A student stands over a patient, needle poised. They have a “perfect” prescription: a textbook combination of points harvested from a lecture slide on chronic lower back pain. But as the needle meets the skin, the student hesitates - the symptom of a quiet habit that has taken hold of our profession. We routinely say we “prescribe” points. It sounds efficient. It echoes the authority of biomedical culture and fits neatly into the insurance field. But vocabulary is never neutral; repeated long enough, it dictates behavior.
I Chun Peng, Doctor of Chinese Medicine
I Chun Peng has more than three decades of clinical experience. He is a TCM cancer specialist in Taiwan. His book Yi Yao- The Key to Medicine - Unveiling the Secrets of Chinese Medicine (in Chinese only), is now in its 11th printing, bringing rich clinical experience to wake up modern medicine and contemporary practitioners. His lectures can be found on Youtube or www.elotus.org. Visit Dr. Peng’s blogs at http://ichunpeng2013.wordpress.com/ and http://ichunpeng2013.blog.com/.