Traditional
Chinese medicine takes root in Palestine
RAMALLAH, March 5 (Xinhua) -- Suheir
Subhi finally gets some relief from her chronic shoulder and neck pain, thanks
to help originated thousands of miles away and dates back many centuries.
Subhi, a 40-year-old professional
who commutes daily to and from work at an advertising company, is one of the
patients receiving care from Ousama Habiballah, the first and only Palestinian
in the West Bank city of Ramallah to have had formal training in traditional
Chinese medicine.
For almost two months, Dr.
Habiballah has been providing Subhi with weekly 40-minute sessions of
acupuncture, cupping and therapeutic massage at his one-room practice within an
alternative medicine clinic inside an office tower in downtown Ramallah.
The combination treatment helps
stimulate blood circulation and the flow of "qi," or vital energy,
and restore balance in the body, thereby reducing pain and fatigue, Habiballah
said, applying heated cupping and acupuncture on Subhi.
"I feel more relaxed and feel
the tension greatly reduced. The muscles are more relaxed; the shoulders are
more relaxed; the neck is more flexible," Subhi said after the procedures.
"There's a big difference."
Habiballah, in his early 30s,
graduated from the University of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Beijing in
2011. He takes an average of six patients a day at his practice, which has been
in business for almost three years and opens from about 10 a.m. through 7:30
p.m., most of the week.
Some days, he would travel to East
Jerusalem to work at a clinic dedicated to traditional medicine.
Leafing through a slightly dog-eared
Chinese-language booklet containing a gist of Compendium of Materia Medica, a
classic in traditional Chinese medicine, at a desk inside his tiny practice,
Habiballah said his dream is to open a comprehensive center in Palestine for
Chinese philosophy and medicine.
"I think that this center can
promote the Chinese methods of therapy to heal problems," Habiballah said.
"It can be a center for healthy people as well, offering courses in
martial arts, de-stressing techniques and even herbal remedies."
His practice currently does not
prescribe herbal medicine for its patients.
Habiballah blames the tense
political situation and poor economic conditions for the high incidence of
stress and hypertension among Palestinians.
He also points to some of the poor
lifestyles in modern societies due to the increase in technology use worldwide.
"People are spending more time
on computers and smartphones working through the life's stresses," he
said, adding that the lack of exercise among some Palestinians could also
aggravate their health problems.
And Habiballah's services could help
relieve many of these problems.
Acupuncture, he said, relieves pain
and fatigue for the patient to regain balance in the body. Inserting small
needles into as many as 350 acupuncture points in the body can stimulate the
nerves, muscles and connective tissue.
Unfamiliar to many locals,
acupuncture can also be used for cosmetic purposes such as skin lifting, and
for weight loss, which makes the summer the busiest season for Habiballah.
Although the term Chinese medicine
could be a new concept to some Palestinians, the older Palestinian generations
have been using some similar methods at home for decades.
Arab culture has always believed and
practiced healing with natural remedies similar to Chinese medicine. Some
practices, such as cupping and the use of herbs, have been passed on from one
generation to another in the Arab world.
"The cupping method is used in
both Chinese and Arab medicine," Habiballah said. "The doctor places
cups in specific areas on the body, and assesses the patient's condition by
observing the skin color of the cupped area to judge blood circulation and the
flow of "qi," or vital energy, in the body."
"The color can tell us more
about the muscles," he said, referring to subcutaneous bleeding resulted
from the procedure.
While the younger generation might
be skeptical about these methods, some local villagers still try to avoid the
intrusive methods of Western medicine and rely on herbs to treat health
problems.
Many have embraced Chinese medicine,
Habiballah said, since it does not have any side effects and that it takes the
entire human body into account.
"We see the body as a whole
unit, and when there is disease, we look to cure the main problem, rather than
symptom-relieving," he said.
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