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10 Ways Chinese Medicine Can Help You,
Part 2 |
by:
Brian
B. Carter, MS, LAc |
#6 It's
Interactive
Chinese Medicine students learn about how
every aspect of our lives (from bowel movements
to emotions) relate to one another. We learn
to relate to every kind of person.
Patients Can Push Your Buttons
Patients sometimes push our buttons, and
this give us the opportunity to interact
with ourselves. This is not always easy.
We don't always like what we find! But if
you commit to growth through interaction,
helping, and self-examination, you can deactivate
your buttons, grow past your limits, and
increase your usefulness to others.
More specifically:
* Some students may realize they came to
medicine for a selfish reason and decide
to put helping others first.
* Some students find they are people-pleasers
and have to learn how to set boundaries
and be more assertive (not aggressive or
passive-aggressive!).
* Others are more confrontational and aggressive
by nature and need to learn compassion and
patience.
* Some are analytical and live in their
heads - they need to learn to focus on their
hearts, gaining rapport and loving their
patients.
Letting Go of Bad Habits
Your bad habits are called into question.
At one point in my training, I went back
to smoking cigarettes. It was a guilt-laden
6 weeks! It seemed hypocritical to want
to be a healer while destroying my health.
And I felt like I had to hide it. I quit
to be a better example to my patients, and
not to have to hide anything.
I also had to quit coffee. I knew from chinese
medicine that it wasn't helping me with
my impatience and irritability. It was worsening
my liver qi stagnation! I had to give it
up and take herbs instead. I had to practice
what I preach.
When you know something is bad, it seems
like fun to do it anyway (it gives you the
illusion of power and control). But eventually
you give in to the wisdom, do what is right,
and get to feel even better. Then you can
help others with the same struggle.
Your Victory can lead to their Victory
Occasionally, your own personal growth and
commitment to self-examination helps your
patients directly. At one point, I saw a
woman with fears of abandonment. I had just
discovered and confronted my own similar
fears 6 months before. She was able to feel
understood and heard and I was able to offer
her solutions, strength, and hope.
In this way, we are trailblazers- pioneers
in growth. If we remain shallow, so will
our healing interactions. If we grow deeper,
we can lead people to greater healing.
#7 It Benefits YOU Too!
As was just explained, by helping others
you get to grow too.
Save on Health Care Costs
By giving yourself the know-how and resources
to keep yourself, your friends, and your
family well, you can save money. One acupuncturist
said on an email list that it saved her
family tens of thousands of dollars in medical
costs. It can be practiced inexpensively
- for many years it treated millions of
poor peasants in China who had no access
to western medicine. Chinese Medicine may
be a large part of the solution to our healthcare
crisis.
Professional Courtesy
Some acupuncturists trade treatments with
one another to stay in good health. I've
received hundreds of treatments from fellow
students, practitioners, and my wife! It's
helped me with anger, irritability, migraines,
light sensitivity, fear, over-thinking,
colds and flus, and cold sores, among other
things.
#8 It's Traditional and Ancient
It's natural for us to look for reassurance,
especially in dealing with our health. Biomedicine
reassures by requiring studies of treatments
for safety. Chinese medicine has been tested
for safety and efficacy (especially acupuncture),
and it has thousands of years of experience
behind it to show what happens to the people
it treats. It is inarguably a positive influence
in our world. Biomedicine, on the other
hand, is only 50 years old, and the full
scope of the side effect phenomenon (short
and long-term) has yet to be grasped.
Not every chinese remedy has been through
the full rigors of the Randomized Controlled
Trial (biomedicine's gold-standard), but
neither have all of the standard biomedical
treatments. The millions of hours and patient
visits through hundreds of years establish
traditional chinese treatments as safe and
effective. More and more studies are being
done to confirm them and understand how
they work in biomedical terms. I have written
extensively on acupuncture safety and how
it works here.
#9 Its Theories have Broad Implications
Since it integrates many different disciplines
and realms, CM concepts could be used to
reorganize and give insight to psychology
and psychiatry, pharmaceutical medicine,
and sociology. These insights could guide
and suggest future research in all fields.
The 16 types of the Meyers Briggs personality
typing system have been somewhat integrated
with the 5 constitutions and 6 temperaments
of Chinese Medicine (read about that). This
yields a mind-body medicine that integrates
personality and physical disease.
From the patient's symptoms, we can understand
their personality and what might help or
hinder their healing from an emotional and
behavioral perspective.
And vice versa, we can look at people's
emotions and behavior and guess what kind
of physical problems they might have. This
makes for a quicker, more comprehensive
medicine, and helps patients feel understood
and confident in the care they receive.
#10 It can be a Lucrative AND Altruistic
Career
As former AMA president and Medscape CEO
George Lundberg, MD says, medicine walks
a thin line because:
* It is supposed to be altruistic (selflessly
concerned for others), but
* It is also a business (and thus vulnerable
to selfish greed).
We could think of this as the yin and yang
of the medical business.
Insurance Coverage for Acupuncture and Herbs
Some alternative medicine practitioners
are happy to stay outside of the managed
care system. It's valuable enough to patients
to pay out of their own pockets. Increasingly,
acupuncture is covered by insurance, HMO's
and worker's compensation boards... sometimes
the full cost of the treatment is covered
and sometimes it isn't. Herbal medicine
usually isn't covered... but patients are
used to buying herbs and vitamins without
reimbursement.
Lundberg suggests that:
* Proven preventive care should be financed
by the government,
* Proven catastrophic care covered by insurance,
and
* Everything else paid for out-of-pocket.
Grossing Gross Amounts of Money - Acupuncture
Salaries
Regardless of who pays, acupuncturists can
expect an annual gross salary of between
$40,000 and$1,000,000. I just heard about
a hospital position for an acupuncturist
in Iowa that was paying $159 per hour (their
medical doctor rate).
My wife made $100,000 her first year out
of school. One acupuncturist here in San
Diego grosses near $1,000,000 annually with
worker's compensation cases only.
Right now in California, work-comp reimburses
$120 per acupuncture treatment. Some acupuncturists
see 4 patients per hour...
Let's do some quick math on an example.
If you averaged $80 per treatment (which
is achievable), saw 2 patients per hour,
and worked 8 hours per day, 4 days per week
(leaving a day or two to do paperwork),
48 weeks per year you could gross $245,760.
If you spend 40% of your gross on overhead,
you earn $147,456 before taxes.
What Makes for Making Money
How much you earn depends, as in all businesses,
upon your resourcefulness, initiative, marketing
savvy, and - most importantly - the quality
of your service. As in all service businesses,
you must be good at what you do.
The Freedom to Give
Making all that money frees us to be altruistic.
A lot of volunteer care is given by acupuncturists.
During "9/11,", New York students from the
Pacific Institute of Chinese Medicine treated
the firefighters. Likewise, students in
San Diego from the Pacific College of Chinese
Medicine treat Viet Nam veterans every year
at a special gathering. Of dozens of services,
the acupuncture is among the top 3 requested.
You can take on a number of low or no-fee
cases in your own practice. It's up to you.
#11 - There are so many options
It's a varied profession.
In California, acupuncturists are physicians
and can be a patient's primary care practitioner
- they are professionals on par with MD's,
chiropractors, and psychologists. As an
acupuncturist...
* You could work with an MD, DO, DC, psychologist,
psychiatrist, or massage therapist.
* You can work in a high-class office wearing
a suit. You could practice at home wearing
your slippers.
* You could do all acupuncture, or all herbs,
or both.
* You could treat just sports injuries,
or workers compensation, or acupuncture
face-lifts, or gynecology, or psychiatry,
or do it all!
* There is room for new schools all over
the U.S. - there are still states without
any Chinese Medicine schools.
* You could practice in California (where
1/3 of us practice), or you could have an
'insta-practice' in many places all over
the U.S. that don't have access to Chinese
Medicine.
* You could teach or be a clinic supervisor
at an established school.
* You could see loads of patients, or spend
2 hours with each one. One herbalist in
China sees 80 patients per day. You have
to be good to get herbs right- to get them
right and see that many patients per day,
you have to be stellar!
* You could create a business selling products
to the 20,000 or so acupuncturists in the
U.S. (even more internationally).
* You can write books and teach continuing
education seminars.
There are so many options!
About the Author
Acupuncturist, herbalist, and medical
professor Brian B. Carter founded the
alternative health megasite The Pulse
of Oriental Medicine (http://www.PulseMed.org/).
He is the author of the book "Powerful
Body, Peaceful Mind: How to Heal Yourself
with Foods, Herbs, and Acupressure" (November,
2004). Brian speaks on radio across the
country, and has been quoted and interviewed
by Real Simple, Glamour, and ESPN magazines. |
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