About the American Institute of Acupuncture
Traditional Chines medicine refers to ideas,
experiences, and substances that have been handed down generation to generation
from ancient times, where the origins are obscure but where the continuity of
basic understanding has been assured by a formal structure. Among the primary
traditional medical systems still active today are in the Chinese, Tibetan, and
Indian (Ayurvedic).
AIA enriches the lives of people seeking traditional medicine knowledge and
services by clarifying the nature of traditional medicine and demonstrating how
it can be utilized in the modern Wellness and Health setting. To accomplish
this goals, the AIA performs 5 basic functions:
1. It operates one clinical facilities, the Acuherb Clinic. This clinic has been providing acupuncture,
Chinese herb therapies, and Massage therapy primarily for patients with serious
ailments that can clearly benefit from effective adjunctive therapies, though
all are welcome so long as they follow program protocol. The clinic serves as a
charitable outlet for AIA's clinical activities. Also this clinic is a mixed
therapies clinic offering naturopathic medicine, acupuncture, therapeutic
massage, Chinese herbs, and modern medicine. It is a demonstration clinic that
illustrates a potential new model for integrative health care. In addition,
AIA provides consulting to other clinics that wish to follow the presentation
method or the therapies that are available at these clinics. Selected students
at local acupuncture colleges, can get advanced training at these clinics.
2. It
provides numerous educational materials, primarily articles written by Wang.
Currently, over 2,000 pages of such articles are in the AIA Journals. Dr.
Wang provides free consulting to practitioners to aid in their understanding
of herbs, issues related to traditional medicine, individual patients, and
practice methods.
3. It conducts background research in traditional
medicine, including medical journal searches in China (carried out by Dr. Jidong Zhang in Nanjing University of Traditional Chinese
Medicine) and computer searches here in the U.S.
4. It provides specially designed herbal
formulations for use in the AIA clinics and by practitioners who read AIA's
literature. These formulas integrate the study of Chinese medicine into the
practice of Chinese medicine. The
formulas most of them based on
traditional Chinese medicine principles. AIA also maintains a pharmacy of
dried extracts, following the method of herb use that is dominant in Japan,
Korea, and Taiwan. These dried extracts (granules) are used to make
personalized formulations or formulas that are used in doses higher than suited
to tablets.
5. AIA supports
traditional environments where traditional medicine can be preserved and
organize Taiji, Qigong Club to help people's wellness
life style. And provides information to other organizations, such as the
magazines, news reporters, and researchers, upon request. AIA is frequently
cited as a source for reliable information on herbal therapies.
Most AIA's employees are mainly acupuncturists and
massage therapists, and AIA has affiliate organizations in Taiwan and China.
To
better understand the work of AIA, please read more here.