Guest guest Posted August 21, 2008 Report Share Posted August 21, 2008 Hi Lynn, To me you've expressed the most poignant and salient thoughts below in terms of history and philosophical ethics. My great grandmother in Eastern Europe was the village herbalist and midwife with my mother in her service. She would treat individuals and families in the sort of preventative care that might also be seen as the mandate of the CM practitioner. Treating lifestyle and teaching cultivation practices are more truly forms of healthcare insurance than most of what an HMO has to offer. Many people in my area including myself put money into the CM practitioner's or tai ji instructor's pockets instead of (or in addition to) paying healthcare insurance premiums. Taoist temple (like Nam Singh's or Liu Ming's) classes on taoist nutrition, many tai ji and qi gong classes and many CM herbal formula prescriptions address quality-of-life/fitness/longevity and not just illness or pathology. In a sense the traditional sort of practitioner should indeed be presenting healthcare insurance in the form of their own medical paradigm. Sort of ironic where we are today, no? I agree with you that this is a fascinating area where a CM practitioner must creatively develop their own paradigm of healthcare delivery. Respectfully and gratefully, Emmanuel Segmen ----------------------- J. Lynn Detamore, MS, L.Ac.wrote: Janis, I replied to this thread earlier, and I forgot to address this. It is very true that selling packages, basically but legally, is selling insurance, and healthcare providers cannot sell insurance, only insurance companies. By the way, I am a Licensed Life and Health Insurance Agent. I'm not contracted with a company, but I am required to do the same amount of education as if I was. Hope this is helpful, I've found this a fascinating discussion. I'm glad it's happening. Lynn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 24, 2008 Report Share Posted August 24, 2008 Hello Emmanuel, I do appreciate your comments. Your great grandmother sounds amazing. Her story certainly epitomizes the concept of a Barefoot Doctor. What a neat heritage to have. Indeed, sometimes it is hard to convince patients that for the future, they will be better served by some ongoing program of maintenance and prevention. It came up on another list recently that many folks want a different kind of fix-it when they come to us. I will certainly not denigrate seeking less toxic, more human-friendly fix-its than some available in conventional medicine. But short-term fix-its of any kind have limitations. When patients stay long enough for them to appreciate value in improving diet and other lifestyle factors -- in the US, obesity and smoking are the leading causes of preventable illness! -- then we may share our deepest CM treasures. Lynn Pain is Normal - Be Weird! J. Lynn Detamore, MS, L.Ac. Licensed Acupuncturist PO Box 14, Sheridan, OR 97378 503.474.8876 lynndetamore ~ Doing Better Than I Deserve ~ Emmanuel Segmen <mrsegmen Chinese Medicine Wednesday, August 20, 2008 4:22:39 PM true preventative care is healthcare insurance Hi Lynn, To me you've expressed the most poignant and salient thoughts below in terms of history and philosophical ethics. My great grandmother in Eastern Europe was the village herbalist and midwife with my mother in her service. She would treat individuals and families in the sort of preventative care that might also be seen as the mandate of the CM practitioner. Treating lifestyle and teaching cultivation practices are more truly forms of healthcare insurance than most of what an HMO has to offer. Many people in my area including myself put money into the CM practitioner' s or tai ji instructor's pockets instead of (or in addition to) paying healthcare insurance premiums. Taoist temple (like Nam Singh's or Liu Ming's) classes on taoist nutrition, many tai ji and qi gong classes and many CM herbal formula prescriptions address quality-of-life/ fitness/longevit y and not just illness or pathology. In a sense the traditional sort of practitioner should indeed be presenting healthcare insurance in the form of their own medical paradigm. Sort of ironic where we are today, no? I agree with you that this is a fascinating area where a CM practitioner must creatively develop their own paradigm of healthcare delivery. Respectfully and gratefully, Emmanuel Segmen ------------ --------- -- J. Lynn Detamore, MS, L.Ac.wrote: Janis, I replied to this thread earlier, and I forgot to address this. It is very true that selling packages, basically but legally, is selling insurance, and healthcare providers cannot sell insurance, only insurance companies. By the way, I am a Licensed Life and Health Insurance Agent. I'm not contracted with a company, but I am required to do the same amount of education as if I was. Hope this is helpful, I've found this a fascinating discussion. I'm glad it's happening. Lynn Recent Activity * 4 New MembersVisit Your Group Health Healthy Aging Improve your quality of life. Meditation and Lovingkindness A Group to share and learn. Moderator Central Join and receive produce updates. .. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 24, 2008 Report Share Posted August 24, 2008 But what problems are the US members trying to self mediciate with that obesity and smoking are the two reason for disease?Sincerely,Patricia Jordan DVM,CVA,CTCVM & Herbology : lynndetamore: Sun, 24 Aug 2008 01:04:34 -0700Re: TCM - true preventative care is healthcare insurance Hello Emmanuel,I do appreciate your comments. Your great grandmother sounds amazing. Her story certainly epitomizes the concept of a Barefoot Doctor. What a neat heritage to have.Indeed, sometimes it is hard to convince patients that for the future, they will be better served by some ongoing program of maintenance and prevention. It came up on another list recently that many folks want a different kind of fix-it when they come to us. I will certainly not denigrate seeking less toxic, more human-friendly fix-its than some available in conventional medicine. But short-term fix-its of any kind have limitations. When patients stay long enough for them to appreciate value in improving diet and other lifestyle factors -- in the US, obesity and smoking are the leading causes of preventable illness! -- then we may share our deepest CM treasures.Lynn Pain is Normal - Be Weird! J. Lynn Detamore, MS, L.Ac. Licensed Acupuncturist PO Box 14, Sheridan, OR 97378 503.474.8876 lynndetamore~ Doing Better Than I Deserve ~ Emmanuel Segmen <mrsegmen: Wednesday, August 20, 2008 4:22:39 PMtrue preventative care is healthcare insuranceHi Lynn,To me you've expressed the most poignant and salient thoughts below in terms of history and philosophical ethics. My great grandmother in Eastern Europe was the village herbalist and midwife with my mother in her service. She would treat individuals and families in the sort of preventative care that might also be seen as the mandate of the CM practitioner. Treating lifestyle and teaching cultivation practices are more truly forms of healthcare insurance than most of what an HMO has to offer.Many people in my area including myself put money into the CM practitioner' s or tai ji instructor's pockets instead of (or in addition to) paying healthcare insurance premiums. Taoist temple (like Nam Singh's or Liu Ming's) classes on taoist nutrition, many tai ji and qi gong classes and many CM herbal formula prescriptions address quality-of-life/ fitness/longevit y and not just illness or pathology. In a sense the traditional sort of practitioner should indeed be presenting healthcare insurance in the form of their own medical paradigm. Sort of ironic where we are today, no? I agree with you that this is a fascinating area where a CM practitioner must creatively develop their own paradigm of healthcare delivery. Respectfully and gratefully,Emmanuel Segmen------------ --------- --J. Lynn Detamore, MS, L.Ac.wrote:Janis, I replied to this thread earlier, and I forgot to address this. It isvery true that selling packages, basically but legally, is selling insurance,and healthcare providers cannot sell insurance, only insurance companies.By the way, I am a Licensed Life and Health Insurance Agent. I'm not contracted with a company, but I am required to do the same amount of education as if I was.Hope this is helpful, I've found this a fascinating discussion. I'm glad it'shappening.LynnRecent Activity* 4New MembersVisit Your Group HealthHealthy AgingImprove yourquality of life.Meditation andLovingkindnessA Groupto share and learn.Moderator CentralJoin and receiveproduce updates.. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] _______________ Be the filmmaker you always wanted to be—learn how to burn a DVD with Windows®. http://clk.atdmt.com/MRT/go/108588797/direct/01/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 24, 2008 Report Share Posted August 24, 2008 We must teach our patients the difference between symptom resolution and pattern resolution. Douglas Knapp Doctoral Fellow, L.Ac. Full Moon Acupuncture 1600 York Avenue New York, NY 10028 212-734-1459 J. Lynn Detamore <lynndetamore Chinese Medicine Sunday, August 24, 2008 4:04:34 AM Re: true preventative care is healthcare insurance Hello Emmanuel, I do appreciate your comments. Your great grandmother sounds amazing. Her story certainly epitomizes the concept of a Barefoot Doctor. What a neat heritage to have. Indeed, sometimes it is hard to convince patients that for the future, they will be better served by some ongoing program of maintenance and prevention. It came up on another list recently that many folks want a different kind of fix-it when they come to us. I will certainly not denigrate seeking less toxic, more human-friendly fix-its than some available in conventional medicine. But short-term fix-its of any kind have limitations. When patients stay long enough for them to appreciate value in improving diet and other lifestyle factors -- in the US, obesity and smoking are the leading causes of preventable illness! -- then we may share our deepest CM treasures. Lynn Pain is Normal - Be Weird! J. Lynn Detamore, MS, L.Ac. Licensed Acupuncturist PO Box 14, Sheridan, OR 97378 503.474.8876 lynndetamore@ ~ Doing Better Than I Deserve ~ Emmanuel Segmen <mrsegmen (AT) comcast (DOT) net> Wednesday, August 20, 2008 4:22:39 PM true preventative care is healthcare insurance Hi Lynn, To me you've expressed the most poignant and salient thoughts below in terms of history and philosophical ethics. My great grandmother in Eastern Europe was the village herbalist and midwife with my mother in her service. She would treat individuals and families in the sort of preventative care that might also be seen as the mandate of the CM practitioner. Treating lifestyle and teaching cultivation practices are more truly forms of healthcare insurance than most of what an HMO has to offer. Many people in my area including myself put money into the CM practitioner' s or tai ji instructor's pockets instead of (or in addition to) paying healthcare insurance premiums. Taoist temple (like Nam Singh's or Liu Ming's) classes on taoist nutrition, many tai ji and qi gong classes and many CM herbal formula prescriptions address quality-of-life/ fitness/longevit y and not just illness or pathology. In a sense the traditional sort of practitioner should indeed be presenting healthcare insurance in the form of their own medical paradigm. Sort of ironic where we are today, no? I agree with you that this is a fascinating area where a CM practitioner must creatively develop their own paradigm of healthcare delivery. Respectfully and gratefully, Emmanuel Segmen ------------ --------- -- J. Lynn Detamore, MS, L.Ac.wrote: Janis, I replied to this thread earlier, and I forgot to address this. It is very true that selling packages, basically but legally, is selling insurance, and healthcare providers cannot sell insurance, only insurance companies. By the way, I am a Licensed Life and Health Insurance Agent. I'm not contracted with a company, but I am required to do the same amount of education as if I was. Hope this is helpful, I've found this a fascinating discussion. I'm glad it's happening. Lynn Recent Activity * 4 New MembersVisit Your Group Health Healthy Aging Improve your quality of life. Meditation and Lovingkindness A Group to share and learn. Moderator Central Join and receive produce updates. .. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 25, 2008 Report Share Posted August 25, 2008 Doug, So well put and suggests the response to Patricia's well taken notation. I teach undergraduate human anatomy and physiology to pre-healthcare track students. I've had many TCM students come through my courses. The heavy lifting is at the outset. It's getting the students to clearly observe the human as a living system with a profound internal integrity of balances and synchronicities, and not an equilibrium system. In a living homeostatic system one adds things carefully and synchronously to support the steady state balance and to maintain fluid communication throughout the system. I've coined certain expressions for the classroom such as, " First, do nothing exogenous. " Rest. Then adjust the basics of lifestyle: diet, sleep, exercise. Then add practices: like tai ji or just a walk in the park. Only after that if balance is not achieved, try exogenous means: add medicine. WM took a strange turn in the early 1900s and became an equilibrium science based on physical chemistry. I quote one of my biochemistry professors who on the first day of class in medical biochemistry said, " Equilibrium is death. Homeostasis is life. " It was one of the most important points he made in the course. Patricia, I can't say how it is to communicate with patients and students where you are. But in the U.S., I have to break my students' habit of looking for health (or recreation or inspiration) in a bottle, i.e. by exogenous means. I do that by having them see clearly the integrity of living systems. This is by far the hardest part of my job. I sense that it might be one of the hardest parts of your job, too. Patient education as a part of home care and patient management is challenging. Teaching personal cultivation or lifestyle practices to make endogenous adjustments rather than responding to endogenous fixes, " Have you got an herb that treats ..(fill in the blank)..? " Your question is well taken. Respectfully, Emmanuel Segmen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 25, 2008 Report Share Posted August 25, 2008 Please pardon my dyslexic typo. I meant to say: Teaching personal cultivation or lifestyle practices to make endogenous adjustments rather than responding to exogenous fixes, " Have you got an herb that treats ..(fill in the blank)..? " Gratefully, Emmanuel Segmen - Emmanuel Segmen Chinese Medicine Sunday, August 24, 2008 9:25 PM Re: true preventative care is healthcare insurance Doug, So well put and suggests the response to Patricia's well taken notation. I teach undergraduate human anatomy and physiology to pre-healthcare track students. I've had many TCM students come through my courses. The heavy lifting is at the outset. It's getting the students to clearly observe the human as a living system with a profound internal integrity of balances and synchronicities, and not an equilibrium system. In a living homeostatic system one adds things carefully and synchronously to support the steady state balance and to maintain fluid communication throughout the system. I've coined certain expressions for the classroom such as, " First, do nothing exogenous. " Rest. Then adjust the basics of lifestyle: diet, sleep, exercise. Then add practices: like tai ji or just a walk in the park. Only after that if balance is not achieved, try exogenous means: add medicine. WM took a strange turn in the early 1900s and became an equilibrium science based on physical chemistry. I quote one of my biochemistry professors who on the first day of class in medical biochemistry said, " Equilibrium is death. Homeostasis is life. " It was one of the most important points he made in the course. Patricia, I can't say how it is to communicate with patients and students where you are. But in the U.S., I have to break my students' habit of looking for health (or recreation or inspiration) in a bottle, i.e. by exogenous means. I do that by having them see clearly the integrity of living systems. This is by far the hardest part of my job. I sense that it might be one of the hardest parts of your job, too. Patient education as a part of home care and patient management is challenging. Teaching personal cultivation or lifestyle practices to make endogenous adjustments rather than responding to endogenous fixes, " Have you got an herb that treats ..(fill in the blank)..? " Your question is well taken. Respectfully, Emmanuel Segmen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 26, 2008 Report Share Posted August 26, 2008 Pat, Oh, it's not just us statesiders that are trying to self-medicate. All first-world countries are finding themselves in the same tragic health bind. I believe we spend so much energy self-medicating the stresses of everyday life because -- this is less work than seeing ourselves as we really are, being truthful with ourselves about changes we need to make to move forward, to be authentic in the world we live. Most people really, really don't want to know the truth or live by it. Lynn Pain is Normal - Be Weird! J. Lynn Detamore, MS, L.Ac. Licensed Acupuncturist PO Box 14, Sheridan, OR 97378 503.474.8876 lynndetamore ~ Doing Better Than I Deserve ~ Patricia Jordan <coastalcatclinic Chinese Traditional Medicine Sunday, August 24, 2008 7:51:09 AM RE: true preventative care is healthcare insurance But what problems are the US members trying to self mediciate with that obesity and smoking are the two reason for disease? Sincerely, Patricia Jordan DVM,CVA,CTCVM & Herbology Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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