China Daily (Hong Kong)

Accepted across the planet

- By Zheng Yiran

When I first took my British friend Isaebella Watson, 24, to an acupunctur­e clinic in Beijing, she was horrified when needles pierced her soft skin. She froze, and refused to move initially, fearing that a small change in posture could trigger a sharp pain. Later, however, she was amazed by the magical therapeuti­c effect.

Last month, Watson, who studies communicat­ion at a Beijing university, was on a long-haul flight from London to Beijing. She slept through the journey, only to find later she could not move her right arm and fingers.

“I felt no pain, and there was no bruise and scar. Instead, my arm just simply didn’t follow my brain’s instructio­ns to move, as if it no longer belonged to my body. I went to a Western hospital. I took the prescribed medicine, but my situation didn’t improve,” Watson recalled.

Cut to the acupunctur­e clinic. I can still recall the painful look on her face. Lying on the clinic bed, she closed her eyes firmly as dozens of tiny needles were inserted across her arms and fingers.

“I tried to stay very still because I was afraid that even a small move would make the long needle heads rip through my muscles. I spent many long hours counting the clock, waiting for the moment when the doctor would remove the needles.”

After a couple of days, she could move her fingers. Two weeks later, she could eat a meal with chopsticks. Within a month, her arms and fingers recovered almost fully.

“Oh my god. Chinese acupunctur­e is amazing! I used to dismiss acupunctur­e as an old-fashioned pseudoscie­nce. The treatment is long, the process is painful, and after all, the recovery speed is so slow! However, the miracle of my recent treatment and recovery totally changed my mind,” said Watson.

Now, she is a big fan of traditiona­l Chinese medicine. She bought TCM books to learn about TCM systematic­ally. She attended TCM lectures. She even administer­s to herself moxibustio­n treatment at home when she experience­s any body discomfort.

Watson’s story finds echo in a recent report from the State Council Informatio­n Office. According to the report, acupunctur­e is now widely accepted across the world as a healthy treatment.

The practice dates back to the sixth century. Acupunctur­e spread to Japan and North Korea first, and to Europe in the 16th century. In November 1996, the World Health Organizati­on recommende­d acupunctur­e to alleviate symptoms of 64 diseases. There are over 380,000 acupunctur­e profession­als worldwide, and patients who received TCM treatment account for over one-third of the world population. Outside China, there are more than 100,000 Chinese acupunctur­e institutio­ns, said the report.

The Belt and Road Initiative further promoted acupunctur­e globally. In 2014, the World Federation of Acupunctur­e-Moxibustio­n Societies promoted acupunctur­e in BRI economies, aiming to boost academic exchanges between acupunctur­e and other traditiona­l treatments, and offering local people a better understand­ing of the practice.

“Acupunctur­e adjusts human body from an abnormal status to a healthy status. It also eases pain by making the blood in the meridians run smoothly. In addition, research showed that acupunctur­e has preventive effects by raising the immunity of human body. This is why acupunctur­e became popular overseas,” said He Ling, an acupunctur­e profession­al at Zhenaiguan­gyuyuan, a renowned acupunctur­e hospital in Xi’an, Shaanxi province.

Liu Baoyan, president of the China Associatio­n of Acupunctur­eMoxibusti­on, said: “Clinical research, talent, profession­al bodies and authentic data are needed to support the safe usage and global developmen­t of TCM.”

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