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Medical Forum / General / Alternative / March 2007

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Ancient medicine all the buzz in modern China

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Ilena Rose - 03 Mar 2007 19:08 GMT
Ancient medicine all the buzz in modern China

Ancient medicine all the buzz in modern China
Sun Jan 21, 11:25 PM ET

BEIJING (Reuters) - With doctors urging amputation to stop the
gangrene
spreading upwards from his toes, Liu Guorong was skeptical when a
friend
said bee venom might save his foot.

"I was doubting this place," the 58-year-old diabetes sufferer said in
a
raspy voice during a visit to the Xizhihe Traditional Medicine
Hospital on
the outskirts of Beijing.

"When I got here, I had no idea what I was doing and what the bee
sting
treatment was all about."

As Liu found out, it was painful.

Bees were placed on his foot and provoked to sting him in a bid to
rejuvenate the blackened, rotting flesh by flooding it with a rush of
protein-rich blood.

A folk remedy for treating arthritis, back pain and rheumatism for
3,000
years in China, practitioners say that such pinpointed stings can
repair
damaged cells, stave off bacteria and ease inflammation.

Doctors at Xizhihe hospital believe they can even cure liver ailments,
diabetes and cancers.

They admit, however, that they do not really know how it works.

"Our knowledge has increased over the years," said Xu Xiaowang,
Xizhihe
hospital director.

"But there are still large areas that are unknown to us all... There
are
too many unanswered questions," Xu said.

Western-trained doctors dismiss the treatment as unscientific and
dangerous.

"It's alternative medicine and has no basis in western medical
science...
I would doubt its efficacy," Professor Christopher Lam, a chemical
pathologist at the Chinese University in Hong Kong said.

"People allergic to bee stings can develop hypersensitivity reactions
like
a sudden drop in blood pressure, swelling of the airways, cold
sweats...
it may be life threatening," Lam said.

Hazy science notwithstanding, at 20 yuan (about $2.50) a sting, the
treatment offers a cheap alternative to mainstream medicine.

"Doctors at other hospitals were telling me that they needed to cut my
foot off," Liu said. "I'd spent loads of money."

Liu has been to Xizhihe several times to get stung and is now on a
course
of orally-taken bee venom medication. He now expects to keep his foot.

"The flesh is growing back ... I'm feeling better," Liu said.

DYING TRADITION

Bee venom is just one of an exhaustive catalog of ancient folk
remedies
involving bugs, herbs, animal parts and massage that make up
traditional
Chinese medicine (TCM).

Incorporating elements of mysticism and based on a philosophy
developed
several thousand years ago, TCM is regarded as an alternative medicine
in
the West, but in China it remains a central plank of modern health
care.

About 3,000 private clinics provided TCM treatments to more than 230
million people in 2005. Health officials say it generated 95 billion
yuan
that year -- more than a quarter of the medical industry's total
income --
and revenues have grown an average 20 percent a year over the past
decade.

The government, sensing an export-driven cash cow, plowed 740 million
yuan
into research and development last year in a bid to bolster TCM's
scientific credibility and standing in Western markets where
alternative
remedies are increasingly welcomed.

And yet, domestically, TCM is in free-fall.

Once the only player in the market, economic reforms have ushered in
foreign drugs and foreign-trained doctors, forcing a showdown between
modern Western practices and ancient Eastern pragmatism.

Between 2000-2004, TCM's share of prescription drug income declined by
nearly a quarter, state media reported.

Increasingly spurned by China's time-poor youth, TCM is also under
siege
from academics who deem it unscientific and of dubious medical
benefit.

Zhang Gongyao, a scientist at Central South University in Changsha,
capital of China's central Hunan province, created a media storm in
October after he posted an essay on his personal blog urging the
government to strike TCM from the official medical registry.

PAIN RELIEF

Western medicine, however, let alone basic health care, is a luxury
many
of the country's 1.3 billion people cannot afford.

Fees at state-run hospitals, robbed of funding after deregulation in
the
1990s, have soared in recent years, while individual spending on
health
care nearly doubled from 1978 to 2002, according to health ministry
statistics.

Beijing has pledged to spend more on basic health services, but
expensive
public health care ensures a steady stream of customers to small,
private
clinics like Xizhihe -- where relief may be as cheap as a few
beestings.

Lu Jiumei, a middle-aged woman with rheumatism, made the three-hour
journey to Xizhihe from her home-town in Hebei province to get bee
venom
therapy.

"I don't think this could be harmful to the body in terms of side
effects.
I have been treated a few times now," she said.

She grimaced as an angry bee deposited its salutary sting into her
leg.
But a few moments later, a smile broke out on her face.

"My pain is relieved a lot and it's going away," she said, patting a
freshly swollen mound on her thigh.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070122/hl_nm/china_tcm_dc

www.BreastImplantAwareness.org/QuackWatchWatch.htm
Skeptic - 03 Mar 2007 20:06 GMT
Ilena, darling dear, I noticed you've a lot of posts recently, yet have
continued to ignore this one.  Do you have a response or should I take your
persistent refusal to attempt an answer, no matter how feeble, as a sign
that you acknowledge that you're wrong [again]?

> Hello???
>
[quoted text clipped - 36 lines]
>>> couple of days.  It was, after all, in response to your post.  Do you
>>> have a reply? A well thought out, meaningful, reply?
Skeptic - 06 Mar 2007 01:30 GMT
Ilena??? you alive sweetie?

> Ilena, darling dear, I noticed you've a lot of posts recently, yet have
> continued to ignore this one.  Do you have a response or should I take
[quoted text clipped - 43 lines]
>>>> couple of days.  It was, after all, in response to your post.  Do you
>>>> have a reply? A well thought out, meaningful, reply?
 
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