Two particular areas
where Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) has excelled is in obstetrics
and gynecology. The two primary reasons for this are 1) Rather than
simply focusing on a woman’s presenting symptoms, Traditional Chinese
Medicine addresses deeper imbalances to improve overall health,
and 2) Traditional Chinese Medicine employs both short and
long-range vision to the treatment plan with each phase of womanhood
being addressed for short and long-term outcomes.
For example, if a post partum woman complains of
weakness and fatigue, these symptoms will be addressed, as will
preparing her body for her next child (if she so chooses) and for
menopause years later. How completely a woman rebounds from childbirth
is believed to affect her wellness in menopause. These objectives are at
the forefront of the Traditional Chinese Medicine practitioner’s
thinking.
In obstetrics, this would mean that while a
practitioner is treating a woman for infertility, one prepares her for
pregnancy; while treating for morning sickness, one prepares for
delivery.
Treating women using Traditional Chinese Medicine
diagnostic techniques employs different skills than those used to
diagnose men. The primary reason for this difference is that from
puberty through menopause women receive a monthly “report card” on the
state of their well-being. The menses, in terms of length of cycle,
duration of bleeding and spotting, color of blood, presence of clots,
etc. are all entered into the diagnostic equation. Also pre-menstrual,
post-menstrual and mid-cycle symptoms are recognized and analyzed. And
the mind, body and spirit are always treated as connected entities,
never dismissed as unrelated.
Symptomatically a patient may have one complaint or
several. The great majority of cases are diagnosed with underlying
imbalances (the root) and the main complaint (the branch).
Acupuncturists, working in partnership with the patient, decide how much
treatment to each is appropriate for the patient. For example, a woman
who is experiencing heavy menstrual bleeding (the branch) would require
much more emphasis on addressing that symptom and less immediate
emphasis on treating the possibly deficient spleen (the root). But a
woman experiencing low-grade pre-menstrual headaches would likely
receive more attention to the root of the problem, since the urgency is
less.
In this way, Chinese medicine is able to restore and
maintain balance -- easing symptoms while addressing the cause.
In practice your practitioner will provide pre-natal
care, labor assistance (including home visits) and, equally important,
post-partum care. Rebuilding a woman’s strength and vitality,
particularly if one has had a difficult birth, can be a long process.
Through individually tailored acupuncture, Chinese herbs and proper diet
a woman can expect a faster and more complete road to health.