Contents of Volume: V, Issue: 3
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Chinese medicine in Australia
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by Glenys Savage
In Chinese culture the number eight (ba) is significant; it is associated with "expanding wealth". I reflected on the fact that it is eight years since the introduction of the Chinese Medicine Registration Act 2000 in the state of Victoria. -
A bitter taste in the mouth
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by Robin Marchment
I am offering this case study as encouragement for all in our profession as we proceed with often unheralded successes in areas where Western medicine has heroic but sometimes less acceptable solutions.
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Arrival of the Qi
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by Elizabeth Reninger
As a graduate student, I was in the habit of filling my elective slots with logic classes. The impulse to do this arose, inevitably, in moments of feeling exasperated by the endlessly slippery content of my chosen fields of study – the maddening ambiguity of just about everything. -
Comments on Phlegm Syndrome
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by Bing Yang
The Zhen Jiu Da Cheng (1601) was written and compiled by Dr Yang Ji-Zhou in the Ming dynasty. This book gathered the quintessence of acupuncture and moxibustion expertise to date and preserved it for future generations. Seven of the 31 cases recorded here involve phlegm syndrome. -
Cooling blood and relieving toxicity
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by Greta Young Jie De
The Wen Bing (Warm Disease) strategy of venting heat from the ying-nutritive level to the qi level originated with Ye Tian-Shi and Wu Ju-Tong in the Qing dynasty. -
Jue Yin Disease
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by Arnaud Versluys
The jue yin chapter of the Shang Han Lun is one of the most enigmatic in Han dynasty clinical literature. Many practitioners still fail to gain a visceral comprehension of the identification and treatment of jue yin disease in everyday clinic. -
Talks on Dao Mountain
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by Xiaoyao Xingzhe
A wake meandered gently from the stern in the calm river water. The little waves gleamed rose and crimson, mirroring the fiery sky, itself inflamed by the lowering sun. A slight jolt and creaking wood marked each scull as the boatman propelled us forward ...
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The strength of synthesis
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by Sharon Weizenbaum
In this article, I will use a case history to illustrate my own
integration of pattern differentiation (bian zheng) with body type diagnosis, abdominal diagnosis and Shang Han Lun diagnosis through key symptoms.
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