Chapter 18 Logically No Difference



If Western medicine treatment does not show any improvement, it is not wrong to turn to your Chinese medicine colleagues for help.

It is said that the patient's illness occurred in the rainy season.

The dermatologist initially said that the patient was suffering from eczema. The TCM department then looked at the patient's tongue and found tooth marks on it, and inferred that it was most likely caused by the moisture brought by the spring cold during the change of seasons.

So, can't I get treatment at the National Association of Traditional Chinese Medicine?

Dr. Yin and Dr. Xie mainly considered that the patient had been taking medicine for a long time and it would be better to try other treatment methods.

Western doctors generally believe that mixing Chinese and Western medicines together is not good for your health, and the side effects of the medicines are even more difficult to predict.

Traditional Chinese medicine is not just about taking medicine, there are other amazing treatment methods such as acupuncture.

The National Association of Traditional Chinese Medicine and Acupuncture was even worse, so I came to find a more professional Chinese doctor.

Thinking back to this, Dr. Yin understood: 99% of the time, the diagnosis opinions of the Department of Traditional Chinese Medicine in his own hospital were inconsistent with those of Dr. Wen.

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Dr. Wen doesn’t think the patient is suffering from cold and dampness?

"They said there were teeth marks on her tongue. Isn't this a symptom of dampness?" Yin Fengchun asked.

Wu Lixuan was the first to burst out laughing when she saw her husband like this. Even though she wasn't a doctor, she could tell that something was wrong with her husband.

Previously, my husband used Western medicine theories to criticize Dr. Wen. Now, why is he using Chinese medicine theories to argue with Dr. Wen?

Fortunately, Dr. Wen has a mild temper and did not argue with her husband or use this to provoke her husband.

In fact, if we compare Chinese medicine practitioners and Western medicine doctors in clinical practice, we will find that Chinese medicine practitioners who are trained in professional schools are generally more calm, open-minded and tolerant than Western medicine practitioners.

Chinese doctors never object to learning from Western medicine, drawing on the advantages of Western medicine and then applying them to Chinese medicine. Those brainless fans of Chinese medicine who only read ancient books are not authentic Chinese doctors at all.

As for Western medicine, since it has the final say 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, no different from Western doctors. This means that both Chinese and Western doctors have commonalities in terms of human brain thinking, which is why top doctors assert that medicine will end up in the same place.

Traditional Chinese medicine is logical and no different from Western medicine.

When facing the family members of Western medicine doctors, Dr. Wen simply used Western medicine examples to make it easier for them to understand.

First, the history of traditional Chinese medicine is about taking its essence and removing its dross, and it has a spirit of reflection and progress.

Excellent Chinese people have always been a collective wisdom, and as a native medical school, how can Chinese medicine not have Chinese characteristics? Therefore, modern Chinese medicine is not a rebellious school.

Second, tell the families of Western medicine doctors directly: "TCM clinical work also includes research, and statistics is indispensable."

Traditional Chinese medicine clinical research will use real data to prove that dampness and tooth marks are not 100% necessarily related.

It has been said that Chinese doctors and Western doctors are both human beings and their logical thinking is the same. This is reflected in their clinical diagnostic thinking: Chinese medicine, like Western medicine, requires a comprehensive analysis of all data when making a diagnosis.

Dr. Yin said there was dampness when there were tooth marks. I guess he misunderstood what the doctors in his own hospital said.

What they meant is the same as the diagnosis name that Western medicine likes to write: Is there dampness? Let me give you a question mark first.

Only a complete layman of TCM would make a fuss about tooth marks with only a half-understood concept.

Moreover, in the professional field of traditional Chinese medicine, dampness is not simply dampness.

Damp heat? Cold and damp?

Which part and which meridian is affected by dampness?

How did this wetness come about?

Only unprofessionals will tell you in a nutshell that it is dampness. Traditional Chinese medicine studies the dampness of a patient just like Western medicine studies a disease, and it is necessary to understand the whole story.

After hearing this, Dr. Yin could only continue listening.

The professionally trained Chinese doctors on the scene took a look and found that it was true that many of the "black" Chinese medicine practitioners were just hearsay and drew conclusions without thorough understanding.

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