaulei.com > " daomsnow " <don83407 >Chinese Medicine >Chinese Medicine > Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) >needling) >Tue, 16 May 2006 13:36:35 -0000 > >Chinese Medicine , " " >< wrote: > > > > Hi All, > > > > Some AP practitioners believe that acupoints MUST be needled in a > > specific ORDER to obtain the best result. > > > > I have seen no published evidence that the ORDER of point needling >is > > important. Does such evidence exist. Is it published in peer- >reviewed > > journals? Where? > > > > Similarly, classical practitioners believe that point >Supplementation (in Xu > > use Bu) or Dispersion (in Shi use Xie) is important. > > > > I have seen no published evidence that the BU/XIE methods of point > > needling are better or worse than neutral (even) needling. Does >such > > evidence exist. Is it published in peer-reviewed journals? Where? > > > > Best regards, > > Phil > > >There are no RTC's supporting evidence that TCM can do many things. >But we continue treating patients with very good results despite >the " evidence. " The proof is in the proverbial pudding. > >Don Snow, DAOM, MPH, L.Ac. > > > > > _______________ Express yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! Download today - it's FREE! http://messenger.msn.click-url.com/go/onm00200471ave/direct/01/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 16, 2006 Report Share Posted May 16, 2006 Phil, You bring up a great point. Often we think that we follow a tradition and the dogma behind it. We get stuck in " Sifu sez " mode. I don't believe in that. I want to find out the source, and I want to know for myself if it is dogma or truth. Master Tung often stated, " Observe for yourself, then you will know. " Of course, this may be skewed according to our beliefs. Many times, we believe so much in our instructors, we become little clones and stop thinking. Confucius said that when he points out 1 corner of a table, the student should be able to point out the other 3. If the student could not, he would refuse teaching him. With the technology of the fMRI and Dr. Zang Hee Cho's research, we can see the mechanism of acupuncture is to send a signal to the brain to regain homeostasis. I believe Master Tung's Dao Ma Zhen technique to be a means to send a stronger signal, as is the Bu and Xie methods of Acupuncture. Of course, I hope our colleagues can discuss this further. Robert Chu, L.Ac., QME, PhD chusauli www.chusaulei.com > " " < >Chinese Medicine >Chinese Medicine > Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) >needling) >Tue, 16 May 2006 16:51:06 +0100 > >Hi Don, & All, > >Don wrote: > > There are no RTC's supporting evidence that TCM can do many things. > > But we continue treating patients with very good results despite the > > " evidence. " The proof is in the proverbial pudding. Don Snow, DAOM, > > MPH, L.Ac. > >A parable of Zhuangzi, says: One cannot speak to a frog in a well about the >sea, as he cannot see beyond his hole. One cannot speak to a summer fly >about the ice, as the fly knows only one season. One cannot speak about >Tao to a scholar, as he is walled in by his scholarliness. " > >As practitioners, we all are products of our past - nation, culture, >family, >school(s), teacher(s), personal study (reading, discussion with peers, >etc), >and clinical experience. > >Don, with respect, as practitioners we use many levels of " proof " to >justify >our methods. Personal experiences (and good clinical results) are fine for >that purpose but they are useless as proof for sceptical medical >colleagues, >uncommitted scientists or sincere students who want to COMPARE the >results of different methods. > >Don, you are correct that: > > There are no RTC's supporting evidence that TCM can do many things ... > >However, if we want to advance as a profession and argue the validity of >our methods (and results) with colleagues in other med / vet / healing >professions (or with politicians or policy-makers), we MUST be able to cite >some reputable published work in support of our methods. > >That brings me back to my original mail: > > I have seen no published evidence that the ORDER of point needling is > > important. Does such evidence exist. Is it published in peer-reviewed > > journals? Where? > > > I have seen no published evidence that the BU/XIE methods of point > > needling are better or worse than neutral (even) needling. Does such > > evidence exist. Is it published in peer-reviewed journals? Where? > >In the absence of good research on those questions, the decision to use >them is based mainly on the school(s) / teacher(s) that one follows. > > That poses several problems for me. Am I alone in thinking that way? > >Best regards, > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 16, 2006 Report Share Posted May 16, 2006 Phil, Being trained in science and engineering myself, I initially tried to stick to whatever w/ RTC's supporting evidence only but realized soon that we are way ahead of what can be proven collectively as of this time. Some of the techniques can be scientifically proven to some extent; others are just beyond my imagination for now. For example, just take Bu/Xie techniques can be proven to make a difference when treating acute inflammation of some sort, e.g., appendicitis, with a proper design of the experiment. Short of institutionalized funding, most of us practice based on the accumulation of some personal experiences treating patients. If these experiences teach us what gives better result we tend to use it more. Don't we all do this? This is just my 2 cents. Mike L. < wrote: Hi Don, & All, Don wrote: > There are no RTC's supporting evidence that TCM can do many things. > But we continue treating patients with very good results despite the > " evidence. " The proof is in the proverbial pudding. Don Snow, DAOM, > MPH, L.Ac. A parable of Zhuangzi, says: One cannot speak to a frog in a well about the sea, as he cannot see beyond his hole. One cannot speak to a summer fly about the ice, as the fly knows only one season. One cannot speak about Tao to a scholar, as he is walled in by his scholarliness. " As practitioners, we all are products of our past - nation, culture, family, school(s), teacher(s), personal study (reading, discussion with peers, etc), and clinical experience. Don, with respect, as practitioners we use many levels of " proof " to justify our methods. Personal experiences (and good clinical results) are fine for that purpose but they are useless as proof for sceptical medical colleagues, uncommitted scientists or sincere students who want to COMPARE the results of different methods. Don, you are correct that: > There are no RTC's supporting evidence that TCM can do many things ... However, if we want to advance as a profession and argue the validity of our methods (and results) with colleagues in other med / vet / healing professions (or with politicians or policy-makers), we MUST be able to cite some reputable published work in support of our methods. That brings me back to my original mail: > I have seen no published evidence that the ORDER of point needling is > important. Does such evidence exist. Is it published in peer-reviewed > journals? Where? > I have seen no published evidence that the BU/XIE methods of point > needling are better or worse than neutral (even) needling. Does such > evidence exist. Is it published in peer-reviewed journals? Where? In the absence of good research on those questions, the decision to use them is based mainly on the school(s) / teacher(s) that one follows. That poses several problems for me. Am I alone in thinking that way? Best regards, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 16, 2006 Report Share Posted May 16, 2006 ---- 05/16/06 17:51:48 Chinese Medicine Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) However, if we want to advance as a profession and argue the validity of our methods (and results) with colleagues in other med / vet / healing professions (or with politicians or policy-makers), we MUST be able to cite some reputable published work in support of our methods. >>>Coincidentally I was just reading a Chinese article on the treatment of back pain in which the outcome was dependent on the needling technique. It was published in The Shanghai Journal of AP & Moxibustion, Feb 2003, Vol. 22 No. 2 on page 48. It is not a RCT, just a case report in which the author was trying to treat a 65 yo patient that had suffered from back pain for over 30 years, especially in the morning. The diagnosis was insufficiency of Qi and Blood, and cold congealing. The author needle Waiguan TE5 with moxa on top of the needle, but after two treatments there was no effect. The author then changed his technique and used first a directional supplementing method and then the so-called burning mountain fire hand method, with no added moxa, and repeated the technique after 20 minutes. On the fourth visit the pain had subsided and 6 months later still had not returned. At this point I couldn't help searching wanfangdata for more articles on bu xie fa. Some 30 articles came up, one of which was called " Effect of Reinforcing and Reducing Methods by Lifting and Thrusting Needle in Acupuncture on the Blood Serum SOD and MDA of Kidney-yang Deficiency Rabbits .. The tests showed that both supplementing and draining method had a significant effect on SOD and MDA, but that the effect of the reinforcing method was greater (p<0.01) than the draining method (p<0.05). Many of the articles deal with directional needling against or with the course of the channels, and mother-child points. Another interesting article was this one:Effect on Acu-Points Skin Temperature of Healthy People with Reinforcing and Reducing by Lifting and Thrusting. It showed that the supplementing method raised skin temperature significantly, and that effect was larger as needle retention time increased with a peak at 10-15 minutes (p<0.001), and p<0.01 at 5 and 20 minutes. Draining method had no significant effect on skin temperature. Regards, Tom. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 Hi David > If the order of needling is not important ... I asked for evidence (other than from the original texts) that needling order really IS important. > ... then why are the ancient texts written a certain way? Probably because the original writers BELIEVED that the order was important. We know that TCM had a significant basis in Shamanism/magic (numerology, Yi-Intention, etc). If one believes (rightly or wrongly) that something is necessary, one does it that way. > Why are Li Shi Zhen's protocols a certain way only? Why are the Ghost > points used in a specific protocol, 1st trinity, 2nd trinity etc? See above. If one believes that one can detetch Ghost- / Demonic- possession / attachment, it is also necessary to believe in the way one can / must use to do that. > You think that a medicine that describes 20+ needling techniques, which > places an onus on practioner intent, would ascribe anything, > specifically needling order to whimsy or to what is closest to the > acupuncturist's body as they are working? David Appleton L.Ac Today, many AP practitioners use no needles; indeed some claim that laser or guasha is even more powerful than needling. IMO, there is no one school or method of AP; it is highly flexible. IMO, AP given by a trained professional (especially one trained in Shamanism) works on many levels - spirit, psyche and soma. No two acupuncturists that I have observed (whether treating humans or animals) do it exactly the same way. It is highly individual to each practitioner. All hold certain concepts in common, but may disagree on other concepts. I am trying to get to the core importance of AP: Is it (a) the POINTS used, (b) the ORDER and METHODS USED at the same points, or © the THOUGHT/Yi/Intention/confidence used when concentrating on those points that is most important? Assuming that the points chosen are relevant to the patient's problems, my gut says © is the most important factor. But I am open to being shown to be wrong in that. Best regards, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 I have many students that believe the practioners intention to be important in acupuncture. However, I don't at all share that view. If I treat someone and they or I MUST believe it (or intend it to work), then we are not practicing medicine at all. Let me explain. If you have, for instance, pheumonia from strep and I give you amoxycillan. Do you or the patient have to believe that it will work? Or will it work despite you intent of belief? Of course you know the answer to that one. Therefore, I posit that if I selected the correct point in an acupuncture prescription and taught a monkey how to insert the needle into that point, the result would be identical to that which a trained acupuncturist would get. That is the result of a true medicine. If one has to believe in it to work, then we are practicing nothing but faith healing. And that is not what I practice, nor do I believe it is what any of us practice. We practice Oriental Medicine; a true medicine. Respectfully, Dr. Don J. Snow, DAOM, MPH, MSTOM, L.Ac. In Chinese Medicine , " " < wrote: > > Hi David > > > If the order of needling is not important ... > > I asked for evidence (other than from the original texts) that needling order > really IS important. > > > ... then why are the ancient texts written a certain way? > > Probably because the original writers BELIEVED that the order was > important. > > We know that TCM had a significant basis in Shamanism/magic > (numerology, Yi-Intention, etc). If one believes (rightly or wrongly) that > something is necessary, one does it that way. > > > Why are Li Shi Zhen's protocols a certain way only? Why are the Ghost > > points used in a specific protocol, 1st trinity, 2nd trinity etc? > > See above. If one believes that one can detetch Ghost- / Demonic- > possession / attachment, it is also necessary to believe in the way one can / > must use to do that. > > > You think that a medicine that describes 20+ needling techniques, which > > places an onus on practioner intent, would ascribe anything, > > specifically needling order to whimsy or to what is closest to the > > acupuncturist's body as they are working? David Appleton L.Ac > > Today, many AP practitioners use no needles; indeed some claim that laser > or guasha is even more powerful than needling. > > IMO, there is no one school or method of AP; it is highly flexible. IMO, AP > given by a trained professional (especially one trained in Shamanism) works > on many levels - spirit, psyche and soma. No two acupuncturists that I have > observed (whether treating humans or animals) do it exactly the same way. > It is highly individual to each practitioner. All hold certain concepts in > common, but may disagree on other concepts. > > I am trying to get to the core importance of AP: Is it > (a) the POINTS used, > (b) the ORDER and METHODS USED at the same points, or > © the THOUGHT/Yi/Intention/confidence used when concentrating on > those points that is most important? > > Assuming that the points chosen are relevant to the patient's problems, my > gut says © is the most important factor. But I am open to being shown to > be wrong in that. > > Best regards, > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 Tue, 16 May 2006 16:51:06 +0100, " " < wrote: > In the absence of good research on those questions, the decision to use them is based mainly on the school(s) / teacher(s) that one follows. That poses several problems for me. Am I alone in thinking that way? and, Tue, 16 May 2006 09:20:32 -0700 (PDT) david appleton <acuapple: >If the order of needling is not important then why are the ancient texts written a certain way? Why are Li Shi Zhen's protocols a certain way only? Why are the Ghost points used in a specific protocol, 1st trinity, 2nd trinity etc? You think that a medicine that describes 20+ needling techniques, which places an onus on practioner intent, would ascribe anything, specifically needling order to whimsy or to what is closest to the acupuncturist's body as they are working? Taking off from Phil's " based … on the … teacher(s) that one follows… " , and in line with David's statement (and a later message from Robert Chu), I have a vivid idea (from teachers hints and my own subsequent experience) of how specific order of needling is integral to treatment. It has to do with process logic e.g. first open this, to allow that to move, in a certain direction, and perhaps balance with a complementary action/channel at some polar opposite location, etc. If one views the channel systems (main, luo, sinew, divergent, 8-extraordinary) as different, layered dynamics, there's always progression of needling to elicit responses and guide them in patterns. It's almost mechanical, or perhaps more algorithmic, like the process of designing, implementing and debugging a software system. But is fashioned uniquely to the patient's momentary situation. On the other hand, such treatments are particular to the particular patient, on that particular day. It's difficult to conceive of approaching this kind of practice in the context of the RCT (random-controlled-trial). You cannot construct a large sample of identical patient situations, in the sense of sophisticated classical CM diagnosis. One can conceive, on yet another hand, of scientific methodology that follows a large number of such treatments (as block boxes, so to speak), and compares the results, by some complex measures, with those of other treatment styles (e.g. standardized). Logically, this should be possible. The logistics, however, in terms of resources, funding, etc., are, currently, somewhat unlikely. Another angle is seen in the large British study on migraine HA, which was quite sophisticated methodologically, but which did not prescribe treatment details, but rather number of treatments and time span and whatever the (qualified) practitioners saw fit to do (the block box approach). This study found results statistically strong enough to recommend national political health policy. (The parallel German studies, which specified protocols, and also found significant results, but confounded by the protocols ( " real " or " sham/minimal " ) hamstrung itself to the extent of not being able to make policy recommendations.) The pharmacological treatment model, and its assumption that the treated conditions are normalized currently drive experimental methodology. This is less intrinsically necessary from a scientific viewpoint, and more an example of the maxim: If your only tool is a hammer, than everything you see looks like a nail. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 Correction in last message: " (as block boxes, so to speak) " should read " black boxes " , and also again a couple of paragraphs below. " Black box " is a technicql term, meaning you don't know what goes on in side, but just see inputs and outputs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 Don, I think you are missing the point. A monkey wouldn't give a patient any confidence in their ability to treat illness. How could a monkey have intention of curing their illness. The FACT is that intention and the belief that a treatment will work applies to ALL medicine, Oriental Medicine and Western Medicine. It might be hard to accept - and " conventional " doctors find it particularly hard to accept, but belief that a treatment will work plays a hugely significant role in the success or failure of any treatment. Scientific studies have shown that broadly speaking almost 40% of illnesses are curable by this mental intention alone (on the part of the patient) and of the pharmaceuticals that have been proven to work approximately 50% of their " curative " powers has to be attributed to this mental belief. This is often disparagingly known as the placebo effect, which is frequently misunderstood as a fake cure for an imagined illness. The placebo effect is in fact the opposite, it's a real and proven cure for a scientifically confirmed illness. Why this is the case is still a complete mystery but there isn't anything wrong or illegitimate with harnessing this powerful effect. Kind regards Dermot - " daomsnow " <don83407 <Chinese Medicine > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 7:18 AM Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) I have many students that believe the practioners intention to be important in acupuncture. However, I don't at all share that view. If I treat someone and they or I MUST believe it (or intend it to work), then we are not practicing medicine at all. Let me explain. If you have, for instance, pheumonia from strep and I give you amoxycillan. Do you or the patient have to believe that it will work? Or will it work despite you intent of belief? Of course you know the answer to that one. Therefore, I posit that if I selected the correct point in an acupuncture prescription and taught a monkey how to insert the needle into that point, the result would be identical to that which a trained acupuncturist would get. That is the result of a true medicine. If one has to believe in it to work, then we are practicing nothing but faith healing. And that is not what I practice, nor do I believe it is what any of us practice. We practice Oriental Medicine; a true medicine. Respectfully, Dr. Don J. Snow, DAOM, MPH, MSTOM, L.Ac. In Chinese Medicine , " " < wrote: > > Hi David > > > If the order of needling is not important ... > > I asked for evidence (other than from the original texts) that needling order > really IS important. > > > ... then why are the ancient texts written a certain way? > > Probably because the original writers BELIEVED that the order was > important. > > We know that TCM had a significant basis in Shamanism/magic > (numerology, Yi-Intention, etc). If one believes (rightly or wrongly) that > something is necessary, one does it that way. > > > Why are Li Shi Zhen's protocols a certain way only? Why are the Ghost > > points used in a specific protocol, 1st trinity, 2nd trinity etc? > > See above. If one believes that one can detetch Ghost- / Demonic- > possession / attachment, it is also necessary to believe in the way one can / > must use to do that. > > > You think that a medicine that describes 20+ needling techniques, which > > places an onus on practioner intent, would ascribe anything, > > specifically needling order to whimsy or to what is closest to the > > acupuncturist's body as they are working? David Appleton L.Ac > > Today, many AP practitioners use no needles; indeed some claim that laser > or guasha is even more powerful than needling. > > IMO, there is no one school or method of AP; it is highly flexible. IMO, AP > given by a trained professional (especially one trained in Shamanism) works > on many levels - spirit, psyche and soma. No two acupuncturists that I have > observed (whether treating humans or animals) do it exactly the same way. > It is highly individual to each practitioner. All hold certain concepts in > common, but may disagree on other concepts. > > I am trying to get to the core importance of AP: Is it > (a) the POINTS used, > (b) the ORDER and METHODS USED at the same points, or > © the THOUGHT/Yi/Intention/confidence used when concentrating on > those points that is most important? > > Assuming that the points chosen are relevant to the patient's problems, my > gut says © is the most important factor. But I am open to being shown to > be wrong in that. > > Best regards, > > Subscribe to the new FREE online journal for TCM at Times http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com Download the all new TCM Forum Toolbar, click, http://toolbar.thebizplace.com/LandingPage.aspx/CT145145 and adjust accordingly. Please consider the environment and only print this message if absolutely necessary. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 Phil- your points are well taken- I would love to see the double blind study that quantifies Intention- as per my teacher Jeffrey Yuen, Intention, which he calls practioner cultivation, is all you need- according to him the most cultivated can simply be in the presence of the patient and heal them. regards, David --- < wrote: > Hi David > > > If the order of needling is not important ... > > I asked for evidence (other than from the original > texts) that needling order > really IS important. > > > ... then why are the ancient texts written a > certain way? > > Probably because the original writers BELIEVED that > the order was > important. > > We know that TCM had a significant basis in > Shamanism/magic > (numerology, Yi-Intention, etc). If one believes > (rightly or wrongly) that > something is necessary, one does it that way. > > > Why are Li Shi Zhen's protocols a certain way > only? Why are the Ghost > > points used in a specific protocol, 1st trinity, > 2nd trinity etc? > > See above. If one believes that one can detetch > Ghost- / Demonic- > possession / attachment, it is also necessary to > believe in the way one can / > must use to do that. > > > You think that a medicine that describes 20+ > needling techniques, which > > places an onus on practioner intent, would ascribe > anything, > > specifically needling order to whimsy or to what > is closest to the > > acupuncturist's body as they are working? David > Appleton L.Ac > > Today, many AP practitioners use no needles; indeed > some claim that laser > or guasha is even more powerful than needling. > > IMO, there is no one school or method of AP; it is > highly flexible. IMO, AP > given by a trained professional (especially one > trained in Shamanism) works > on many levels - spirit, psyche and soma. No two > acupuncturists that I have > observed (whether treating humans or animals) do it > exactly the same way. > It is highly individual to each practitioner. All > hold certain concepts in > common, but may disagree on other concepts. > > I am trying to get to the core importance of AP: Is > it > (a) the POINTS used, > (b) the ORDER and METHODS USED at the same points, > or > © the THOUGHT/Yi/Intention/confidence used when > concentrating on > those points that is most important? > > Assuming that the points chosen are relevant to the > patient's problems, my > gut says © is the most important factor. But I am > open to being shown to > be wrong in that. > > Best regards, > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 You're absolutely right, placebo plays a big role in all medicines. However, it is not what makes the medicine work when placebo is not the cure. It is the medicine. It is not the intent or the belief. The next time you get a bacterial infection, or Hepatitis, try " just believing " and see where it gets you. I'll take the medicine thank you. Dr. Snow Chinese Medicine , " Dermot O'Connor " <dermot wrote: > > Don, > > I think you are missing the point. A monkey wouldn't give a patient any > confidence in their ability to treat illness. How could a monkey have > intention of curing their illness. The FACT is that intention and the > belief that a treatment will work applies to ALL medicine, Oriental Medicine > and Western Medicine. It might be hard to accept - and " conventional " > doctors find it particularly hard to accept, but belief that a treatment > will work plays a hugely significant role in the success or failure of any > treatment. Scientific studies have shown that broadly speaking almost 40% > of illnesses are curable by this mental intention alone (on the part of the > patient) and of the pharmaceuticals that have been proven to work > approximately 50% of their " curative " powers has to be attributed to this > mental belief. This is often disparagingly known as the placebo effect, > which is frequently misunderstood as a fake cure for an imagined illness. > The placebo effect is in fact the opposite, it's a real and proven cure for > a scientifically confirmed illness. Why this is the case is still a > complete mystery but there isn't anything wrong or illegitimate with > harnessing this powerful effect. > > Kind regards > > Dermot > > > > - > " daomsnow " <don83407 > <Chinese Medicine > > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 7:18 AM > Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) > needling) > > > I have many students that believe the practioners intention to be > important in acupuncture. However, I don't at all share that view. > If I treat someone and they or I MUST believe it (or intend it to > work), then we are not practicing medicine at all. > > Let me explain. If you have, for instance, pheumonia from strep and > I give you amoxycillan. Do you or the patient have to believe that > it will work? Or will it work despite you intent of belief? Of > course you know the answer to that one. > > Therefore, I posit that if I selected the correct point in an > acupuncture prescription and taught a monkey how to insert the needle > into that point, the result would be identical to that which a > trained acupuncturist would get. That is the result of a true > medicine. If one has to believe in it to work, then we are > practicing nothing but faith healing. And that is not what I > practice, nor do I believe it is what any of us practice. We > practice Oriental Medicine; a true medicine. > > > Respectfully, > > Dr. Don J. Snow, DAOM, MPH, MSTOM, L.Ac. > > > In Chinese Medicine , " " > <@> wrote: > > > > Hi David > > > > > If the order of needling is not important ... > > > > I asked for evidence (other than from the original texts) that > needling order > > really IS important. > > > > > ... then why are the ancient texts written a certain way? > > > > Probably because the original writers BELIEVED that the order was > > important. > > > > We know that TCM had a significant basis in Shamanism/magic > > (numerology, Yi-Intention, etc). If one believes (rightly or > wrongly) that > > something is necessary, one does it that way. > > > > > Why are Li Shi Zhen's protocols a certain way only? Why are the > Ghost > > > points used in a specific protocol, 1st trinity, 2nd trinity etc? > > > > See above. If one believes that one can detetch Ghost- / Demonic- > > possession / attachment, it is also necessary to believe in the way > one can / > > must use to do that. > > > > > You think that a medicine that describes 20+ needling techniques, > which > > > places an onus on practioner intent, would ascribe anything, > > > specifically needling order to whimsy or to what is closest to the > > > acupuncturist's body as they are working? David Appleton L.Ac > > > > Today, many AP practitioners use no needles; indeed some claim that > laser > > or guasha is even more powerful than needling. > > > > IMO, there is no one school or method of AP; it is highly flexible. > IMO, AP > > given by a trained professional (especially one trained in > Shamanism) works > > on many levels - spirit, psyche and soma. No two acupuncturists > that I have > > observed (whether treating humans or animals) do it exactly the > same way. > > It is highly individual to each practitioner. All hold certain > concepts in > > common, but may disagree on other concepts. > > > > I am trying to get to the core importance of AP: Is it > > (a) the POINTS used, > > (b) the ORDER and METHODS USED at the same points, or > > © the THOUGHT/Yi/Intention/confidence used when concentrating on > > those points that is most important? > > > > Assuming that the points chosen are relevant to the patient's > problems, my > > gut says © is the most important factor. But I am open to being > shown to > > be wrong in that. > > > > Best regards, > > > > > > > > Subscribe to the new FREE online journal for TCM at Chinese Medicine Times > http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com > > Download the all new TCM Forum Toolbar, click, > http://toolbar.thebizplace.com/LandingPage.aspx/CT145145 > > > and adjust > accordingly. > > Messages are the property of the author. Any duplication outside the group > requires prior permission from the author. > > Please consider the environment and only print this message if absolutely > necessary. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 The point is may be one needs to show a better clinical outcome then a monkey inserting needles Oakland, CA 94609 - Dermot O'Connor Chinese Medicine Wednesday, May 17, 2006 3:05 AM Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) Don, I think you are missing the point. A monkey wouldn't give a patient any confidence in their ability to treat illness. How could a monkey have intention of curing their illness. The FACT is that intention and the belief that a treatment will work applies to ALL medicine, Oriental Medicine and Western Medicine. It might be hard to accept - and " conventional " doctors find it particularly hard to accept, but belief that a treatment will work plays a hugely significant role in the success or failure of any treatment. Scientific studies have shown that broadly speaking almost 40% of illnesses are curable by this mental intention alone (on the part of the patient) and of the pharmaceuticals that have been proven to work approximately 50% of their " curative " powers has to be attributed to this mental belief. This is often disparagingly known as the placebo effect, which is frequently misunderstood as a fake cure for an imagined illness. The placebo effect is in fact the opposite, it's a real and proven cure for a scientifically confirmed illness. Why this is the case is still a complete mystery but there isn't anything wrong or illegitimate with harnessing this powerful effect. Kind regards Dermot - " daomsnow " <don83407 <Chinese Medicine > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 7:18 AM Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) I have many students that believe the practioners intention to be important in acupuncture. However, I don't at all share that view. If I treat someone and they or I MUST believe it (or intend it to work), then we are not practicing medicine at all. Let me explain. If you have, for instance, pheumonia from strep and I give you amoxycillan. Do you or the patient have to believe that it will work? Or will it work despite you intent of belief? Of course you know the answer to that one. Therefore, I posit that if I selected the correct point in an acupuncture prescription and taught a monkey how to insert the needle into that point, the result would be identical to that which a trained acupuncturist would get. That is the result of a true medicine. If one has to believe in it to work, then we are practicing nothing but faith healing. And that is not what I practice, nor do I believe it is what any of us practice. We practice Oriental Medicine; a true medicine. Respectfully, Dr. Don J. Snow, DAOM, MPH, MSTOM, L.Ac. In Chinese Medicine , " " < wrote: > > Hi David > > > If the order of needling is not important ... > > I asked for evidence (other than from the original texts) that needling order > really IS important. > > > ... then why are the ancient texts written a certain way? > > Probably because the original writers BELIEVED that the order was > important. > > We know that TCM had a significant basis in Shamanism/magic > (numerology, Yi-Intention, etc). If one believes (rightly or wrongly) that > something is necessary, one does it that way. > > > Why are Li Shi Zhen's protocols a certain way only? Why are the Ghost > > points used in a specific protocol, 1st trinity, 2nd trinity etc? > > See above. If one believes that one can detetch Ghost- / Demonic- > possession / attachment, it is also necessary to believe in the way one can / > must use to do that. > > > You think that a medicine that describes 20+ needling techniques, which > > places an onus on practioner intent, would ascribe anything, > > specifically needling order to whimsy or to what is closest to the > > acupuncturist's body as they are working? David Appleton L.Ac > > Today, many AP practitioners use no needles; indeed some claim that laser > or guasha is even more powerful than needling. > > IMO, there is no one school or method of AP; it is highly flexible. IMO, AP > given by a trained professional (especially one trained in Shamanism) works > on many levels - spirit, psyche and soma. No two acupuncturists that I have > observed (whether treating humans or animals) do it exactly the same way. > It is highly individual to each practitioner. All hold certain concepts in > common, but may disagree on other concepts. > > I am trying to get to the core importance of AP: Is it > (a) the POINTS used, > (b) the ORDER and METHODS USED at the same points, or > © the THOUGHT/Yi/Intention/confidence used when concentrating on > those points that is most important? > > Assuming that the points chosen are relevant to the patient's problems, my > gut says © is the most important factor. But I am open to being shown to > be wrong in that. > > Best regards, > > Subscribe to the new FREE online journal for TCM at Times http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com Download the all new TCM Forum Toolbar, click, http://toolbar.thebizplace.com/LandingPage.aspx/CT145145 and adjust accordingly. Messages are the property of the author. Any duplication outside the group requires prior permission from the author. Please consider the environment and only print this message if absolutely necessary. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 Indeed, just as you would need to show a better clinical outcome than a monkey performing surgery. - " " <alonmarcus <Chinese Medicine > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 3:56 PM Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) > The point is may be one needs to show a better clinical outcome then a > monkey inserting needles > > > > > Oakland, CA 94609 > > > - > Dermot O'Connor > Chinese Medicine > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 3:05 AM > Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral > (Even) needling) > > > Don, > > I think you are missing the point. A monkey wouldn't give a patient any > confidence in their ability to treat illness. How could a monkey have > intention of curing their illness. The FACT is that intention and the > belief that a treatment will work applies to ALL medicine, Oriental > Medicine > and Western Medicine. It might be hard to accept - and " conventional " > doctors find it particularly hard to accept, but belief that a treatment > will work plays a hugely significant role in the success or failure of > any > treatment. Scientific studies have shown that broadly speaking almost > 40% > of illnesses are curable by this mental intention alone (on the part of > the > patient) and of the pharmaceuticals that have been proven to work > approximately 50% of their " curative " powers has to be attributed to this > mental belief. This is often disparagingly known as the placebo effect, > which is frequently misunderstood as a fake cure for an imagined illness. > The placebo effect is in fact the opposite, it's a real and proven cure > for > a scientifically confirmed illness. Why this is the case is still a > complete mystery but there isn't anything wrong or illegitimate with > harnessing this powerful effect. > > Kind regards > > Dermot > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 How do you know the outcome will be any different? Replace the monkey with a robot. The point is, the acupuncture would still work regardless. But you can believe as you will. Dr. Snow - Dermot O'Connor Wednesday, May 17, 2006 8:46 AM Chinese Medicine Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) Indeed, just as you would need to show a better clinical outcome than a monkey performing surgery. - " " <alonmarcus <Chinese Medicine > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 3:56 PM Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) > The point is may be one needs to show a better clinical outcome then a > monkey inserting needles > > > > > Oakland, CA 94609 > > > - > Dermot O'Connor > Chinese Medicine > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 3:05 AM > Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral > (Even) needling) > > > Don, > > I think you are missing the point. A monkey wouldn't give a patient any > confidence in their ability to treat illness. How could a monkey have > intention of curing their illness. The FACT is that intention and the > belief that a treatment will work applies to ALL medicine, Oriental > Medicine > and Western Medicine. It might be hard to accept - and " conventional " > doctors find it particularly hard to accept, but belief that a treatment > will work plays a hugely significant role in the success or failure of > any > treatment. Scientific studies have shown that broadly speaking almost > 40% > of illnesses are curable by this mental intention alone (on the part of > the > patient) and of the pharmaceuticals that have been proven to work > approximately 50% of their " curative " powers has to be attributed to this > mental belief. This is often disparagingly known as the placebo effect, > which is frequently misunderstood as a fake cure for an imagined illness. > The placebo effect is in fact the opposite, it's a real and proven cure > for > a scientifically confirmed illness. Why this is the case is still a > complete mystery but there isn't anything wrong or illegitimate with > harnessing this powerful effect. > > Kind regards > > Dermot > > > > Subscribe to the new FREE online journal for TCM at Times http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com Download the all new TCM Forum Toolbar, click, http://toolbar.thebizplace.com/LandingPage.aspx/CT145145 and adjust accordingly. Please consider the environment and only print this message if absolutely necessary. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 Nobody is disputing the fact that acupuncture works. It's what I do for a living, so of course I believe that it works - and works very well and scientific studies have proven that it works. But belief and intention apply to both Western and Eastern medicine and to say that intention and belief doesn't apply to our own medicine is simply ignoring scientifically established fact. If belief wasn't a factor than medical studies would not need to take into account the placebo response, and ALL medical studies in order to be credible must take this factor into consideration. - " Donald Snow " <don83407 <Chinese Medicine > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 5:17 PM Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) How do you know the outcome will be any different? Replace the monkey with a robot. The point is, the acupuncture would still work regardless. But you can believe as you will. Dr. Snow - Dermot O'Connor Wednesday, May 17, 2006 8:46 AM Chinese Medicine Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) Indeed, just as you would need to show a better clinical outcome than a monkey performing surgery. - " " <alonmarcus <Chinese Medicine > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 3:56 PM Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) > The point is may be one needs to show a better clinical outcome then a > monkey inserting needles > > > > > Oakland, CA 94609 > > > - > Dermot O'Connor > Chinese Medicine > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 3:05 AM > Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral > (Even) needling) > > > Don, > > I think you are missing the point. A monkey wouldn't give a patient any > confidence in their ability to treat illness. How could a monkey have > intention of curing their illness. The FACT is that intention and the > belief that a treatment will work applies to ALL medicine, Oriental > Medicine > and Western Medicine. It might be hard to accept - and " conventional " > doctors find it particularly hard to accept, but belief that a treatment > will work plays a hugely significant role in the success or failure of > any > treatment. Scientific studies have shown that broadly speaking almost > 40% > of illnesses are curable by this mental intention alone (on the part of > the > patient) and of the pharmaceuticals that have been proven to work > approximately 50% of their " curative " powers has to be attributed to this > mental belief. This is often disparagingly known as the placebo effect, > which is frequently misunderstood as a fake cure for an imagined illness. > The placebo effect is in fact the opposite, it's a real and proven cure > for > a scientifically confirmed illness. Why this is the case is still a > complete mystery but there isn't anything wrong or illegitimate with > harnessing this powerful effect. > > Kind regards > > Dermot > > > > Subscribe to the new FREE online journal for TCM at Times http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com Download the all new TCM Forum Toolbar, click, http://toolbar.thebizplace.com/LandingPage.aspx/CT145145 and adjust accordingly. Please consider the environment and only print this message if absolutely necessary. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 indeed Oakland, CA 94609 - Dermot O'Connor Chinese Medicine Wednesday, May 17, 2006 8:02 AM Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) Indeed, just as you would need to show a better clinical outcome than a monkey performing surgery. - " " <alonmarcus <Chinese Medicine > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 3:56 PM Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) > The point is may be one needs to show a better clinical outcome then a > monkey inserting needles > > > > > Oakland, CA 94609 > > > - > Dermot O'Connor > Chinese Medicine > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 3:05 AM > Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral > (Even) needling) > > > Don, > > I think you are missing the point. A monkey wouldn't give a patient any > confidence in their ability to treat illness. How could a monkey have > intention of curing their illness. The FACT is that intention and the > belief that a treatment will work applies to ALL medicine, Oriental > Medicine > and Western Medicine. It might be hard to accept - and " conventional " > doctors find it particularly hard to accept, but belief that a treatment > will work plays a hugely significant role in the success or failure of > any > treatment. Scientific studies have shown that broadly speaking almost > 40% > of illnesses are curable by this mental intention alone (on the part of > the > patient) and of the pharmaceuticals that have been proven to work > approximately 50% of their " curative " powers has to be attributed to this > mental belief. This is often disparagingly known as the placebo effect, > which is frequently misunderstood as a fake cure for an imagined illness. > The placebo effect is in fact the opposite, it's a real and proven cure > for > a scientifically confirmed illness. Why this is the case is still a > complete mystery but there isn't anything wrong or illegitimate with > harnessing this powerful effect. > > Kind regards > > Dermot > > > > Subscribe to the new FREE online journal for TCM at Times http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com Download the all new TCM Forum Toolbar, click, http://toolbar.thebizplace.com/LandingPage.aspx/CT145145 and adjust accordingly. Please consider the environment and only print this message if absolutely necessary. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 Our thoughts and our beliefs cause real and scientifically measurable bio-chemical changes in our bodies and science proves this. The point is that belief/placebo plays a major role (sometimes the major role) and has been proven to work on everything from the common cold to cancer. I'm not saying that placebo alone is more effective than all treatments, all medications and all surgery. No, that would just be plain silly. But belief plays a major role in all treatments even drug treatments when drug has been proven to be effective. Thats why ALL drugs including those used to treat bacterial infection and hepatitis have to be tested in trials against a placebo. If belief could be completely discounted, just the way you completely discounted it in your first e-mail about the monkey acupuncturists, then drugs trialed for these conditions would not have to be tested against a placebo. But all proper medical research trials have to be scientific and not based on any emotional bias and therefore have to take into consideration placebo (belief). Drugs are only classified as effective when they are MORE effective than a placebo. So for example, if the placebo cures 40% of people and the real medication cures 50% then the medication can be classified as an effective treatment. That means that such a drug's effectiveness is 80% attributable to placebo (belief) and only 20% attributable to the real effect of the drug. It might surprise you just how many drugs are classified as effective by the FDA and similar bodies, even though the drugs are only marginally more effective than placebos/belief (perhaps only a few percentage points). You'd do well to take a fresh look at this and get a fuller understanding of what the power of belief and intention could mean for your clients..... If you ever get a chance to see this well put together BBC documentary you should (see link below). In this documentary the scientist Kathy Sykes met a knee surgeon in the US who has made an amazing discovery. In an research trial, he gave a group of his patients a fake operation. He opened them up - but instead of carrying out the usual procedure - simply sowed them back up again having done nothing at all. Incredibly, this group of patients did as well as those who had the real procedure. When asked about this Kathy made the point that these people got better even though they hadn't received any treatment at all. But the knee surgeon corrected her - " these people got better, they got treatment it just wasn't the treatment that they thought they got " http://www.open2.net/home/view?entityID=27419 & jsp=prog_pages%2Ftemplate%2Fviewer\ & sessionID=-1147903488051 & entityName=object Kind regards Dermot - " daomsnow " <don83407 <Chinese Medicine > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 3:31 PM Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) > You're absolutely right, placebo plays a big role in all medicines. > However, it is not what makes the medicine work when placebo is not > the cure. It is the medicine. It is not the intent or the belief. > The next time you get a bacterial infection, or Hepatitis, try " just > believing " and see where it gets you. I'll take the medicine thank > you. > > > Dr. Snow > > > > > Chinese Medicine , " Dermot > O'Connor " <dermot wrote: >> >> Don, >> >> I think you are missing the point. A monkey wouldn't give a > patient any >> confidence in their ability to treat illness. How could a monkey > have >> intention of curing their illness. The FACT is that intention and > the >> belief that a treatment will work applies to ALL medicine, Oriental > Medicine >> and Western Medicine. It might be hard to accept - > and " conventional " >> doctors find it particularly hard to accept, but belief that a > treatment >> will work plays a hugely significant role in the success or failure > of any >> treatment. Scientific studies have shown that broadly speaking > almost 40% >> of illnesses are curable by this mental intention alone (on the > part of the >> patient) and of the pharmaceuticals that have been proven to work >> approximately 50% of their " curative " powers has to be attributed > to this >> mental belief. This is often disparagingly known as the placebo > effect, >> which is frequently misunderstood as a fake cure for an imagined > illness. >> The placebo effect is in fact the opposite, it's a real and proven > cure for >> a scientifically confirmed illness. Why this is the case is still > a >> complete mystery but there isn't anything wrong or illegitimate > with >> harnessing this powerful effect. >> >> Kind regards >> >> Dermot >> >> >> >> - >> " daomsnow " <don83407 >> <Chinese Medicine > >> Wednesday, May 17, 2006 7:18 AM >> Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral > (Even) >> needling) >> >> >> I have many students that believe the practioners intention to be >> important in acupuncture. However, I don't at all share that view. >> If I treat someone and they or I MUST believe it (or intend it to >> work), then we are not practicing medicine at all. >> >> Let me explain. If you have, for instance, pheumonia from strep and >> I give you amoxycillan. Do you or the patient have to believe that >> it will work? Or will it work despite you intent of belief? Of >> course you know the answer to that one. >> >> Therefore, I posit that if I selected the correct point in an >> acupuncture prescription and taught a monkey how to insert the > needle >> into that point, the result would be identical to that which a >> trained acupuncturist would get. That is the result of a true >> medicine. If one has to believe in it to work, then we are >> practicing nothing but faith healing. And that is not what I >> practice, nor do I believe it is what any of us practice. We >> practice Oriental Medicine; a true medicine. >> >> >> Respectfully, >> >> Dr. Don J. Snow, DAOM, MPH, MSTOM, L.Ac. >> >> >> In Chinese Medicine , " " >> <@> wrote: >> > >> > Hi David >> > >> > > If the order of needling is not important ... >> > >> > I asked for evidence (other than from the original texts) that >> needling order >> > really IS important. >> > >> > > ... then why are the ancient texts written a certain way? >> > >> > Probably because the original writers BELIEVED that the order was >> > important. >> > >> > We know that TCM had a significant basis in Shamanism/magic >> > (numerology, Yi-Intention, etc). If one believes (rightly or >> wrongly) that >> > something is necessary, one does it that way. >> > >> > > Why are Li Shi Zhen's protocols a certain way only? Why are the >> Ghost >> > > points used in a specific protocol, 1st trinity, 2nd trinity > etc? >> > >> > See above. If one believes that one can detetch Ghost- / Demonic- >> > possession / attachment, it is also necessary to believe in the > way >> one can / >> > must use to do that. >> > >> > > You think that a medicine that describes 20+ needling > techniques, >> which >> > > places an onus on practioner intent, would ascribe anything, >> > > specifically needling order to whimsy or to what is closest to > the >> > > acupuncturist's body as they are working? David Appleton L.Ac >> > >> > Today, many AP practitioners use no needles; indeed some claim > that >> laser >> > or guasha is even more powerful than needling. >> > >> > IMO, there is no one school or method of AP; it is highly > flexible. >> IMO, AP >> > given by a trained professional (especially one trained in >> Shamanism) works >> > on many levels - spirit, psyche and soma. No two acupuncturists >> that I have >> > observed (whether treating humans or animals) do it exactly the >> same way. >> > It is highly individual to each practitioner. All hold certain >> concepts in >> > common, but may disagree on other concepts. >> > >> > I am trying to get to the core importance of AP: Is it >> > (a) the POINTS used, >> > (b) the ORDER and METHODS USED at the same points, or >> > © the THOUGHT/Yi/Intention/confidence used when concentrating on >> > those points that is most important? >> > >> > Assuming that the points chosen are relevant to the patient's >> problems, my >> > gut says © is the most important factor. But I am open to being >> shown to >> > be wrong in that. >> > >> > Best regards, >> > >> > >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Subscribe to the new FREE online journal for TCM at Chinese > Medicine Times >> http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com >> >> Download the all new TCM Forum Toolbar, click, >> http://toolbar.thebizplace.com/LandingPage.aspx/CT145145 >> >> >> and > adjust >> accordingly. >> >> Messages are the property of the author. Any duplication outside > the group >> requires prior permission from the author. >> >> Please consider the environment and only print this message if > absolutely >> necessary. >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 18, 2006 Report Share Posted May 18, 2006 Dermot, I agree with you when you say that there is nothing wrong with harnessing the effect of placebo.It does lead to an ethical problem which is that if I am intentionally using this effect then I believe that each client should know about it. Ray Ford _____ Chinese Medicine Chinese Medicine On Behalf Of Dermot O'Connor Wednesday, May 17, 2006 8:06 PM Chinese Medicine Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) Don, I think you are missing the point. A monkey wouldn't give a patient any confidence in their ability to treat illness. How could a monkey have intention of curing their illness. The FACT is that intention and the belief that a treatment will work applies to ALL medicine, Oriental Medicine and Western Medicine. It might be hard to accept - and " conventional " doctors find it particularly hard to accept, but belief that a treatment will work plays a hugely significant role in the success or failure of any treatment. Scientific studies have shown that broadly speaking almost 40% of illnesses are curable by this mental intention alone (on the part of the patient) and of the pharmaceuticals that have been proven to work approximately 50% of their " curative " powers has to be attributed to this mental belief. This is often disparagingly known as the placebo effect, which is frequently misunderstood as a fake cure for an imagined illness. The placebo effect is in fact the opposite, it's a real and proven cure for a scientifically confirmed illness. Why this is the case is still a complete mystery but there isn't anything wrong or illegitimate with harnessing this powerful effect. Kind regards Dermot - " daomsnow " <don83407 <Chinese Medicine > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 7:18 AM Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) I have many students that believe the practioners intention to be important in acupuncture. However, I don't at all share that view. If I treat someone and they or I MUST believe it (or intend it to work), then we are not practicing medicine at all. Let me explain. If you have, for instance, pheumonia from strep and I give you amoxycillan. Do you or the patient have to believe that it will work? Or will it work despite you intent of belief? Of course you know the answer to that one. Therefore, I posit that if I selected the correct point in an acupuncture prescription and taught a monkey how to insert the needle into that point, the result would be identical to that which a trained acupuncturist would get. That is the result of a true medicine. If one has to believe in it to work, then we are practicing nothing but faith healing. And that is not what I practice, nor do I believe it is what any of us practice. We practice Oriental Medicine; a true medicine. Respectfully, Dr. Don J. Snow, DAOM, MPH, MSTOM, L.Ac. In Chinese Medicine , " " < wrote: > > Hi David > > > If the order of needling is not important ... > > I asked for evidence (other than from the original texts) that needling order > really IS important. > > > ... then why are the ancient texts written a certain way? > > Probably because the original writers BELIEVED that the order was > important. > > We know that TCM had a significant basis in Shamanism/magic > (numerology, Yi-Intention, etc). If one believes (rightly or wrongly) that > something is necessary, one does it that way. > > > Why are Li Shi Zhen's protocols a certain way only? Why are the Ghost > > points used in a specific protocol, 1st trinity, 2nd trinity etc? > > See above. If one believes that one can detetch Ghost- / Demonic- > possession / attachment, it is also necessary to believe in the way one can / > must use to do that. > > > You think that a medicine that describes 20+ needling techniques, which > > places an onus on practioner intent, would ascribe anything, > > specifically needling order to whimsy or to what is closest to the > > acupuncturist's body as they are working? David Appleton L.Ac > > Today, many AP practitioners use no needles; indeed some claim that laser > or guasha is even more powerful than needling. > > IMO, there is no one school or method of AP; it is highly flexible. IMO, AP > given by a trained professional (especially one trained in Shamanism) works > on many levels - spirit, psyche and soma. No two acupuncturists that I have > observed (whether treating humans or animals) do it exactly the same way. > It is highly individual to each practitioner. All hold certain concepts in > common, but may disagree on other concepts. > > I am trying to get to the core importance of AP: Is it > (a) the POINTS used, > (b) the ORDER and METHODS USED at the same points, or > © the THOUGHT/Yi/Intention/confidence used when concentrating on > those points that is most important? > > Assuming that the points chosen are relevant to the patient's problems, my > gut says © is the most important factor. But I am open to being shown to > be wrong in that. > > Best regards, > > Subscribe to the new FREE online journal for TCM at Times http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com Download the all new TCM Forum Toolbar, click, http://toolbar.thebizplace.com/LandingPage.aspx/CT145145 and adjust accordingly. Please consider the environment and only print this message if absolutely necessary. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 18, 2006 Report Share Posted May 18, 2006 Dermot, The qoute below,taken from your post is very interesting BUT unless each patient knee the 'experiment " was taking place. I have not seen the documentary but reading between the lines of your post it seems the patients did not know? If this WAS the case it is very very bad medicine IMO.These people were little more than lab rats.Rather than be proud of his claim,the opposite should be true.This is of course IF THEY DID KNOW,which seems unlikely.This is blatant and unethical,too horible to contemplate where it might lead,how on earth did he pull it off. What next?David Coperfield's home surgery kit ? Ray Ford -a knee surgeon in the US who has made an amazing discovery. In an research trial, he gave a group of his patients a fake operation. He opened them up - but instead of carrying out the usual procedure - simply sowed them back up again having done nothing at all. Incredibly, this group of patients did as well as those who had the real procedure. When asked about this Kathy made the point that these people got better even though they hadn't received any treatment at all. But the knee surgeon corrected her - " these people got better, they got treatment it just wasn't the treatment that they thought they got " _____ Chinese Medicine Chinese Medicine On Behalf Of Dermot O'Connor Thursday, May 18, 2006 8:51 AM Chinese Medicine Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) Our thoughts and our beliefs cause real and scientifically measurable bio-chemical changes in our bodies and science proves this. The point is that belief/placebo plays a major role (sometimes the major role) and has been proven to work on everything from the common cold to cancer. I'm not saying that placebo alone is more effective than all treatments, all medications and all surgery. No, that would just be plain silly. But belief plays a major role in all treatments even drug treatments when drug has been proven to be effective. Thats why ALL drugs including those used to treat bacterial infection and hepatitis have to be tested in trials against a placebo. If belief could be completely discounted, just the way you completely discounted it in your first e-mail about the monkey acupuncturists, then drugs trialed for these conditions would not have to be tested against a placebo. But all proper medical research trials have to be scientific and not based on any emotional bias and therefore have to take into consideration placebo (belief). Drugs are only classified as effective when they are MORE effective than a placebo. So for example, if the placebo cures 40% of people and the real medication cures 50% then the medication can be classified as an effective treatment. That means that such a drug's effectiveness is 80% attributable to placebo (belief) and only 20% attributable to the real effect of the drug. It might surprise you just how many drugs are classified as effective by the FDA and similar bodies, even though the drugs are only marginally more effective than placebos/belief (perhaps only a few percentage points). You'd do well to take a fresh look at this and get a fuller understanding of what the power of belief and intention could mean for your clients..... If you ever get a chance to see this well put together BBC documentary you should (see link below). In this documentary the scientist Kathy Sykes met a knee surgeon in the US who has made an amazing discovery. In an research trial, he gave a group of his patients a fake operation. He opened them up - but instead of carrying out the usual procedure - simply sowed them back up again having done nothing at all. Incredibly, this group of patients did as well as those who had the real procedure. When asked about this Kathy made the point that these people got better even though they hadn't received any treatment at all. But the knee surgeon corrected her - " these people got better, they got treatment it just wasn't the treatment that they thought they got " http://www.open2.net/home/view?entityID=27419 <http://www.open2.net/home/view?entityID=27419 & jsp=prog_pages%2Ftemplate%2Fv iewer & sessionID=-1147903488051 & entityName=object> & jsp=prog_pages%2Ftemplate%2Fviewer & sessionID=-1147903488051 & entityName=obje ct Kind regards Dermot - " daomsnow " <don83407 <Chinese Medicine > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 3:31 PM Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) > You're absolutely right, placebo plays a big role in all medicines. > However, it is not what makes the medicine work when placebo is not > the cure. It is the medicine. It is not the intent or the belief. > The next time you get a bacterial infection, or Hepatitis, try " just > believing " and see where it gets you. I'll take the medicine thank > you. > > > Dr. Snow > > > > > Chinese Medicine , " Dermot > O'Connor " <dermot wrote: >> >> Don, >> >> I think you are missing the point. A monkey wouldn't give a > patient any >> confidence in their ability to treat illness. How could a monkey > have >> intention of curing their illness. The FACT is that intention and > the >> belief that a treatment will work applies to ALL medicine, Oriental > Medicine >> and Western Medicine. It might be hard to accept - > and " conventional " >> doctors find it particularly hard to accept, but belief that a > treatment >> will work plays a hugely significant role in the success or failure > of any >> treatment. Scientific studies have shown that broadly speaking > almost 40% >> of illnesses are curable by this mental intention alone (on the > part of the >> patient) and of the pharmaceuticals that have been proven to work >> approximately 50% of their " curative " powers has to be attributed > to this >> mental belief. This is often disparagingly known as the placebo > effect, >> which is frequently misunderstood as a fake cure for an imagined > illness. >> The placebo effect is in fact the opposite, it's a real and proven > cure for >> a scientifically confirmed illness. Why this is the case is still > a >> complete mystery but there isn't anything wrong or illegitimate > with >> harnessing this powerful effect. >> >> Kind regards >> >> Dermot >> >> >> >> - >> " daomsnow " <don83407 >> <Chinese Medicine > >> Wednesday, May 17, 2006 7:18 AM >> Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral > (Even) >> needling) >> >> >> I have many students that believe the practioners intention to be >> important in acupuncture. However, I don't at all share that view. >> If I treat someone and they or I MUST believe it (or intend it to >> work), then we are not practicing medicine at all. >> >> Let me explain. If you have, for instance, pheumonia from strep and >> I give you amoxycillan. Do you or the patient have to believe that >> it will work? Or will it work despite you intent of belief? Of >> course you know the answer to that one. >> >> Therefore, I posit that if I selected the correct point in an >> acupuncture prescription and taught a monkey how to insert the > needle >> into that point, the result would be identical to that which a >> trained acupuncturist would get. That is the result of a true >> medicine. If one has to believe in it to work, then we are >> practicing nothing but faith healing. And that is not what I >> practice, nor do I believe it is what any of us practice. We >> practice Oriental Medicine; a true medicine. >> >> >> Respectfully, >> >> Dr. Don J. Snow, DAOM, MPH, MSTOM, L.Ac. >> >> >> In Chinese Medicine , " " >> <@> wrote: >> > >> > Hi David >> > >> > > If the order of needling is not important ... >> > >> > I asked for evidence (other than from the original texts) that >> needling order >> > really IS important. >> > >> > > ... then why are the ancient texts written a certain way? >> > >> > Probably because the original writers BELIEVED that the order was >> > important. >> > >> > We know that TCM had a significant basis in Shamanism/magic >> > (numerology, Yi-Intention, etc). If one believes (rightly or >> wrongly) that >> > something is necessary, one does it that way. >> > >> > > Why are Li Shi Zhen's protocols a certain way only? Why are the >> Ghost >> > > points used in a specific protocol, 1st trinity, 2nd trinity > etc? >> > >> > See above. If one believes that one can detetch Ghost- / Demonic- >> > possession / attachment, it is also necessary to believe in the > way >> one can / >> > must use to do that. >> > >> > > You think that a medicine that describes 20+ needling > techniques, >> which >> > > places an onus on practioner intent, would ascribe anything, >> > > specifically needling order to whimsy or to what is closest to > the >> > > acupuncturist's body as they are working? David Appleton L.Ac >> > >> > Today, many AP practitioners use no needles; indeed some claim > that >> laser >> > or guasha is even more powerful than needling. >> > >> > IMO, there is no one school or method of AP; it is highly > flexible. >> IMO, AP >> > given by a trained professional (especially one trained in >> Shamanism) works >> > on many levels - spirit, psyche and soma. No two acupuncturists >> that I have >> > observed (whether treating humans or animals) do it exactly the >> same way. >> > It is highly individual to each practitioner. All hold certain >> concepts in >> > common, but may disagree on other concepts. >> > >> > I am trying to get to the core importance of AP: Is it >> > (a) the POINTS used, >> > (b) the ORDER and METHODS USED at the same points, or >> > © the THOUGHT/Yi/Intention/confidence used when concentrating on >> > those points that is most important? >> > >> > Assuming that the points chosen are relevant to the patient's >> problems, my >> > gut says © is the most important factor. But I am open to being >> shown to >> > be wrong in that. >> > >> > Best regards, >> > >> > >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Subscribe to the new FREE online journal for TCM at Chinese > Medicine Times >> http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com >> >> Download the all new TCM Forum Toolbar, click, >> http://toolbar.thebizplace.com/LandingPage.aspx/CT145145 >> >> >> and > adjust >> accordingly. >> >> Messages are the property of the author. Any duplication outside > the group >> requires prior permission from the author. >> >> Please consider the environment and only print this message if > absolutely >> necessary. >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 18, 2006 Report Share Posted May 18, 2006 Dermot, this is very,very funny,well said,made my day. " Indeed, just as you would need to show a better clinical outcome than a monkey performing surgery. " _____ Chinese Medicine Chinese Medicine On Behalf Of Dermot O'Connor Wednesday, May 17, 2006 8:06 PM Chinese Medicine Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) Don, I think you are missing the point. A monkey wouldn't give a patient any confidence in their ability to treat illness. How could a monkey have intention of curing their illness. The FACT is that intention and the belief that a treatment will work applies to ALL medicine, Oriental Medicine and Western Medicine. It might be hard to accept - and " conventional " doctors find it particularly hard to accept, but belief that a treatment will work plays a hugely significant role in the success or failure of any treatment. Scientific studies have shown that broadly speaking almost 40% of illnesses are curable by this mental intention alone (on the part of the patient) and of the pharmaceuticals that have been proven to work approximately 50% of their " curative " powers has to be attributed to this mental belief. This is often disparagingly known as the placebo effect, which is frequently misunderstood as a fake cure for an imagined illness. The placebo effect is in fact the opposite, it's a real and proven cure for a scientifically confirmed illness. Why this is the case is still a complete mystery but there isn't anything wrong or illegitimate with harnessing this powerful effect. Kind regards Dermot - " daomsnow " <don83407 <Chinese Medicine > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 7:18 AM Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) I have many students that believe the practioners intention to be important in acupuncture. However, I don't at all share that view. If I treat someone and they or I MUST believe it (or intend it to work), then we are not practicing medicine at all. Let me explain. If you have, for instance, pheumonia from strep and I give you amoxycillan. Do you or the patient have to believe that it will work? Or will it work despite you intent of belief? Of course you know the answer to that one. Therefore, I posit that if I selected the correct point in an acupuncture prescription and taught a monkey how to insert the needle into that point, the result would be identical to that which a trained acupuncturist would get. That is the result of a true medicine. If one has to believe in it to work, then we are practicing nothing but faith healing. And that is not what I practice, nor do I believe it is what any of us practice. We practice Oriental Medicine; a true medicine. Respectfully, Dr. Don J. Snow, DAOM, MPH, MSTOM, L.Ac. In Chinese Medicine , " " < wrote: > > Hi David > > > If the order of needling is not important ... > > I asked for evidence (other than from the original texts) that needling order > really IS important. > > > ... then why are the ancient texts written a certain way? > > Probably because the original writers BELIEVED that the order was > important. > > We know that TCM had a significant basis in Shamanism/magic > (numerology, Yi-Intention, etc). If one believes (rightly or wrongly) that > something is necessary, one does it that way. > > > Why are Li Shi Zhen's protocols a certain way only? Why are the Ghost > > points used in a specific protocol, 1st trinity, 2nd trinity etc? > > See above. If one believes that one can detetch Ghost- / Demonic- > possession / attachment, it is also necessary to believe in the way one can / > must use to do that. > > > You think that a medicine that describes 20+ needling techniques, which > > places an onus on practioner intent, would ascribe anything, > > specifically needling order to whimsy or to what is closest to the > > acupuncturist's body as they are working? David Appleton L.Ac > > Today, many AP practitioners use no needles; indeed some claim that laser > or guasha is even more powerful than needling. > > IMO, there is no one school or method of AP; it is highly flexible. IMO, AP > given by a trained professional (especially one trained in Shamanism) works > on many levels - spirit, psyche and soma. No two acupuncturists that I have > observed (whether treating humans or animals) do it exactly the same way. > It is highly individual to each practitioner. All hold certain concepts in > common, but may disagree on other concepts. > > I am trying to get to the core importance of AP: Is it > (a) the POINTS used, > (b) the ORDER and METHODS USED at the same points, or > © the THOUGHT/Yi/Intention/confidence used when concentrating on > those points that is most important? > > Assuming that the points chosen are relevant to the patient's problems, my > gut says © is the most important factor. But I am open to being shown to > be wrong in that. > > Best regards, > > Subscribe to the new FREE online journal for TCM at Times http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com Download the all new TCM Forum Toolbar, click, http://toolbar.thebizplace.com/LandingPage.aspx/CT145145 and adjust accordingly. Please consider the environment and only print this message if absolutely necessary. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 18, 2006 Report Share Posted May 18, 2006 Ray, Sorry but what you are saying isn't quite true. In a single-blind or double blind placebo study you simply can't tell the patients when they are receiving the placebo. If you do then it just isn't a blinded study anymore. It was a thoroughly scientific study, people knew that they were potentially going to receive " sham " surgery. Regardless of that, the results were the same between the two groups. If you tell someone they are receiving a placebo then the belief in the treatment disappears and along with it the potential healing power. Regards Dermot - " Ray Ford " <ray <Chinese Medicine > Thursday, May 18, 2006 11:50 AM RE: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) Dermot, The qoute below,taken from your post is very interesting BUT unless each patient knee the 'experiment " was taking place. I have not seen the documentary but reading between the lines of your post it seems the patients did not know? If this WAS the case it is very very bad medicine IMO.These people were little more than lab rats.Rather than be proud of his claim,the opposite should be true.This is of course IF THEY DID KNOW,which seems unlikely.This is blatant and unethical,too horible to contemplate where it might lead,how on earth did he pull it off. What next?David Coperfield's home surgery kit ? Ray Ford -a knee surgeon in the US who has made an amazing discovery. In an research trial, he gave a group of his patients a fake operation. He opened them up - but instead of carrying out the usual procedure - simply sowed them back up again having done nothing at all. Incredibly, this group of patients did as well as those who had the real procedure. When asked about this Kathy made the point that these people got better even though they hadn't received any treatment at all. But the knee surgeon corrected her - " these people got better, they got treatment it just wasn't the treatment that they thought they got " _____ Chinese Medicine Chinese Medicine On Behalf Of Dermot O'Connor Thursday, May 18, 2006 8:51 AM Chinese Medicine Re: Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) Our thoughts and our beliefs cause real and scientifically measurable bio-chemical changes in our bodies and science proves this. The point is that belief/placebo plays a major role (sometimes the major role) and has been proven to work on everything from the common cold to cancer. I'm not saying that placebo alone is more effective than all treatments, all medications and all surgery. No, that would just be plain silly. But belief plays a major role in all treatments even drug treatments when drug has been proven to be effective. Thats why ALL drugs including those used to treat bacterial infection and hepatitis have to be tested in trials against a placebo. If belief could be completely discounted, just the way you completely discounted it in your first e-mail about the monkey acupuncturists, then drugs trialed for these conditions would not have to be tested against a placebo. But all proper medical research trials have to be scientific and not based on any emotional bias and therefore have to take into consideration placebo (belief). Drugs are only classified as effective when they are MORE effective than a placebo. So for example, if the placebo cures 40% of people and the real medication cures 50% then the medication can be classified as an effective treatment. That means that such a drug's effectiveness is 80% attributable to placebo (belief) and only 20% attributable to the real effect of the drug. It might surprise you just how many drugs are classified as effective by the FDA and similar bodies, even though the drugs are only marginally more effective than placebos/belief (perhaps only a few percentage points). You'd do well to take a fresh look at this and get a fuller understanding of what the power of belief and intention could mean for your clients..... If you ever get a chance to see this well put together BBC documentary you should (see link below). In this documentary the scientist Kathy Sykes met a knee surgeon in the US who has made an amazing discovery. In an research trial, he gave a group of his patients a fake operation. He opened them up - but instead of carrying out the usual procedure - simply sowed them back up again having done nothing at all. Incredibly, this group of patients did as well as those who had the real procedure. When asked about this Kathy made the point that these people got better even though they hadn't received any treatment at all. But the knee surgeon corrected her - " these people got better, they got treatment it just wasn't the treatment that they thought they got " http://www.open2.net/home/view?entityID=27419 <http://www.open2.net/home/view?entityID=27419 & jsp=prog_pages%2Ftemplate%2Fv iewer & sessionID=-1147903488051 & entityName=object> & jsp=prog_pages%2Ftemplate%2Fviewer & sessionID=-1147903488051 & entityName=obje ct Kind regards Dermot - " daomsnow " <don83407 <Chinese Medicine > Wednesday, May 17, 2006 3:31 PM Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral (Even) needling) > You're absolutely right, placebo plays a big role in all medicines. > However, it is not what makes the medicine work when placebo is not > the cure. It is the medicine. It is not the intent or the belief. > The next time you get a bacterial infection, or Hepatitis, try " just > believing " and see where it gets you. I'll take the medicine thank > you. > > > Dr. Snow > > > > > Chinese Medicine , " Dermot > O'Connor " <dermot wrote: >> >> Don, >> >> I think you are missing the point. A monkey wouldn't give a > patient any >> confidence in their ability to treat illness. How could a monkey > have >> intention of curing their illness. The FACT is that intention and > the >> belief that a treatment will work applies to ALL medicine, Oriental > Medicine >> and Western Medicine. It might be hard to accept - > and " conventional " >> doctors find it particularly hard to accept, but belief that a > treatment >> will work plays a hugely significant role in the success or failure > of any >> treatment. Scientific studies have shown that broadly speaking > almost 40% >> of illnesses are curable by this mental intention alone (on the > part of the >> patient) and of the pharmaceuticals that have been proven to work >> approximately 50% of their " curative " powers has to be attributed > to this >> mental belief. This is often disparagingly known as the placebo > effect, >> which is frequently misunderstood as a fake cure for an imagined > illness. >> The placebo effect is in fact the opposite, it's a real and proven > cure for >> a scientifically confirmed illness. Why this is the case is still > a >> complete mystery but there isn't anything wrong or illegitimate > with >> harnessing this powerful effect. >> >> Kind regards >> >> Dermot >> >> >> >> - >> " daomsnow " <don83407 >> <Chinese Medicine > >> Wednesday, May 17, 2006 7:18 AM >> Re: Needling ORDER and Method (BU v XIE v Neutral > (Even) >> needling) >> >> >> I have many students that believe the practioners intention to be >> important in acupuncture. However, I don't at all share that view. >> If I treat someone and they or I MUST believe it (or intend it to >> work), then we are not practicing medicine at all. >> >> Let me explain. If you have, for instance, pheumonia from strep and >> I give you amoxycillan. Do you or the patient have to believe that >> it will work? Or will it work despite you intent of belief? Of >> course you know the answer to that one. >> >> Therefore, I posit that if I selected the correct point in an >> acupuncture prescription and taught a monkey how to insert the > needle >> into that point, the result would be identical to that which a >> trained acupuncturist would get. That is the result of a true >> medicine. If one has to believe in it to work, then we are >> practicing nothing but faith healing. And that is not what I >> practice, nor do I believe it is what any of us practice. We >> practice Oriental Medicine; a true medicine. >> >> >> Respectfully, >> >> Dr. Don J. Snow, DAOM, MPH, MSTOM, L.Ac. >> >> >> In Chinese Medicine , " " >> <@> wrote: >> > >> > Hi David >> > >> > > If the order of needling is not important ... >> > >> > I asked for evidence (other than from the original texts) that >> needling order >> > really IS important. >> > >> > > ... then why are the ancient texts written a certain way? >> > >> > Probably because the original writers BELIEVED that the order was >> > important. >> > >> > We know that TCM had a significant basis in Shamanism/magic >> > (numerology, Yi-Intention, etc). If one believes (rightly or >> wrongly) that >> > something is necessary, one does it that way. >> > >> > > Why are Li Shi Zhen's protocols a certain way only? Why are the >> Ghost >> > > points used in a specific protocol, 1st trinity, 2nd trinity > etc? >> > >> > See above. If one believes that one can detetch Ghost- / Demonic- >> > possession / attachment, it is also necessary to believe in the > way >> one can / >> > must use to do that. >> > >> > > You think that a medicine that describes 20+ needling > techniques, >> which >> > > places an onus on practioner intent, would ascribe anything, >> > > specifically needling order to whimsy or to what is closest to > the >> > > acupuncturist's body as they are working? David Appleton L.Ac >> > >> > Today, many AP practitioners use no needles; indeed some claim > that >> laser >> > or guasha is even more powerful than needling. >> > >> > IMO, there is no one school or method of AP; it is highly > flexible. >> IMO, AP >> > given by a trained professional (especially one trained in >> Shamanism) works >> > on many levels - spirit, psyche and soma. No two acupuncturists >> that I have >> > observed (whether treating humans or animals) do it exactly the >> same way. >> > It is highly individual to each practitioner. All hold certain >> concepts in >> > common, but may disagree on other concepts. >> > >> > I am trying to get to the core importance of AP: Is it >> > (a) the POINTS used, >> > (b) the ORDER and METHODS USED at the same points, or >> > © the THOUGHT/Yi/Intention/confidence used when concentrating on >> > those points that is most important? >> > >> > Assuming that the points chosen are relevant to the patient's >> problems, my >> > gut says © is the most important factor. But I am open to being >> shown to >> > be wrong in that. >> > >> > Best regards, >> > >> > >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Subscribe to the new FREE online journal for TCM at Chinese > Medicine Times >> http://www.chinesemedicinetimes.com >> >> Download the all new TCM Forum Toolbar, click, >> http://toolbar.thebizplace.com/LandingPage.aspx/CT145145 >> >> >> and > adjust >> accordingly. >> >> Messages are the property of the author. Any duplication outside > the group >> requires prior permission from the author. >> >> Please consider the environment and only print this message if > absolutely >> necessary. >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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