September 2014 - Colorado School of Traditional Chinese Medicine
Transcription
September 2014 - Colorado School of Traditional Chinese Medicine
Colorado School of Traditional Chinese Medicine Newsletter Volume 2, Issue 76 September 2014 Welcome to the new class of students for the Fall 2014 Trimester. Good luck to all students who will be taking the NCCAOM Exams in 2014. We are always looking for articles about Oriental Medicine from mainstream newspapers, magazines, cartoons, etc. Thanks again to those who have contributed articles and cartoons. We are also looking for articles written by our students, graduates, and faculty. Also, please let us know other things you would like to see in the CSTCM Newsletter. Newsletters come out three times a year at the beginning of each trimester in January, May, and September. We are trying to e-mail all newsletters to graduates. If you are receiving a paper copy of the newsletter and not an emailed copy, please send us your e-mail address to admin@cstcm.edu . Please help us save on postage and save some trees too. The newsletter is also always available on the CSTCM website. CSTCM NEWS Honors List for Spring 2014 The Honors List recognizes scholastic achievement in any given trimester for accelerated and full-time students (12 credits or more) whose average percentile of all courses taken for that trimester was 94% (3.7 GPA) or better, with no Incompletes. The Honors List will be noted on student‟s transcripts and posted on the bulletin board. M.S.Ac. and M.S.T.C.M. students are listed by their earliest enrolled course. Trimester 1 – Kathleen Blazek, Danisha Bogue, Meghan Cooper, Stephanie James, Vonda Muncy, Elizabeth Prescott, Isaac White; CSTCM Summer Barbeque July 12, 2014 “How do you know what I know? You are not me.” Zhuang Zi, Warring States Period INSIDE THIS ISSUE Trimester 2 – Whitney Dwyer, Jeffrey Lum, Amy Malone; Trimester 3 – Thaddeus Haas, Brian Duncan; Trimester 4 – Jennifer Cleveland, Julie Johns; Darlene Zwolinski; Trimester 5 – Yolanda Dickinson, Janice Poloway; 1 CSTCM News 7 CSTCM Alumni Corner Trimester 6 - Chris Dyer, Molly Gibson, Jennifer Luther; 10 National & International OM News Trimester 7 – Kalin Davidov, Caitlin Gordon; 11 Recent OM in Mainstream Media Trimester 8 – None 12 AOM in Medical Journals & Research Trimester 9 – Nancy Imig, DiAnna Kelsey. 15 America on Drugs suggest activities they would like to see for all school members to participate in. Any ideas? The Academic Achievement Award recognizes the student with the highest average percentile of all courses taken for the year and is awarded annually at the Chinese New Year Open House. Office hours for all administrators for this trimester are posted on office doors and can be found on our website http://www.cstcm.edu/ or call 303-329-6355. Other times are available by appointment. We are doing our best to accommodate students with convenient office hours that meet both students and administrative needs. The easiest way to be sure of talking to someone in the administrative office is to make an appointment. Students and faculty can always use the Message Center on the door of 302 to drop a note through the mail slot in the door at any time and you will receive a prompt reply. We will make every effort to ensure all voice mail messages are returned within 24 hours. Please let Administrative Director, Vladimir DiBrigida, know if you are having any problems with messages or emails. The 2013 Academic Achievement Award went to Jennifer Luther. Madelina Scotto and Chris Dyer were runner-ups. The Academic Dean’s Office hours for appointments this trimester are posted as noted above. Please make an appointment if you would like to talk to the Academic Deans or Assistant Academic Dean, also other times are available by appointment. Anything related to students, faculty, classroom instruction, or the curriculum should be taken to the Academic Dean‟s office. The CSTCM Fall 2014 Graduation Ceremony will be Sunday, December 21, 2014. We wish those graduates success in the Oriental Medicine profession. See the announcement for more info. Again, please contact faculty member Anna Tsang to volunteer to work on the CSTCM Herb Garden Project, or for more info on the garden greenhouse We encourage all faculty, students, and graduates to participate in this project. Anna can always use some volunteers. The Clinic Director’s Office hours for appointments this trimester are posted as noted above. Other times are available by appointment. Concerns, problems, or questions relating to Acu Moxa Techniques, Forum, Clinical Observation or the Student Clinic should be taken to the Clinic Director. We continue to plan Winter/Spring, Summer, and Fall Trimester social events. The Winter/Spring event will always be the Chinese New Year Open House and Potluck and the summer event has been the Dragon Boat Festival and a barbeque at school. In the Fall Trimester, we have been having a free clinic day for National AOM Day, October 24 and a bowling night. Anyone who has other ideas should contact Administrative Director, Vladimir DiBrigida. Some other ideas that have been suggested are a picnic, or something scheduled around National Herb Day, October 14. Yan Jing Supply Store hours this trimester are: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday 9:30 – 9:00 pm; Friday 9:30 - 5:30 PM (closed 1:00 - 1:45 PM for lunch); and Saturday 12:30 - 7:00 PM. Don‟t forget Tai Ji Quan on Friday‟s from 4:30 - 5:30 pm and Qi Gong on Saturday‟s from 8:00 - 9:00 am and the combination of Tai Ji/Qi Gong on Fridays 6:00 - 7:00 pm. Students must take the required number of hours as part of their curriculum and hours taken above the requirements are free. All others pay $5 per class. The classes are open to the public. We continue to work very hard to increase the sense of community among students, graduates, administration, and faculty. We encourage students, graduates, and faculty members to → continued “From caring comes courage.” Lao Zi 2 YOGA CSTCM Library News & Update Free Meditation, Yoga, & Therapeutic Hoop Dance is offered by CSTCM students on Thursdays. Yoga is one Thursday per month at 6:00 pm; Hoop Dance is one Thursday per month at 6:00 pm; and Meditation is one Thursday per month at 7:00 pm. See the flyer for more info. The classes are in Classroom G&H (downstairs). Library hours for the Fall 2014 Trimester are: Monday and Friday 9:00 am – 7:00 pm; Tuesday, Wednesday 9:00 am – 10:00 pm; and Thursday 9:00 am – 7:00 pm; Saturday 1:30 – 6:30 pm. The Library Guidelines handbook is available in the library to answer any questions about procedures. If anyone has any Oriental medicine or holistic medicine books or journals they would like to donate to the library, we would deeply appreciate it. Also, western medicine books or journals published in the last 5 years would be appreciated. We keep hoping the theft of library books will not be as much of a problem as in the past. Please contact Assistant Academic Dean, Edie Newall or Administrative Director, Vladimir DiBrigida, who have oversight of the Library, if you have any questions or comments about the library. Input is always welcome. We will continue offering Free NCCAOM Exam Prep Workshops in 2014 for CSTCM students and grads. The workshops are offered on Sundays, with Acupuncture 9:00–12:00 PM and Chinese Herbal Medicine 1:00–4:00 PM. Fall workshops are September 14 & September 28. Contact the Clinic Director‟s office for more info and see the 2014 CSTCM NCCAOM Exam Prep Workshop flyer. The library continues to welcome students, faculty, and graduates to visit, browse the books and resources, and find what most interests you. There are over 10,000 books and other items to assist with your studies, and meet the information needs of students and faculty. 2014 CSTCM SCHOOL EVENTS Fall Open House - September 18 AOM Day – October 25 Deck the Halls – November 29 Student library staff are in the library during the lunch hour and from 5 pm to clinic closing, as well as on Saturdays from 1 – 6 pm. They can help with any information needs and make book recommendations to fit student preferences. Bowling – December 6 Fall Graduation – December 21 See flyers for more info. Check-out PubMed http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/ for more than 21 million citations on biomedical and alternative medicine (including AOM). The Free Weekly Tutoring will continue this trimester with the extra hour and is open to all students. The tutor will be Assistant Clinic Director Jim Harris, L.Ac. Wednesday‟s 12:00 to 2:00 pm. If you have any questions or comments about tutoring, please contact the Academic Dean, and also see the Free Weekly Tutoring flyer. See the new Townsend Letter complete index 19832013. Library Book Review No reviews The Free Proficiency Exam Study Workshops will continue this trimester. The workshops will be on Mondays, 10:00 – 11:00am. See Flyer Thanks to the following people who donated books to the library in 2014: NA Students should check out the Trudy McAlister (Scholarship) Fund website at: http://triskeles.org/contact-us or http://triskeles.org/phil tmf scholarship fund.asp Gold is tested by fire, and man is tested by gold. Traditional Chinese Proverb 3 Welcome to the new co-Academic Deans: CSTCM Assistant Academic Dean & grad Camille Rodriguez was promoted to Academic Dean and CSTCM grad Marsha Pruett (02); both are now co- Academic Deans. Welcome to new faculty members: J. David Cornett, Ph.D., is teaching Intro to Biology; Kenneth Dole, MHS, is teaching A&P 1 and Western Medical Terminology; and CSTCM grad Heather Conway (09), is teaching Western Medical Referral; New Student Orientation – May 2014 Welcome new clinic and teaching assistants: CSTCM grad Shannon Stevens (12) is assisting in Acu Meridian & Point Practicum 1 & 2. Welcome the following new Grad Care Clinic practitioners: CSTCM grads Caitlin Dilli (13), Sarah Spearman (12), and Scott Turpin (13). Welcome to the following new Observation Practitioners: CSTCM grads Caitlin Dilli (13), Sarah Spearman (12), and Scott Turpin (13). We often find personal items left in classrooms and around the school. The CSTCM Lost & Found is located in the Receptionist’s office. Also, students should always put their name in textbooks for easy identification in case they are lost. Anyone could claim a textbook if it doesn’t have a student’s name in the book. The CSTCM Internal Arts Club formed by student, now graduate and faculty member, Joe Wollen, has been taken over by current student Bradley Larsen. The goal is to spread awareness of internal arts and offer the community the chance to learn traditional Tai Chi Chuan of all styles, as well as Qi Gong and push hands. Thanks to Bradley for Acupuncture on an elephant at the Singapore Zoo organizing this club. We encourage everyone to participate. continued 4 NCCAOM news and exam dates, Clean Needle Technique Courses, CSTCM policy changes, student representative meetings, faculty meetings, etc. The bulletin boards are organized into sections like CSTCM workshops, other workshops, housing, for sale, national organizations, etc. Also you can use the suggestion boxes in the hall by classroom A and in the library for suggestions or comments. A reply to suggestions will be posted on the board periodically. CSTCM PROCEDURES/POLICIES The following is repeated in every newsletter to remind everyone of a few important policies and procedures. Please remember the file holders in the hall across from classroom A. Most forms and procedure/ guideline handouts that a student might need are stocked in these file holders. Students should inspect these forms and handouts and make sure they are using the most recent versions. Please notify the office if any file holders are empty. Check out the CSTCM website http://www.cstcm.edu. It continues to be updated. Please give any comments to Vladimir. We have added a “Study Aids” section to the CSTCM website. We will continue to add various links for helpful sites to assist students with study aids. We will soon have a new website; really we will. If anyone is experiencing phone messages or e-mails not being returned, please notify Vladimir DiBrigida with details of the problem. We have had a lot of problems in the past with the computers and printers in the library. Please treat them like they were your own. They continually seem to crash and need repair. Most areas of the school have wireless access for laptops; let us know of any problems. Please do not make over 8 copies at a time on the copier in the library (Room 202). The cost is 10 cents per copy. We have always had a usage policy, but the copier still gets over-used and always seems to need service. If you need to make over 8 copies, you must get permission from the Receptionist, the Librarian, or the library staff. Also, please do not print over 3 pages on the printer in the library. The copier in the Administrative Office is not for student use. Clinic Forum - July 2014 - Jim Harris Please make every effort to pick up around you when class is over and put back any tables and chairs that have been moved around. We also have had problems with the classrooms and the building being left unlocked, which has led to theft problems. Please, please, everyone make every effort to check that all windows are closed, the classroom doors are locked by the last person leaving the classroom, the handicap side door, and the building front door are all locked by 10:30 pm. The treatment tables in the classrooms also need to need to be locked up every night. Also, please turn off all lights at the end of the night classes and turn up/down thermostats. We want to continue to encourage all faculty, students, and graduates to join our state (AAC) http://acucol.com/ and national (AAAOM) www.aaaonline.org organizations to help support Oriental medicine in the U.S. Applications are available in the office or apply on-line. Our profession is relatively small in numbers and everyone has a voice as to the direction it will take in the future. Don‟t forget the "What‟s New Board" in the hall by classroom A. This is a way for the administration to communicate with students concerning issues like → 5 UPCOMING 2014 WORKSHOPS CSTCM scheduled workshops for 2014: - Distal Method Acupuncture for the Treatment of Disease, Nate Mohler, L.Ac., October 12; - Building and Preserving Wealth: Money Smarts, Getting Out of Your Own Way, Michael Gaeta, D.Ac., October 26; - Micro-current Point Stimulation (MPS): Pain Management and Scar Release Therapy, Rory Oetomo, L.Ac., PT, November 1-2; - The Power of Integrating Five Element Acupuncture with TCM; Abbye Silverstein, L.Ac., November 16; - Starting Up Right: Preparing to Create a Strong Practice, Michael Gaeta, D.Ac., L.Ac., December 7 Clinic Forum - July 2014 Scholarships for OM students Also see the flyers for the NCCAOM Exam Prep, CSTCM Proficiency Exam, and Tongue & Pulse workshops; free for all CSTCM students and graduates. Evergreen Hua-Tou Scholarship (deadline 11/30/13) https://www.evherbs.com/evshop/index.php?option=c om_content&view=article&id=112 All workshops and registration are available on our website. Parago Jones is working on arranging more workshops for 2014. Suggestions for workshops can be submitted to him. For more information see the flyers on the bulletin board as they are posted and check the CSTCM website. Mayway Scholarship Program https://www.mayway.com/store/scholarship.jsp Nuherbs Scholarships http://www.nuherbs.com/giving/scholarship Tylenol www.tylenol.com/page.jhtml?id=tylenol/news/subptys chol.inc CSTCM received a very nice thank you letter from the University of Colorado, Anschutz Medical Campus for supporting their CAM elective allowing residents to be treated, shadow Clinic Supervisors in the student clinic, and meet with the Clinic Director, Parago Jones for questions about AOM. They said this elective was one of the most popular among internal medicine residents. They will continue offering the elective in the 2014-2015 academic year. AARP www.aarp.org/aarp-foundation/ourwork/income/womens-scholarshipprogram/?cmp=RDRCTWSC_feb6_2012/content/view/1/1/ AAUW (Women only) http://www.aauw.org/what-we-do/educationalfunding-and-awards/ CSTCM STUDENT SERVICES Students can show their CSTCM ID Card and receive a free drink with a purchase at Chipotle; Apple, Microsoft, and Dell may still be giving discounts with an ID card; and standard discounts still apply around town like movie theaters and some restaurants. Please let us know if you find any other discounts so we can inform everyone. All CSTCM student services can be found in the CSTCM Student Services Guide. continued 6 2014. ALUMNI CORNER What are all you graduates doing out there? Any CSTCM Diploma graduates, who wish to obtain the M.S.T.C.M. or M.S.Ac. Degree, must meet all admissions requirements and curriculum of the programs at the time they enter the program. They should get a catalog from the office and submit an application and application fee. Graduates who are interested can also get an information sheet from the office on their Transfer Credit into the programs and courses they will need to take. The Fall 2014 Trimester begins September 1, 2014. Contact the office for a schedule. There are currently 13 graduates from the old Diploma program who have graduated with their M.S.TCM or M.S.Ac. Degree. We are interested in what our graduates are doing and your classmates and schoolmates would be interested also. Please let us know if you appear in any articles or on TV, publish anything on OM, teach any workshops, or are on the faculty or administration of another OM school. Are any graduates interested in forming a committee to create an alumni association? Please contact the Academic Dean if interested. Graduates, did you know that CSTCM receives 1-2 referral requests for acupuncturists each day? That‟s a potential of many new patients yearly. We will gladly provide your clinic information to these callers. Please send us your clinic information by sending your business cards, and in writing or e-mail (admin@cstcm.edu ) to request to be placed on the referral list. We need your name, name of clinic, address, phone number, treatment specialties, etc. Also, we are working on the CSTCM website and are adding a section for all of our grads with links to their clinic and website. If you are interested in having a link to your website, please email us the website link to (admin@cstcm.edu ). For more information contact the Receptionist, Kirsten Weeks. Missing Grads Melissa D’Arrigo (98), Patricia Householder (93), Darin Levine (98), Scott Misegadis (05), Mike Mitchell (96), Martin Pahl (96), Hyo Jin Park (05), Ai Sato (98), Kaeryn Silvera (03), Cari Saloch (99), Jessica Steyn (99), Jeffrey Taylor (99), Alejandra Vidarte (98), Cindy Wells (95). We continue to update our graduate database and want to be sure graduates receive surveys, newsletters, and flyers for upcoming workshops. Please contact the Academic Deans or Vladimir DiBrigida if you have not talked to them recently. CSTCM currently has 550 graduates (218 Diploma grads, 283 M.S.T.C.M. grads, and 49 M.S.Ac. grads). Again, we really would like to do more alumni updates each newsletter, as this has been a popular part of the newsletter. We would appreciate it if graduates would send us a brief note about what they are doing, marriages, births, etc. and contact info (phone or e-mail). We are sure other classmates and graduates would be interested, especially those that haven‟t stayed in contact. This alumni column could also be about students who have just graduated and what they have decided to do about practicing. Graduates can send us a note (attention George Kitchie) by mail, fax 303-388-8165, or e-mail admin@cstcm.edu. We are so sorry to announce the passing of CSTCM grad Karen Reising (07). She passed away in Virginia. CSTCM grad Chris Harrison (93) graduated from the American College of TCM‟s DAOM Program and is now working at the college as a Doctoral Program Academic Assistant and Continuing Education Coordinator. CSTCM grad MK Christian (96) was featured in a whisperingtree.net article on NADA and ear acupuncture. Any CSTCM graduates who need transcripts should go to http://cstcm.edu/transcripts. You can download and print the form, fill-out, and fax to 303-388-8165, or email to admin@cstcm.edu. CSTCM grad Marc Hanson (98) reports that he is loving Hawaii. CSTCM grad Martha Lucas (01) had an article published in Acupuncture Today; Anti-Aging: Educating Your Patients About The Skin, May → continued 7 We would like to thank all CSTCM students, grads and faculty who have referred prospective students to CSTCM. We deeply appreciate your loyalty and help with student recruitment. NCCAOM Another reminder, you can download a Candidate Handbook and Application and Recertification info at the National Commission for the Certification of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (NCCAOM), at http://www.nccaom.org/. We are always looking for grads or others with a bioscience background to teach bioscience courses and those with 5 years or more experience to teach TCM courses. If interested, please submit a CV and call the Academic Dean at 303-329-6355, ext 15. Students don‟t forget to check out the NCCAOM Online Practice Tests ($60-75 / 90-day subscription). NCCAOM Study Guides are updated (2014) and posted on the NCCAOM website. An informational exam webinar is on their website for students and school officials. We are still working on adding a list of our graduate’s and their clinic contact information to our website. We will send graduates a form to fillout to be included on the website. We will keep you posted. The NCCAOM is considering to only allow enrolled students to take exams in their last term. The NCCAOM is seeking feedback on the interest in creating other certification programs, such as Women‟s Health/Reproductive/Fertility, Integrative Hospital-based Practice, Mental Health, Facial Rejuvenation, etc. The 2013 Job Analysis Report has been published at http://www.nccaom.org/job-task-analysis-jtainformational-page. Random data showed that respondents were: 70% female; median age 50; 77% identified themselves as White/Caucasian; 10 years median experience; 67% held a Dipl. Ac. only; 42% were from the far west region; 26% worked 19 hours per week or less and 4% worked 60 hours or more; 35% worked part-time or less due to not enough new or returning patients; 59% were sole proprietors; 14% were also massage therapists; 79% saw 0-10 new patients per month; 28% saw 11-20 returning patients per month; $95 median first visit; $70 median followup visit; median income $52,000. CSTCM Photo Archives Graduating Class – Spring 1997 Todd (Greg) Bates, Fred Jennes, Stephanie Kinsman-Kelsey, Susan Kraus, David Leaver (Deceased), Kyle Liston, Robert Palmero, Lil Pettinato, Ron Sokol, Anna Tsang; John Doss pictured, but graduated Fall 1997. CLEAN NEEDLE TECHNIQUE COURSE SCHEDULE 2014 2014 CNT English Course Dates in Colorado: Exam Application Deadline Location 11/9/2014 9/9/2014 CSTCM [See schedule on bulletin board for other dates, locations, and most recent CNT info] 8 CCAOM AAAOM The Council of Colleges of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (CCAOM) will hold their Fall; 2014 Meetings in Oakland, CA, on November 10-13, at the Waterfront Plaza Hotel. George Kitchie, Vladimir DiBrigida will attend the meetings to represent CSTCM. Check out the American Association of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (AAAOM) website at www.aaaomonline.org. You can also checkout job postings on their website. The AAOM is also on Facebook at @aaaomonline. We encourage all graduates, administrators, students, and faculty to join the AAAOM to support the profession. CCAOM offers a CEU course on-line. The 3 credit course is titled CNT and Blood-Borne Pathogen Review and the cost is now $50, including course & certification; satisfies NCCAOM safety & ethics requirement. The course can be found at www.CCAOM.org. The AAAOM is still requesting donations to fund lobbying efforts related to OM on issues. The AAAOM has added special discounts with Stericycle for needle disposal as a new member benefit. CNT courses are being offered in China and Korea. According to Acupuncture Today, the AAAOM „s new President and interim Vice President are attempting to rebuild from the previous months of turmoil. AAC The AAC has an e-mail discussion group. It is only open to AAC members. You can send an e-mail introducing yourself to www.aacforum@egroups.com or www.aac-list-subscribe@yahoogroups.com .The AAC address is 4380 Harlan St, Suite 203, Wheat Ridge, CO 80033, phone 303-572-8744. Their website is http://acucol.com/ , and e-mail to AAC@NTW.net. The AAC is also now on Facebook at Acupuncture Association of Colorado. ACAOM The Accreditation Commission for Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (ACAOM) website, http://acaom.org/ . The website lists all accredited and candidate programs, ACAOM news, frequently asked questions, with other areas still under development. ACAOM has approved the Standards for a First Professional Doctorate (FPD) degree in Acupuncture and/or Oriental Medicine. The AAC now has their newsletter online at their website and membership renewal is available on the website. ACAOM continues to work on the Revised Masters Standards. They will soon apply to USDE to add Distance Education courses. Student membership is free while being enrolled. Go to http://acucol.com/amember/signup.php. AAC‟s Annual Conference 2015 will be Saturday, April 25 in Colorado Springs. See the website for details. We encourage all graduates, students, administrators, and faculty to join the AAC in order to support the profession. shu da hu sun san Literally: When the tree falls, the monkeys scatter. Usage: When a leader loses power, his followers become disorganized. This proverb id often used to describe fair-weather friends. CSTCM Student Interns - February 2014 9 ITM NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL ORIENTAL MEDICINE NEWS Institute of Traditional Medicine (ITM) on-line has an internal java based search engine to quickly find any topic. Check out the ITM website: http://www.itmonline.org/. The ITM Start Group Journals are one of the best OM journals published, especially related to Chinese herbal medicine. The full set is in the library in 3-ring binders, from 1999 to 2005, when they stopped publishing the journal. Kentucky received full licensure for acupuncturists, changing from a certified to a licensed profession. PRACTICE MANAGEMENT The following is from an article by Timothy I. Suh, in The American Acupuncturist, Spring 2014, titled Practice Management in Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine. ACUPUNCTURE TODAY POLLS Acupuncture Today did the following polls over the past few months: The author stated that practice management courses are a rarity in AOM schools. One small study showed that 30% of participants suggested business and practice management courses were needed to help prepare for the first year of practice and 34% wanted to learn practice management through a mentorship process. What is the biggest issue affecting the profession in 2014? Increased research to prove the efficacy of acupuncture Greater inclusion of acupuncture in managed healthcare plans Dry needling Licensure issues 44% 44% 36% 8% In another small study, 58% worked 30 hours or less per week; 27% worked 31 to 40 hours per week; and 15% worked more than 40 hours per week. 25% stated they net less than $10,000; 59% stated they net $40,00 or less; and 40% stated they grossed less than $40,000. Are you currently involved in taking a stand against dry needling in your state? Yes No Planning on it 43% 38% 19% The survey showed that 65% too at least one practice management course outside of their AOM program; 15% took 3-4 courses; and 11% took more than 10 courses. What areas of training do you think most acupuncturists need more of? Business classes Acupuncture methods Legal issues 63% 25% 12% This survey ultimately suggests that many data factors indicate that there may not be an association between AOM practice management courses taught and the financial success of the AOM practitioner How do you market yourself? As an acupuncturist As an Oriental medicine doctor As a TCM practitioner As a healer 66% 16% 14% 4% You can subscribe to their free e-newsletter at acupuncturetoday.com. Check their classifieds for Practices for Sale and Job Opportunities. From wonder into wonder, existence opens. Lao Zi 10 RECENT ORIENTAL MEDICINE IN THE MAINSTREAM MEDIA EMERGENCY: TRUE STORIES FROM THE NATION’S ERS ABC, A Close-up Look at Acupuncture for Pain, 4/2214; Time, New Medicine: At on Ohio hospital, patients get herbs as well as drugs, 4/28/14; Prevention, Answers: Lower Back Pain, Submit to Needles, May 2014; Townsend Letter, Researcher Finds Acupuncture Effective or any Conditions, May 2014; Natural Health, There‟s An Herb For That (Dang Gui, Gui Zhi), May/June 2014; Put a Pin in It (acupuncture), Sept/Oct 2014; PBS, Channel 12, KBDI, Chinese Medicine Master, 6/11/14; Denver Post, Fitness: Ayurveda? Reiki? They May Hold Relief (Acupressure, Acupuncture), 617/14; Your Hub: Urban Herbs, Medicine About the Community, 7/31/14. In a book titled – Emergency: True Stories from the Nations ERs, by Mark Brown, M.D., emergency-room doctors and nurses from across the United States share their most memorable stories from today’s war zone of medicine: the emergency room. The following is an ongoing column in the newsletter from the book. Perseverance A young male entered the walk-in entrance to our ER one busy Sunday afternoon shift, holding a hand over a bloodstained shirt. When the overwhelmed triage nurse didn‟t acknowledge him for several minutes, he calmly walked to the registration desk and informed the startled clerk that he had been shot in the chest. After the man was rushed to our trauma room, his unluckiest-ever story unfolded. CELEBRITIES & AOM Vincenzo NIbali, of Team Astana, won the Tour de France this year. He touts how little details like getting acupuncture treatments can make a difference. Team Astana appeared to be the only team to bring its own acupuncturist. Team members are treated twice a day, once before stages and once at night. It seems that he had been depressed for several weeks, and two days earlier he had decided to commit suicide. He took a bottle of Valium and a fifth of vodka and fell asleep in his bed, fully intending to never wake up again. Unfortunately, the combination was not lethal, and he did wake up, albeit 36 hours later, with a tremendous hangover. Deciding that something else was needed to complete the job, he filled up the bathtub, got in, and slit both wrists with a razor blade. Alas, the bleeding was all venous and clotted off after several minutes, leaving him sitting in a pink-tinged lukewarm bathtub. Last year, singer Carnie Wilson, used acupuncture to treat Bell‟s Palsy. AOM APPS All apps available from http://www.apple.com/iphone/from-the-app-store/ and many other app sources. He climbed out of the bathtub and decided to hang himself from the dining room light fixture using his belt. The light fixture tore from the ceiling and he crashed to the floor with such force that he fell through the dining room floor into the basement. Battered but not beaten, he looked around the basement for something to finish the job. He found a .22 caliber bullet but no gun. He decided to hold the bullet with a pair of pliers and, pressing it against his sternum, took several whacks at the compression end of it, with a ball-peen hammer. On the third whack the bullet went off. He fell to the floor and looked down to see a bullet hole on the left side of his chest. After lying on the floor for 20 minutes, he decided that maybe he really did not want to die and drove himself the ER. The bullet had bounded off a rib. NA Akron, Ohio 11 AOM IN MEDICAL JOURNALS & RESEARCH AT MAINSTREAM UNIVERSITIES MD DOCTORS TALK ABOUT THEMSELVES In a book titled M.D. Doctors Talk About Themselves, by medical Arthritis Research & Therapy, Arthritis Knee Pain Eased by Chinese Medicine, July 2014 Brain Imaging & Behavior, Verum and sham acupuncture affect different brain regions, April 12, 2014 Clinical & Experimental Ophthalmology, Acupuncture may improve vision in patients with retinitis pigmentosa, May 2014 Clinical Rehabilitation, Tai chi improves balance in Parkinson’s patients, February 11, 2014 British Medical Journal, Acupuncture outperforms counseling and usual care for depressed patients with pain, May 2014 International Journal of Women’s Health, Acupuncture for women’s reproductive health, March 17, 2014 Journal of the American Geriatric Society, Tai chi improves cognitive function in elders, January 2, 2014 Journal of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, Acupuncture Lowers Hypertension - New Biology, April 23, 2014 Journal of Caffeine, Caffeine inhibits analgesic effect of acupuncture, 2013 Journal of Clinical Endocrinology, Chinese herb reduce progression of diabetes, February 2014 Menopause, Acupuncture better than herbs for menopausal hot flushes, May 13, 2014 Spine Journal, Acupuncture effective for sciatica, October 4, 2013 Whipps Cross University Hospital and University College of London Hospital, Acupuncture Controls Overactive Bladder, July 2014 World Journal of Gastroenterology, Acupuncture effective for IBS, February 21, 2014 journalist John Pekkanen, doctors are portrayed by a portrait that sometimes damns, sometimes exalts but always humanizes the men and women who spend their lives meeting human suffering head on. The true stories come from interviews with doctors from all over the country. The following is an ongoing column in the newsletter from the book. Colleagues (continued) A woman called me at home at midnight and said she‟d just heard about me, and that I sounded like just the doctor she‟d always been looking for. She said she‟d been to dozens of doctors for her problem, but none of them were understanding. I asked her what her problem was. “There are electric shocks emanating from my body,” she said “They‟re from a powerful, evil force, probably the CIA.” There‟s a neurosurgeon at my hospital I really don‟t like, so I explained to her that I was an internist and told her she really needed to see a neurosurgeon. Then I gave her his name and telephone number and told her to call him. INTERESTING BIOSCIENCE STUDY WEBSITES YUNNAN BAIYAO FORCED TO REVEAL SECRET FORMULA Images for A&P http://www.google.com/search?q=anatomy+physiolog y&start=10&hl=en&sa=N&rlz=1T4GGLD_enUS312U S312&biw=999&bih=504&prmd=ivnsb&tbm=isch&tbo =u&source=univ&ei=ehc8Tvy6EK_FsQLVvuQd&ved =0CHMQsAQ4Cg Yunnan Baiyao was developed in 1902 in Yunnan Province, by Qu Huanzhang. In China it enjoyed a similar reputation to the discovery and development of penicillin in the West. It has always been designated as a Class-1 protected traditional Chinese medicine formula, which allowed its producer to keep the formula a secret. A&P Practice Questions http://academic.pgcc.edu/~aimholtz/AandP/P racticeQuestions/ANPquestions.html Guidelines for the publication of ingredients were revised and Yunnan Baiyao reluctantly published the ingredients. It showed that Yunnan Baiyao contained the potentially toxic caowu or duanchangcao. The producer explained that it was safe after the company‟s unique processing of the herb. A&P Review Questions – http://ansonbiology.info/A&P_Review_Question_eBooks/3600+_Review_Questions_Volume2.pdf Bioscience Flashcards http://www.flashcardexchange.com/ The China FDA issued a notification last year that all Chinese medicinal drinks that contained ingredients classified as toxic must have continued Anatomy Quizzes (also for iPhone/iPad) – http://www.mobilefiledownload.com/anatomy-quiz-16-iphone-ipad-and-ipod-touch/ 12 funding is key to addressing any physician shortages, will lead to the production of more residents, and reduces financial burden imposed by becoming a physician. This wisdom results in advocacy for increasing DME funding, but DME financing does little to offset the cost of training physicians. Residents essentially pay the full cost of their training, while the DME program simply transfers money to recipient hospitals. IME is more controversial, in terms of both the accuracy of the costs that are reimbursed and the underlying concept. ingredient notes that detail the toxins and a warning. PREPARED TRADITIONAL CHINESE MEDICINES GUIDEBOOK FOR TREATING INFECTIOUS DISEASES Chinese TCM experts plan to compile a guidebook for clinical application of ready-made TCM medicines. The project will be carried out by scholars from the State Administration of TCM, China Press of TCM and China Academy of Chinese Medicine Sciences. Some economists believe that residents, not the hospital where they obtain their training, bear the full cost of their education; they accept lower wages during training that offset training‟s significant costs. For example, if the total cost of training a resident is $80,000 annually but his or her services generate $130,000 in hospital revenue, then the resident would appropriately be paid a salary of $50,000, the difference between the two. The compiling and publishing of the book is aimed at standardizing the use of TCM, which has helped Chinese people overcome plagues in ancient times and has proved effective in treating modern diseases including SARS and H1N1 influenza in recent years. Prepared TCM medicines are in pills, capsules, tablets, oral liquids or granular forms. THE ECONOMICS OF GRADUATE MEDICAL EDUCATION Why are residents paid wages whereas medical students pay tuition? Both receive some amount of training and education and provide some amount of services, but the relative valuation of and time devoted to services received and services provided differs dramatically. Medical students provide relatively minor amounts of service, acting mostly as apprentices or observers. The primarily receive costly education in basic and clinical sciences; thus they pay tuition. The following is taken from an article in The New England Journal of Medicine, June 19, 2014. A central health care-related policy question for the US is whether the federal government‟s role in financing graduate medical education (GME) increases the number of physicians trained and influences their specialty choices by subsidizing the cost of training. Total federal GME funding amounts to nearly $16 billion annually. Medicare is the largest federal government contributor to GME, providing $9.5 billion and almost $3 billion for direct medical education (DME), to pay the salaries of residents and supervising physicians, and about $6.5 billion for indirect medical education (IME), to subsidize the higher costs that hospitals incur when they run training programs. Federal Medicaid spending adds another $2 billion for GME, and an additional $4 billion comes from the Veterans Health Administration and the Health Resources and Services Administration. States support GME through nearly $4 billion in Medicaid spending. Residents receive some direct educational benefits, and their practice during training can incur costs for the hospital. But, residents provide substantial amounts of service to patients, thereby generating substantial revenues for their hospitals, particularly after their first year of residency. A different justification for federal residency funding is that it provides hospitals that treat indigent populations with a needed financial infusion. But, the Affordable Care Act can provide these people care, so that justification is weakened. Ultimately, it is important to recognize that achieving st the goals that have been deemed desirable for 21 century health care will require much more than expanding the GME program under the pretext of solving the physician shortage. The conventional wisdom is that increasing GME → 13 cost that must be recouped from customers. Some argue this cost should be eliminated from figuring the cost of the drug. YOUR SHOES CAN TELL YOUR AGE! Try this and see: Others critics argue that taxpayers subsidize about half of company research costs through credits and deductions granted to drug companies. Also, many clinical trials are funded by the National Cancer Institute and foundations. 1. Take your shoe size (no half sizes, round up) 2. Multiply it by 5 3. Add 50 4. Multiply by 20 The industry price is also based on a sample of the most costly fifth of new drugs, not the average for all drugs. 5. Add 1013 6. Subtract the year you were born Critics say that clinical trials in cancer are smaller and shorter than trials for other diseases, so trial costs should be smaller. The first digit is your shoe size and the last 2 digits are your age! But, sometimes the age can come up 1 year younger than you are. Maybe that is good. Estimated costs for research are inflated by backing in a large estimate for the cost of basic research, say critics. No accurate estimate exists because the costs of discovery vary s much, from an inexpensive luck break to a costly 30-year search before a new drug is discovered. It is shoe magic. CANCER RX: THE $100,000 MYTH The article suggests that pharmaceutical companies are price-gouging. In addition, some companies raise the prices on some of their older drugs by 20% to 25% a year. The following is taken from an article in the AARP Bulletin, May 2014. Every patient with cancer wants the most effective treatment, but drug prices have become staggering. Eleven of the new cancer drugs approved in 2012 were priced above $100,000 annually, and a 20% to 30% copayment can make them unaffordable even for well-insured patients. Companies say that the high process reflects high research costs, and the prices reflect the added benefits of curing or controlling cancer. However, it is questionable whether these new drugs are better than the old ones. Only one of the 12 new cancer drugs approved in 2012 helps patients survive more than 2 months longer. The most famous industry-sponsored estimate claims that it costs on average $1.3 billion to develop a new drug and get it approved. This includes the cost of failures. Half that estimate is not research cost, but rather a high figure for profits that companies would have made if they had invested their research money in stocks and bonds instead. Profits forgone is a common way of estimating whether it is worthwhile to undertake a new project. But some argue not a → Five million babies have been conceived through in-vitro fertilization since 1989. About half of those babies were born in the past six years. 14 10% of Americans take 5 or more drugs daily; 50% take at least 1 drug Researchers have ID‟d a rare mutation that spurs the growth of fat cells and spikes blood sugar. It could lead to the group of symptoms known as metabolic syndrome (obesity, hypertension, and Type 2 diabetes); but few people carry the mutation. DNA isn‟t always to blame. Solvents have been linked to memory problems 30 years after exposure in people whose jobs require working with the chemicals. For the average joe, the risk is unclear, so when you redo the living room, protect yourself. The skin of red grapes contains resveratrol, a powerful polyphenol that has been shown in labs and animals to fight cell aging. But researchers in, where else, Chianti found that drinking wine did not alone reduce the risk of cancer, heart disease or early death. AMERICA ON DRUGS If you looked at only the numbers, you would think the U.S. practically runs on Prozac and heart-related pills. These are the most prescribed medications, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Today, 50% of Americans take at least one pill a day, and many of those drugs can be lifesaving (or at least life-enhancing). But the CDC report also pointed to troubling uptick in the use and abuse of opioid painkillers, which can lead to addiction and, in extreme, death from overdose. BODY OF WORK The following are some other facts from the CDC report: The brain has 85 billion neural cells and 150 trillion synapses. These are its electrical connections, its possibilities. Even if you add up the brain‟s entire energy consumption, it‟s a mere 23 watts (for a typical person consuming 2,400 calories daily). Still the brain uses a whopping 20% of the body‟s energy despite taking up only 2% of the body‟s mass. Percentages of Americans ages 18 to 64 on: Heart drugs 17.7% Cholesterol lowering drugs 10.7% Antidepressants 10.6% Painkillers 10.5% Acid-reflux meds 9% The nervous system‟s activity, which peaks between ages 22 and 27 and starts to diminish thereafter, is of course the control system for a myriad other internal motions. The well-known ones are our breaths and heartbeats. U.S. spending on prescription drugs $263 billion The heart beats 2.5 billion times in a lifetime. The 5 quarts of blood an adult male continually pumps (4 quarts for women), flow at an average speed of 3 to 4 mph. Vaccines work; only 2% of U.S. deaths are caused by pneumonia and influenza 80% reduction in deaths from HIV since 1996, thanks to effective anti-retrovirals Reflex signals travel at 250 mph. Thought signals travel at 70 mph. Pain travels at 3 mph. Lymph fluid moves at ¼ inch per minute. Air intake averages 2 gallons per minute. Food travels through the esophagus at ¾ inch per second. Urine flows 1/3 to ½ ounce per second. Blinking takes 1/10 second and happens about 10 times per minute. The cell can make a protein in 10 seconds. The fastest sneeze was recorded at 102 mph and a sneeze can release 40,000 particles at high speed. 300% increase in use of prescription painkillers over the past decade; opioid-overdose deaths have tripled In 1994, 0.8% of Americans under 18 were prescribed ADHD drugs; in 2010, 4.2% 5% of insured Americans and 22% of the uninsured failed to fill a prescription because they couldn‟t afford it. → 15 WORLDS TALLEST MAN BEST SCHOLARSHIP SEARCH ENGINES Turkey‟s Sultan Kosen, at 2.51 meters (8‟ 3”) is the world‟s tallest man. In 2013 he wed a Syrian woman who is 1.7 meters (5‟ 7”). Scholarship.com provides the best possibilities overall but has many ads and mismatches. The College Board‟s BigFuture.CollegeBoard.org is fast, ad-free, but lists scholarships only alphabetically. His growth has resulted from a tumor affecting his pituitary gland. In 2010, U.S. doctors treated his tumor using gamma rays. In 2012, the doctors said he has overcome his acromegaly, a rare hormonal disorder. He must use crutches in order to walk. Cappex.com gives useful info on competition for awards and the effort needed to apply. Zinch.com has the best designed website, easy to use. FastWeb.com clearly labels promotional scholarships but is full of ads. ADVERTISING Mailed subscriptions are available to the newsletter at a cost of $20.00 per year / 3 issues. ADVERTISING RATES Ads must be digital. Full Page 7.25w x 10.25 Half Page 7.25w x 5 Quarter Page 3.5w x 5 Business Card 2 x 3 1/2 Simple classified ad up to 6 lines 16 $100.00 $60.00 $35.00 $15.00 $10.00