The journal of the American Academy of Medical Acupuncture with acupuncture research articles, reviews, abstracts and case studies.
     
     
     
     

Medical Acupuncture
A Journal For Physicians By Physicians

Volume 13 / Number 3
"Aurum Nostrum Non Est Aurum Vulgi"

     
           
     

Editorial
Acupuncture: Spirits And Healers

I always believed that a healer was a fictional character; perhaps someone who existed in a fairy tale. I also assumed that if healers existed, they would be found shrouded in mystery in India or Tibet. I doubted very much whether healers existed in the United States because our most celebrated people rarely achieved a miraculous recovery when they were very ill. I also reasoned that if they had the means, and many of them did, they would seek out a healer for a miracle cure. But, that rarely happened and they died anyway.

Partly influencing my belief that healers could not be real was my Western medical school education. The human body was just one large chemical factory with trillions of chemical reactions that were taking place in tempo to the laws of thermodynamics, and keeping us alive. I contemplated that a medical cure for our most dreadful diseases was a process that required restoring the biochemical machinery that went astray.

I was not taught about the spirit in medical school. I only learned of its existence from my parents and religion. "Spirit" seemed something very vague, and a time I heard it mentioned was when my grandparents died; there was talk of a spirit that was still present, but I never saw or heard anything. During the majority of my life, I never encountered a spirit or a healer. Nor did it seem to make much difference.

When I embraced acupuncture into my profession, the concept of spirit and healer surfaced again. I thought it strange that physicians integrating acupuncture into their practices would even consider these notions. After all, I had practiced medicine for over two decades and never needed to deal with "spirit" or have contact with a "healer." My patients either got better, developed chronic conditions, or died.

As I practiced acupuncture, I felt a need to know more about the spirit. Intuitively, I began to believe that the concept of the patient's spirit must be important because, not only did my colleagues discuss it, but there were even acupuncture points that somehow influenced the "spirit." I began to notice that this abstract concept of spirit played a vital role in the successful outcome of my patients' treatment. I realized that energy nourishing the spirit had to overcome obstacles; otherwise, the spirit would dim. I observed that if acupuncture could somehow open these obstacles, then the spirit would thrive.

Most importantly, the spirit is the driving force within the body. This is illustrated by a quote from Zhang Jie Bin, the author of Differentiated Canon: "Form is the body of the spirit and is used by the spirit. Without spirit, the form cannot move, and without form, the spirit cannot exist."1(392)

I have now learned that the heart stores the spirit. I believe that there are two "spirit" forces, if you will, at work in the healing process: the spirit within a person that makes a person who and what he or she is and gives a person the will to live and survive, and the God-spirit within a person, the belief in something or someone beyond oneself.

I find it fascinating that our ancestors knew of acupuncture points that dealt with a spirit pathway, spirit court, spirit hall, spirit ruins, spirit storehouse, spirit support, spirit gate, spirit tower, spirit path, spirit court, etc.1(425-426) I am unsure what these spiritual sanctuaries do or how to incorporate them into my practice, but the fact that they exist is in itself very exciting.
What about healers? Is there a relationship with the spirit? Are we as physicians actually promoting healing, and are we really the intermediary of the healing event? I do believe there is a strong relationship between healing and spirit. Both are "alive," and both are driving forces that occupy biochemical events all the way down into quantum mechanics. It surfaces in a smile, or in the sparkle of an eye, or a tone of voice that says "all is well." It is reflective in the intense will to live that many of our patients show.

I have found that the healer does indeed exist, and it is nearby and in all of us who practice the healing arts. We are the intermediary that causes healing to take place. We bring about the process. Spirit and healer are the centers of the circle; both defy Newtonian physics, and both beckon to us when our intent is true and deliberate. Healing and spirit are like the Yin and Yang. One cannot exist without the other.

STRICTA (Standards for Reporting Interventions in Controlled Trials of Acupuncture)
Standards for Reporting Interventions in Controlled Trials of Acupuncture (STRICTA) is being published not
only in this issue of Medical Acupuncture but also by the editors of Acupuncture in Medicine, Clinical Acupuncture, Oriental Medicine, Complementary Therapies In Medicine, and the Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine.
If you plan to publish clinical trials or report clinical cases, kindly adhere to STRICTA as closely as possible to enhance the quality of your reporting. The checklist in this document is extremely useful. It is important that we improve the quality of manuscripts, and STRICTA is a big step in the right direction. (The STRICTA article follows this editorial on page 9.)

ACUPUNCTURE NOMENCLATURE
This journal reflects the recommendation of the American Academy of Medical Acupuncture (AAMA) to use the current acupuncture nomenclature as found in the "Instructions for Authors" (page 12). Bryan Frank, MD, DABMA, immediate Past-President of the AAMA, has researched the issue and reports that it is the consensus of the AAMA Board that the nomenclature in Medical Acupuncture be consistent with the recommendations of the World Health Organization (WHO). Furthermore, I agree with Dr. Frank that it is important for us to realize that the Academy represents practitioners from diverse paradigms in acupuncture. It is therefore appropriate to accept the generally recognized standards of WHO regardless of our personal biases. These standards have been published by WHO as stated below:
Standard Acupuncture Nomenclature Part 1, Revised Edition, WHO, 1991.
Standard Acupuncture Nomenclature Part 2, Revised Edition, WHO, 1991.
(Note: The Principal Meridians are listed in Part 1, and the Extra Meridians in Part 2.)
Dr. Frank states that the only conflicts seen in the Principal Meridians are the need to change MH, Master of the Heart, to PC, Pericardium and TH, Triple Heater, to TE, Triple Energizer.

We are also inconsistent with the WHO standards in using the "Mo" phrases for the 8 Extra Meridians (not Curious Meridians).

It is accepted to call the GV and CV by their common names, Governor Vessel and Conception Vessel, respectively, or as Dumai and Renmai (not Du Mo and Ren Mo, and not as separate words).

The accepted terminology for the Extra Meridians is:

GV Dumai Governor Vessel
CV Renmai Conception Vessel
TV Chongmai Thoroughfare Vessel
BV Daimai Belt Vessel
YinHV Yinqiaomi Yin Heel Vessel
YangHV Yangqiaomai Yang Heel Vessel
YinLV Yinweimai Yin Link Vessel
YangLV Yangweimai Yang Link Vessel

Finally, Dr. Frank states that what our journal refers to as the "Ting" or "Well" point is usually referred to as Jing or Jing-Well point. This is admittedly confusing, since the 4th command point is also Jing (River). These are not published in the WHO Standard publications, and the Board recommends leaving the Ting point as it is for now. (Please refer to additional information on page 12, "Instructions for Authors.")

Once more, I express my deepest thanks to the Editorial Board, and the AAMA Board for their energetic support, to Roz Royal for continuing to keep the journal on track with her professionalism and dedication, despite the recent death of her mother for which we extend our deepest sympathies, and to Stacy Christiansen Krol for her continued and competent assistance.

Anchors aweigh! My assignment at the Naval Medical Center in San Diego ends in July. Because the acupuncture program was successful, the Air Force has transferred me to Malcom Grow USAF Medical Center, Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland, where I will spend 60% of my time as a full-time acupuncturist and the rest of my time
on the Surgeon General's Air Staff promoting acupuncture throughout the Air Force Medical Corps.
- Richard C. Niemtzow, MD, PhD, MPH

REFERENCE
1. Ellis A, Wiseman N, Boss K. Grasping the Wind. Brookline, MA: Paradigm Publications; 1989.

EDITOR INFORMATION
Colonel Richard C. Niemtzow, MD, is a Radiation Oncologist on active duty in the United States Air Force. He is currently assigned to the United States Naval Medical Center, San Diego, California, as their first physician-acupuncturist. Dr Niemtzow practices Medical Acupuncture full-time with oncology and general patients, and is also involved in research.
Richard C. Niemtzow, MD, PhD, MPH
1835 E Main St
El Cajon, CA 92021-5255
Phone: 619-447-6806 o Fax: 619-447-6881 o E-mail: N5EV@aol.com



 

     
     

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