Western holistic treatments are based on TCM or 'Traditional Chinese Medicine'. The key components of TCM are as follows:
Qi (pronounced like "chee") - this is the vital energy necessary for life (blood, body fluid)
Zang-Fu - the internal organs; and Jing-Luo: - this governs the meridian and collateral systems of the body. (Brown, 2001)
Practitioners of TCM also used a system referred to as "The Eight Principles" which are used to categorize illness or disease. These eight principles are comprised of "four pairs of polarities, including:
interior/exterior;
hot/cold;
deficiency/excess; and Yin/Yang." (Brown, 2001)
These principles are stated to determine:
1) Disease location;
2) the nature of imbalance;
3) the presence of a pathological (disease) factors; and 4) the strength of the body's own energies. (Brown, 2001)
Summary and Conclusion
Ayurvedic medicine is much older than the holistic systems of treatment being used in the Western world however, the Western world does make use of the traditional Chinese medicines at a greater rate than every before. Ayurvedic medicine does complement the use of other medicines and is many times used in combination with other alternative holistic treatments in the West. Predictions are for the growth of Ayurveda and other holistic healing systems growth in the years to come.
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Ayurveda and Western Science: Compare and Contrast
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In contrast to other work in this field, this book views alternative health as a social movement, and shows commonalities between the cultural left and the religious right that can help form a new healthcare paradigm. National Center for Complimentary and Alternative Medicine 2000 Expanding Horizons of Healthcare: Five-year Strategic Plan, 2001-2005. National Institute of Health Publication No. 01-5001. Gaithersburg, Maryland: National Institutes of Health. In this report, the National Center for Complementary and
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