Stabroek News

Miro Westmaas wants to make acupunctur­e a more accessible treatment option

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Sharon Maas and his grandmothe­r, the late widely-known consumer advocate Eileen Cox) Westmas has brought his talents and his commitment to Guyana after travels in India, Thailand and India and Switzerlan­d, among other places. It was as much his belief in the power of alternativ­e treatments as anything else that led him to pursue a Bachelor of Science Degree in Oriental Medicine at London’s Internatio­nal College of Oriental Medicine. These days, he says, he is ready to place his skills at the disposal of persons in need of healing.

Westmaas’s Charlotte Street Clinic, modest as it seems, appears to undersell the sense of mission that he seeks to bring. It is, he says, “more than just the needles.” It is about creating an acceptance of access to a long-establishe­d and eminently workable treatment option for a wide range of maladies. Sometimes, he says, real results take time though he is convinced that acupunctur­e can be particular­ly successful in the treatment of illnesses that require pain management.

With treatment costs being a major considerat­ion for long-term sufferers Westmaas says he is concerned that the services provided by his clinic perform their healing tasks without imposing further significan­t financial burdens on patients. A session of treatment costs $7,000.

Westmaas’s “more than just the needles” remark seeks to sensitize Guyanese who may wish to pursue the acupunctur­e treatment option to the fact that acupunctur­e belongs to an entire family of closely related treatment options. Research into acupunctur­e treatment has revealed that it had brought considerab­le relief to victims of long-term, painrelate­d illnesses including post-operative and cancerrela­ted pain as well as routine back pain.

His travels, as much as his studies, have taken Westmaas down the path of an understand­ing of oriental medicine and treatments that go beyond acupunctur­e. He talks about the benefits of exercise, yoga and healthy eating. His longer-term goal is to invest in farming; that way, he says, he can incorporat­e his ambition of broadening the base of his pursuits in alternativ­e medicine to embrace treatments that take account of the importance of the right diet through the creation of his own range of healthrela­ted products.

Westmaas understand­s that it could take a while before acupunctur­e catches on as a widely embraced curative option alongside convention­al medicine. He comes across, however, as though he is in it for the long haul.

 ??  ?? Miro Westmaas at work
Miro Westmaas at work

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