Acupuncture Today
  • Your Practice
  • Your Patients
  • Your Profession
  • The Podcast
  • Webinars
    • Upcoming Webinars
    • Previous Webinars
    • Register for Invites
  • The Publication
    • Current Issue
    • Issue Archives
    • Digital Editions
    • Columns
    • Subscribe to Print
    • Industry News
    • Submit an Article
  • SUBSCRIBE HERE


July 2026 Podcast Archives


Research Literacy: A Tool for Clinical Communication

Protecting Jing in Modern Women (Pt. 2)

Texts Unearthed from Ancient Han Tombs Reveal the Anatomical Origins of Meridians

Exposing a Culprit of Impaired Knee Extension After ACL Reconstruction

TCM’s Role in Palliative Care

Acupuncture for Vulvodynia: Rigorous Evidence

Illuminating Health: The Therapeutic Power of LED and Red Light Therapy

Avoiding Sexual Misconduct Allegations

What’s Your Kung Fu?

Saturn and the Water Element

Help Validate Timed Acupressure for Jet Lag

« Previous Month

No competitors. No substitutes. No equal.
There's only one media brand serving the acupuncture profession — and it's Acupuncture Today. With 25+ years of owning the conversation, we bring 24,000+ practitioners and students the news, research, clinical insight, and product information they rely on — in print, online, and everywhere in between. If you want to reach this market, there's only one way in. And you're looking at it.

ADVERTISEMENT


ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Trending
News / Profession
Classification and Determination of TCM Constitution: China’s New National Standard
Classification and Determination of TCM Constitution

On April 1, 2026, China implemented a landmark national standard: Classification and Determination of TCM Constitution. Although designated as a recommended rather than mandatory standard, it represents a major step in modernizing traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) by converting traditional constitution theory into a clear, measurable and clinically practical framework. By clarifying the relationship between constitution, disease, and pattern differentiation, the standard strengthens professional credibility, supports research, and enhances patient-centered treatment.

Ann Y Wang, CMD (China), LAc
News / Profession
Profession at a Crossroads: What Must Change
Profession at a Crossroads: What Must Change

The field of acupuncture in the U.S. continues to grow in visibility, patient demand and clinical effectiveness. Yet behind the curtain, many acupuncturists are quietly struggling to keep their doors open. While the profession is rooted in centuries of healing tradition, modern economic pressures – particularly those driven by insurance limitations, low reimbursement rates and job-market saturation – are making it increasingly difficult for licensed acupuncturists to thrive.

Shabnam Pourhassani, LAc, QME, DACM
Acupuncture & Acupressure
It’s Time to Stop Prescribing Points
It's Time to Stop Prescribing Points

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.

Bruce W. Park, DACM
ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT
Acupuncture Today
follow us
Contact Us
Editorial
Media Guide
Issue Archives
Subscription Services
Update Mailing Address
Advertising
News Update
To Your Health Membership
Other MPA Media Sites:
DynamicChiropractic.com
ToYourHealth.com
©2026 Acupuncture Today™ All Rights Reserved
Terms and Conditions Privacy Policy Accessibility Statement Do Not Sell My Data About Us Contact Us AdChoices