The results of Western medicine treatment were not good, so I asked my colleagues in Chinese medicine whether it was possible.
It is said that the patient's disease occurred during the rainy season.
The dermatology department initially said that the patient suffered from eczema. The TCM department then looked at the patient's tongue and found teeth marks on his tongue, deducing that it was most likely caused by the moisture brought by the spring cold during the seasonal change.
In this way, isn’t it possible to treat the disease in the National Association?
Dr. Yin and Dr. Xie mainly considered that the patient had been taking medicine for a long time, so it was better to switch to other methods of treatment.
Doctors of Western medicine generally believe that Chinese and Western medicines are mixed together and are not very good to eat, and the side effects of the medicines are more difficult to predict.
Chinese medicine is not just about taking medicine, it also has other amazing treatments such as acupuncture.
The Chinese Association of Traditional Chinese Medicine and Acupuncture was not very good, so I went to find a more professional Chinese doctor.
Thinking back to this, Dr. Yin understood: 99% of the time, the diagnostic opinions of the Traditional Chinese Medicine Department of his own hospital were inconsistent with those of Dr. Wen.
Dr. Wen doesn’t think the patient is suffering from cold-dampness invasion?
"They said there were teeth marks on her tongue. Isn't this a symptom of moisture?" Yin Fengchun asked.
Wu Lixuan was the first to laugh when she saw her husband like this. She didn't have to be a doctor to tell that something was wrong with her husband.
Previously, my husband used Western medicine theory to argue that Dr. Wen was not good. Now, how could my husband use Chinese medicine theory to argue with Dr. Wen?
Fortunately, Dr. Wen has a gentle temper and does not compete with her husband. She does not use this point to poke her husband's lungs.
In fact, if you compare TCM doctors and Western doctors in clinical practice, you will find that TCM doctors with professional backgrounds generally have a calmer, more open and tolerant mentality than Western doctors.
Traditional Chinese medicine doctors have never been averse to learning Western medicine, learning from the advantages of Western medicine, and then applying it to traditional Chinese medicine. Those who only rely on ancient books and have no brain in traditional Chinese medicine are not authentic Chinese doctors with a professional background.
As for Western medicine, since it occupies the right to speak in mainstream medical circles around the world, its attitude is inevitably rather arrogant.
However, there are some facts that you must make clear. Chinese doctors are human beings and are no different from Western doctors. This means that both Chinese and Western doctors have universal similarities in human brain thinking. This is why top leaders assert that medicine will achieve the same goal through different paths.
Traditional Chinese medicine is logical and no different from Western medicine.
When he was facing family members of Western medicine doctors, Dr. Wen simply used Western medicine analogies to make it easier for the other party to understand.
The first point is that the history of traditional Chinese medicine is to extract the essence and discard the dross, and to have a spirit of introspection and enterprising.
Excellent Chinese people have always put their minds together. As a native medicine, how could Chinese medicine not have the characteristics of Chinese people? Therefore, modern Chinese medicine is not an anti-bone sect.
The second point is to tell the family members of Western medicine doctors bluntly: "The clinical work of traditional Chinese medicine also includes research, and statistics is indispensable."
Clinical research in traditional Chinese medicine will use real data to prove that moisture and tooth marks are not 100% inevitable.
It has been said that Chinese medicine doctors and Western medicine doctors are both human beings, and their logical thinking is the same. This is reflected in clinical diagnostic thinking: Chinese medicine and Western medicine are the same. When making a diagnosis, a comprehensive analysis must be made with reference to all data.
There are teeth marks and it means there is moisture. I guess Dr. Yin may have misunderstood the doctor at his hospital.
What I should say is that it is the same as the diagnosis name that Western medicine likes to write: Is there moisture? Let me put a question mark for you first.
Only TCM fans who are completely outsiders would use teeth marks to explain things without knowing anything about it.
Moreover, in the professional field of traditional Chinese medicine, dampness is not simply dampness.
Damp and hot? Cold and damp?
Which part and which meridian is affected by dampness?
What caused this dampness?
Only unprofessional generalities will tell you that it is dampness. Traditional Chinese medicine studies a patient's dampness just like Western medicine studies a disease. It is necessary to understand the ins and outs.
Hearing this, Dr. Yin could only listen.
The on-site TCM doctors with professional backgrounds took a look and found that, as expected, many "black" TCM doctors were based on hearsay and drew conclusions without a thorough understanding.