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Herbal Medicine
Oriental Medicine theory asserts that processes of the human body are interrelated and in constant interaction with the environment. Signs of disharmony help the TCM practitioner to understand, treat and prevent illness and disease. Its theory is based on a number of philosophical frameworks
including the theory of Yin-yang, the Five Elements, the human body Meridian system, Zang Fu organ theory , and others. Diagnosis and treatment are conducted with reference to these
concepts. TCM does not operate within a scientific paradigm but some
practitioners make efforts to bring practices into a biomedical and evidence-based medicine framework.
Since 1200 BC, Chinese academics of various schools have focused on the
observable natural laws of the universe and their implications for the practical
characterisation of humanity's place in the universe. In the I Ching and other Chinese literary and philosophical
classics, they have described some general principles and their applications to
health and healing:
- There are observable principles of constant change by which the Universe is
maintained. Humans are part of the universe and cannot be separated from the
universal process of change.
- As a result of these apparently inescapable primordial principles, the
Universe (and every process therein) tends to eventually balance itself.
Optimum health results from living harmoniously, allowing the spontaneous process of change to bring one
closer to balance. If there is no change (stagnation), or too much change (catastrophism), balance is lost and illnesses
can result.
- Everything is ultimately interconnected. Always use a holistic ("systemic" or "system-wide") approach when addressing imbalances.
One modern interpretation of Traditional Chinese medicine's "macro" or
holistic view of disease is that well-balanced human bodies can resist most
everyday bacteria and viruses, which are ubiquitous and quickly changing.
Infection, while having a proximal cause of a microorganism, would have an
underlying cause of an imbalance of some kind. TCM would target the theorized
imbalance, not the infectious organism. A
TCM practitioner might give very different herbal prescriptions to
patients affected by the same type of affliction, because the different
symptoms reported by the patients would indicate a different type of imbalance.
There is a popular saying in China: Chinese medicine treats humans while
western medicine treats diseases.
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