To understand what Western Acupuncture is about, one needs to know a little about the more traditional therapies of Acupuncture that still exists today.
Over three thousand years ago, the Chinese were apparently treating many illnesses by first taking the patients radial pulse, as done by a GP or nurse. The difference being that, the Chinese claimed to be able to feel six pulses on each wrist, each associated with one of the twelve organs of the body.
They were feeling for the energy factor, the strength or weakness of the pulse for the particular organ, which would perhaps indicate excess or deficient energy, causing a malfunction of an organ and thus relate directly to the external symptomology.
By using certain needle techniques they reported that it was possible to transfer an excess of energy from one organ to another which may have become deficient. This would create a ‘balanced’ energy, which would exhibit itself in the disappearance of outward symptoms, which had caused the original problem.
Western Medicine was some what critical of this philosophy and it had some cause to be so. It had been shown that varying diagnoses had been applied to the same patients having a problem. This inconsistency was unacceptable and could not be incorporated into Western diagnostic techniques.
Today, we have to acknowledge that the methods used in Western diagnosis, i.e. blood tests, X-rays, MRIs etc, are the only way we can be reasonably sure our treatment is appropriate and not attributed to guess-work, which the ancient pulse diagnosis would be seen as in this modern age.
Western Medical Acupuncture does work. Doctors, nurses and other medical practitioners, who have been through our training programme, have proved this over many years. This method is based upon a formulae researched for each of a variety of illnesses and applied only on the basis of a western medical diagnosis having first been made by a doctor. The explanation for how Acupuncture works, is based upon sound physiological mechanisms widely accepted by Science as well as medicine, and a feature of the course.
