What Happens When Western And Traditional Chinese
Medicine Merge
These
two treatment philosophies were previously seen as being diametrically opposed,
but some experts think the systems can complement each another
Western medicine and traditional
Chinese medicine (TCM) at first glance might seem like irreconcilable systems
of thought. TCM deals with the body as a whole—the idea is that
an individual's constitution, energy and mentality affect that system
and that plant and animal parts can balance the body in order to maintain
or restore health. Western medicine, on the other hand, relies on
empirically gathered data, and pharmaceuticals usually target the problem
symptom or source of disease directly.
Despite the differences between
these medical approaches, an increasing number of doctors and researchers are
trying to reconcile TCM and Western medicine, the Wall Street Journal reports. In the
case of TCM, that means scientifically analyzing components of treatments and
attempting to identify the standardized Western equivalent of a typical TCM
diagnosis and treatment path. Researchers at major universities in China are
involved, as are some at Leiden University in the Netherlands, Yale
University and other institutions.
So far, teams have found that
gastritis patients who a TCM practitioner would identify as having either
hot or cold symptoms do indeed have different assemblies of bacteria on
their tongue, the Wall Street Journal writes. Depending on whether they
are a hot or cold case, patients might benefit from slightly different
therapies, doctors think—an approach to Western medicine that borrows from the
individualized treatment regimes of TCM. Such hypotheses will require much more
research before they are put into action, however.
Still, many of the researchers
involved are optimistic that both TCM and Western medicine can only benefit
from an open exchange of knowledge and ideas. As one expert told the Wall
Street Journal, "In such a big-data era, a new way can be eventually
found to connect Eastern and Western medicine at the molecular and systematic
levels.”
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