Dear All,
The normal training for Acupuncture in the UK currently is a 3 - 4 year BSc course. For people who want to train in herbs also, this is normally another two years. Most collesges also encourage students to do some post graduate training in China although this is not compulsory.
In the UK we also have opportunities for post graduates to undertake both MSc courses and PHD Doctorates in Chinese Medicine and associated subjects.
We should be clear that a TCM Doctor trained in China is not the same as medical Doctor. Some Doctors in China train in both Western and Chinese Medicine and practice both but it is also possible to be trained purely in TCM and only practice this which is similar to the training we have in the UK.
The main difference in the way we practice acupuncture in the UK is in the practice of five element acupuncture. After the communist takeover in China this system of acupuncture was removed from the TCM syllabus as it dealt with things such as the spirit and had certain ideas that were anachronistic to the new Chinese Idealogy.
The Doctors and teachers of TCM who managed to escape from China went to countries such as Korea, Vietnam, Taiwan etc where they continued to practice what has become known as five-element acupuncture as well as the style we now call TCM.
After the 2nd world War there were European and American soldiers and officials who learnt acupuncture outside of China and were able to bring it back to the west and this is why today the acupuncture courses taught in many UK colleges are more encompassing than the way TCM is taught in China.
Because of this it is true that acupuncture is used much more frequently than it is used in China and it is used to treat conditions that would normally be treated with herbal medicine in China.
We have much to learn from China and its unique form of medicine but we also have much to offer and hopefully at some future date we will be able to return something that was once lost.
With regard to herbs, we have only just begun to realise the potential of Chinese Herbal Medicine which in the right hands has the potential to revolutionise the way we deliver healthcare in the UK and it is true that for many conditions herbs are very useful and sometimes essential.
Chinese Herbal Medicine, in many situations, is far superior than what is available in terms of Western medicines but the key to all Chinese Medicine is in the skill of the practitioner in being able to diagnose the condition accurately and provide the best possible treatment plan.
TB