Guest guest Posted February 21, 2009 Report Share Posted February 21, 2009 This discussion about developing diagnostic skill versus opting to use technical diagnostic equipment is very important (and I say 'versus' here because I DO believe for most of us, this is a choice between two very different paths. I have a few comments I would like to put out there. First and foremost, I need to reiterate that I am not advocating some 'anthropological position' that everything old is to be 'preserved and protected' in our medicine. To the contrary, I believe wholeheartedly that does need an upgrade to this millenium on many fronts. But I do believe that offers a profoundly rich and deep opportunity for practitioners to cultivate diagnostic skill and that personal cultivation (which in turn raises practitioner cultivation) is all tied in with that process. Just for example, get your hands on the 800 page book Leon Hammer has published on his pulse diagnosis system after a lifetime dedicated to its mastery - its breathaking. The journey a junior practitioner goes on when pursuing such development is important. I practice Kiiko Matsumoto's palpatory system - when I first learned the system - it was overwhelming - and it typically took me 20-25 minutes to palpate a patient from head to toe and integrate all the information. Now, after 10 years of doing that, I can palpate a patient from head to toe in 3-5 minutes, integrate the information in 1 minute and proceed to treatment. That process of proceeding through various stages of confusion and complexity into full integration is critical to maturity and development. The same is likely to be true if one pursues mastery of pulse or tongue diagnosis. Consider mastering a musical instrument as an analogy. Its possible to just purchase a player piano complete with paper rolls for all ones favourite tunes, plug the thing in and let it play. Or its possible to spend 10-20 years mastering the piano so one can play all the tunes themselves. The difference between the two scenarios should be obvious. What do you think Vladimir Horowitz would answer if you were to ask him whether he felt there was an advantage to having a player piano play a Mozart Piano concerto versus having him play it? Daniel Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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