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Medical Forum / General / Alternative / May 2008

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Acupuncture in the US Marine Corps: Ooh-rah!

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The One True Zhen Jue - 20 May 2008 20:02 GMT
Our armed forces deserve the best in all things, especially medical
care.  It is nice to see that the Marines are getting safe, practical,
and effective Acupuncture.  Let us rejoyce!

Navy doctor treats Marines in a pinch
Submitted by: 1st Marine Division
Story Identification #: 200461453725
Story by Cpl. Paula M. Fitzgerald

CAMP HURRICANE POINT, Iraq(June 11, 2004) -- Marines with 2nd
Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment look forward to getting the needle from
their battalion surgeon.

Chinese healers have been using acupuncture therapy to treat injuries
and diseases for more than 3,000 years. Navy Lt. Kenneth Y. Son, 2nd
Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment surgeon, is using that same wisdom
combined with modern "Western" medicine to treat the battalion's
battle-hardened warriors.

"I get a lot of Marines in here that don't believe in acupuncture,"
said Son, of Los Angeles. "The first time they try it they get hooked,
and then the word spreads like wildfire throughout the battalion."

So far, Son estimates he's treated almost 300 Marines and sailors for
a number of reasons including the three most common: back pains,
muscle strains and sprained ankles. About 20 percent of those who
visit Son were injured during improvised explosive device explosions.

Son, a 12-year medical veteran, began studying the art of acupuncture
in November.

After meeting a fellow Navy doctor who treated patients with the
"Eastern" therapy, Son enrolled in acupuncture classes at the
University of California. He completed half of the training prior to
coming to Iraq and is using what he has learned to get injured Marines
and sailors back into the fight quickly.

"Ancient Chinese believed humans were made of energetic points," he
said. "We're not just organs put together but rather many energy
patterns which control the medical problems we have."

Acupuncture was developed from the belief that if the body's incoming
and outgoing energies could be controlled, the body could recover from
injury and disease faster than through conventional methods.

"When Marines come in with muscle pains, I give them the choice to
take Motrin for the problem," explained 34-year-old Son. "Or I can
give them acupuncture. Some refuse to do acupuncture, but most want
it."

He said he prefers acupuncture to sending Marines away with a few pain
relievers because the therapy is more likely to have a long-term
effect.

One of Son's satisfied customers, 2nd Lt. Bronson D. Makeeff, knows
the benefits of the treatment.

"At (Officer Candidate School), a few Marines and I were doing
training," explained Makeeff, the battalion's adjutant. "During the
training, we fell about fifteen feet from a window. Ever since then,
I've had lower back pain."

Makeeff, of Carthage, Mo., made regular visits to a chiropractor to
correct his back problems, but nothing seemed to relieve the pain.

"It's funny," said Makeeff. "I had to come all the way to Iraq to get
my back taken care of."

After six acupuncture treatments, 26-year-old Makeeff no longer
suffers from lower back pain and is a firm believer in the therapy.

"At first, I was kind of hesitant," he added. "But now I definitely
believe this is much better and more effective than medicine."

Although acupuncture is more successful than medicine, Son said the
process takes time.
One treatment, depending on what part of the body is being worked on,
lasts between 10
and 20 minutes.

"I try to make the patient relax," said Son. "Then I can begin."

The doctor uses needles and a moxa combustion stick, which is made of
herbs from the moss family. The herbs burn slowly and produce ashes
that do not fall, making it suitable for acupuncture, but some people
mistake the moxa's scent for a less-than-suitable substance.

"When I first started doing acupuncture out here," Son explained,
"some people thought someone was smoking marijuana, but the two are
not the same. I have to assure people of that."

The needles are 4 centimeters in length and are as thick as a strand
of hair. They are inserted and twisted into trigger points until the
patient feels a dull aching pain in his muscle.

Then the patient is left to relax for 10 to 15 minutes. After
relaxing, Son heats the needles with the moxa.

"Muscles are made of protein, and the heat that goes from the moxa
through the needle causes the muscles to relax," explained Son. "After
two or three treatments, they're usually completely healed."

Son's successes are a thing of battalion legend and almost everyone -
from the lance corporal fresh from a firefight to the battalion
commander - wants a piece.

And so Son has begun soliciting assistance from the corpsmen under his
charge.

"It's such an intense method of treatment," said Navy Petty Officer
3rd Class Michael L. Dobec, of Wooster, Ohio. "It goes directly to the
source of the problem to heal patients."

Dobec has watched how quickly Marines respond to Son's treatments and
developed an interest to learn what he could from the doctor.

"It's pretty easy to learn when you have someone who knows what
they're doing show you and tell you what to do," the 27-year-old said.

Both Son and Dobec have been pleased by how effective acupuncture has
been.

Where a Marine with a sprained ankle would have taken a few weeks to
heal through traditional treatment, that same Marine can be up and
walking within a few days after acupuncture.

"It's just incredible," Son said. "That's the only reason I do
acupuncture - to see the smiles on the Marines and sailors faces when
they get better. It's a great feeling."

http://www.usmc.mil/marinelink/image...uncture1lr.jpg

Navy Lt. Kenneth Y. Son, 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment surgeon,
searches for trigger points during battalion adjutant 2nd Lt. Bronson
D. Makeeff's acupuncture therapy. Son believes acupuncture provides
better and more permanent relief to strains, sprains and other
injuries than medicines.
(USMC photo by Cpl. Paula M. Fitzgerald) Photo by: Cpl. Paula M.
Fitzgerald

http://www.usmc.mil/marinelink/mcn20...A?opendocument
Richard Schultz - 20 May 2008 20:58 GMT
: Our armed forces deserve the best in all things, especially medical
: care.  It is nice to see that the Marines are getting safe, practical,
: and effective Acupuncture.  Let us rejoyce!

Do you think that the acupuncture they are getting is of the same quality
as the care described in (inter alia) the following article:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Reed_Army_Medical_Center_neglect_scandal

-----
Richard Schultz                              schultr@mail.biu.ac.il
Department of Chemistry, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel
Opinions expressed are mine alone, and not those of Bar-Ilan University
-----
"Logic is a wreath of pretty flowers which smell bad."
The One True Zhen Jue - 20 May 2008 23:23 GMT
> In article <4a8314f2-4f75-41b8-b964-f10f77ca8...@g16g2000pri.googlegroups.com>, The One True Zhen Jue <Andrew_King...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> Do you think that the acupuncture they are getting is of the same quality
> as the care described in (inter alia) the following article:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Reed_Army_Medical_Center_neglect_...

Heavens, no!  There are only accolades, not complaints, about the
acupuncture.  It succeeds where other methods do not and with
exceptional safety and cost-effectiveness.  Of course, you knew that
already.  It was in the article about the airforce's 40 MD's who
perform acupuncture.

> -----
> Richard Schultz                              schu...@mail.biu.ac.il
> Department of Chemistry, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel
> Opinions expressed are mine alone, and not those of Bar-Ilan University
> -----
> "Logic is a wreath of pretty flowers which smell bad."
Citizen Jimserac - 22 May 2008 18:47 GMT
> > In article <4a8314f2-4f75-41b8-b964-f10f77ca8...@g16g2000pri.googlegroups.com>, The One True Zhen Jue <Andrew_King...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> > Do you think that theacupuncturethey are getting is of the same quality
> > as the care described in (inter alia) the following article:...
worthless link  removed.

POSTING IGNORED.

Citizen Jimserac
We DO have Clue About YOU!
Jan Drew - 21 May 2008 05:00 GMT
> In article
> <4a8314f2-4f75-41b8-b964-f10f77ca8622@g16g2000pri.googlegroups.com>, The
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
> as the care described in (inter alia) the following article:
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Reed_Army_Medical_Center_neglect_scandal

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> -----
> Richard Schultz                              schultr@mail.biu.ac.il
> Department of Chemistry, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel
> Opinions expressed are mine alone, and not those of Bar-Ilan University
> -----
> "Logic is a wreath of pretty flowers which smell bad."
 
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