PCOM Pagoda
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Saturday, April 4, 2009
5th Trimester Required Books
DIAGNOSIS & TREATMENT OF DISEASE 1
Clinical Handbook of Internal Medicine Volume 2 Spleen & Stomach by Maclean & Lyttleton
ACUPUNCTURE POINTS 4
The Acupuncturist's Clinical Handbook by Jeffrey Jacob
Navigating the Channels of Traditional Chinese Medicine by Yitian Ni
OTHER BOOKS
A Practical Dictionary of Chinese Medicine by Wiseman & Feng
The Foundations of Chinese Medicine by Giovanni Maciocia
Chinese Acupuncture and Moxibustion (CAM)
Human Anatomy & Physiology (7th Edition) by Marieb
Diagnosis in Chinese Medicine: A Comprehensive Guide by Giovanni Maciocia
Practical Diagnosis in Traditional Chinese Medicine by Tietao Deng
A Manual of Acupuncture (2nd Edition) by Peter Deadman
Principles of Anatomy and Physiology by Gerard J. Tortora
Chinese Herbal Medicine: Materia Medica, Third Edition
Chinese Medical Herbology & Pharmacology
Chinese Herbal Medicine: Formulas and Strategies
Atlas of Chinese Tongue Diagnosis
Atlas of Chinese Tongue Diagnosis, Volume 2
Traditional Chinese Medicine Cupping Therapy
A Clinical Guide to Chinese Herbs and Formulae
Acupuncture: A Comprehensive Text - Shanghai College
Fundamentals of Chinese Medicine by Wisemann & Ellis
Tongue Diagnosis in Chinese Medicine by Giovanni Maciocia
Acupuncture Risk Management
Materia Medica (Essentials of Chinese Medicine) by Dafang Zeng
260 Essential Chinese Medicinals
Dui Yao: The Art of Combining Chinese Medicinals
The Secret of Chinese Pulse Diagnosis by Bob Flaws
Clean Needle Technique Manual for Acupuncturists
Art of Acupuncture Techniques by Robert Johns
A Field Guide to Medicinal Plants and Herbs: Of Eastern and Central North America (Peterson Field Guides)
Anatomy Coloring Book
Lippincott's Illustrated Reviews: Biochemistry
The Wall Map of Standard Meridians and Points of Acupuncture and Tuina
Friday, March 27, 2009
Dr. Pai???
http://delivery.gettyimages.com/xd/961-39.mov?c=NewsMaker&d=9B6C5E9A385F67CC5C95B398F422FAE5&k=2&v=1
Acupuncture: Guy of the needles
Gerad Kite is an acupuncturist with a list of famous patients as long as your arm. But be warned if you’re tempted to join them – after a few sessions with him life can change in all sorts of ways.
Gerad Kite looks like a sharply dressed businessman, jacket off in the aftermath of an important meeting. Once upon time, 20 years ago, when he was running his own successful travel company in San Francisco, that is what he was. 'I was only interested in making money at the time. I was very stressed. I was working too hard. I was drinking too much.’ A self-confessed sceptic when it came to all things 'alternative’, Kite found himself going along with a friend for a session of classical five-element acupuncture. The next day he shut down his business. He says it took him a long time to make the connection between the two events, but by then he was already training in so-called five element himself. Read More...
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Thursday, February 26, 2009
IBM Launches Groundbreaking Health Record System for South China's Largest Hospital
GUANGZHOU, CHINA - IBM (NYSE: IBM) today announced the launch of a new suite of healthcare information sharing and analytics technologies at the Guang Dong Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), which combines the strengths of TCM and Modern Western Medicine (MWM). The first-of-a-kind system, dubbed CHAS (Clinical and Health Records Analytics and Sharing), is designed to enable the sharing of electronic medical records (EMRs) that incorporates TCM and MWM data across the hospital network. Read More...
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Researchers Find Traces Of Mercury In High-Fructose Corn Syrup
A swig of soda or bite of a candy bar might be sweet, but a new study suggests that food made with corn syrup also could be delivering tiny doses of toxic mercury. Read More...
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Official: Acupuncture beats aspirin for chronic headache
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Acupuncture works better than drugs like aspirin to reduce the severity and frequency of chronic headaches, U.S. researchers reported on Monday.
A review of studies involving nearly 4,000 patients with migraine, tension headache and other forms of chronic headache showed that that 62 percent of the acupuncture patients reported headache relief compared to 45 percent of people taking medications, the team at Duke University found. Read more...
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