I think the "intuitive" point here is that MD's don't touch or manipulate their patients hardly at all -- unless it's with a scalpel! It makes sense that a body that is clearly "bio-mechanical"should be handled. I trust what I see here. What I find weird is a guy in a lab coat who wants to do anything but touch you to treat you!
It does not hurt that much. It looks like just moving the knee cap which anyone (I am not saying you should) Could do. Along with a few pressure points
Most chinese medicine(at least as far as physical therapy goes) is exceptionally effective, however it is painful by american standards, since we are mostly used to slow, progressive and relatively painless treatments. But when you give it a bit of thought, would you rather endure an hour of agony and regain health immediately, when the other option is several weeks of traction? (This is an extreme example of course). Its all up to personal preference(And availability, of course)!
Id definitely go for the hour of agony and much quicker better health - the weeks of relatively painless treatment don't always work anyway (I speak from experience).
Sadly I doubt this would be available here in the UK - no doubt health & safety would have a fit!
You'd be surprised! I know Errol Lynch(A practicioner of TCM- traditional chinese medicine- specialising in "tuina" is in Britain somewhere). Look up his videos, just look up Tuina and you'll see a bunch from user ERROLLYNCH. I'm sure if you ask him he'll tell you where his clinic is :) Although tuina is somewhat gentler than this- which appears to be a sort of bonesetting.
Oops, meant to say "I know Errol Lynch has some uploaded". Didn't meant to imply I knew him, d'oh. Lol. Anyways you get what I mean. Hope you found the vids/clinic ok!
Same here! Right now I practise holistic medicine as a hobby- Rolfing, myofascial, shiatsu, etc. Hopefully i can get an internship over at a clinic in China for a few years and integrate TCM plus a plethora of other manipulations.
famous doctor, shity desk
angus506 1 year ago
@angus506 Haha! Hahaha
halfhigh 4 months ago
0:04 "Ella No Toma la Medicina" o "Mesera"...
cybergreed38 1 year ago
@cybergreed38 Estoy bastante seguro de que no habla español, ja ja
WildBillHickums 1 year ago
hooray he can asian squat now
karlbrahz 1 year ago
I thought your knees weren't supposed to move like that.
TheTime2listen 1 year ago
@TheTime2listen no bend sideways not move
runescapedude47 1 year ago
@TheTime2listen the kneecap is supposed to move like that! if you sit down with your leg in front of you extended you can move it really freely ! :D
Raxmole 1 year ago
Comment removed
mikexlarry 1 year ago
heh dr zhang!! I met him before in shanghai, as the dr i was following at the time, is his student...
mikexlarry 1 year ago
WHOA THE KNEE CAP IS NOT SUPPOSED TO DO THAT THE FUCK DID SHE DO TO IT
jonlscott 1 year ago
Comment removed
samjl4 1 year ago
gross.........
zfair3850 1 year ago
The woman is kinda irritating
yoonweijie2 1 year ago
I think the "intuitive" point here is that MD's don't touch or manipulate their patients hardly at all -- unless it's with a scalpel! It makes sense that a body that is clearly "bio-mechanical"should be handled. I trust what I see here. What I find weird is a guy in a lab coat who wants to do anything but touch you to treat you!
robsdogAR 2 years ago 23
Well a lot of medical practice these-days is just information management.
Doctors assess the patient (collect info), then prescribe the correct meds (give info).
roidroid 2 years ago 5
@robsdogAR I really need to tighten my knee cap after watchin this....its TOO GROSS
MisterJohnny2887 1 year ago
i need this, my knee cap is f---ed.
crazyAsoccerAdude 3 years ago 7
i cant watch. looks really painful
shindarou 3 years ago
eek that looks painful.
dreaminofcalifornia1 3 years ago
he speaks 3 dialects in this vid haha
TheKoukiMonster 3 years ago 14
It does not hurt that much. It looks like just moving the knee cap which anyone (I am not saying you should) Could do. Along with a few pressure points
CyberDragonZero 3 years ago
Yikes! One of the weirdest Chinese cures I've seen. That looks like it hurts like a mofo.
I won't say it doesn't work because I haven't had it done to me, but I won't say it does. But it does look like it fix knee pain.
anastu 3 years ago
Wow! I wonder if this would benefit me! I mean, seriously! That is Amazing!
Thanks for sharing!
somewheregone 3 years ago
fascinating; but it looks painful.
Tracy137 3 years ago
Most chinese medicine(at least as far as physical therapy goes) is exceptionally effective, however it is painful by american standards, since we are mostly used to slow, progressive and relatively painless treatments. But when you give it a bit of thought, would you rather endure an hour of agony and regain health immediately, when the other option is several weeks of traction? (This is an extreme example of course). Its all up to personal preference(And availability, of course)!
SkanRashke 3 years ago
Id definitely go for the hour of agony and much quicker better health - the weeks of relatively painless treatment don't always work anyway (I speak from experience).
Sadly I doubt this would be available here in the UK - no doubt health & safety would have a fit!
Tracy137 3 years ago
You'd be surprised! I know Errol Lynch(A practicioner of TCM- traditional chinese medicine- specialising in "tuina" is in Britain somewhere). Look up his videos, just look up Tuina and you'll see a bunch from user ERROLLYNCH. I'm sure if you ask him he'll tell you where his clinic is :) Although tuina is somewhat gentler than this- which appears to be a sort of bonesetting.
SkanRashke 3 years ago
I will hunt down his vids and have a look, thanks. :O)
Tracy137 3 years ago
Oops, meant to say "I know Errol Lynch has some uploaded". Didn't meant to imply I knew him, d'oh. Lol. Anyways you get what I mean. Hope you found the vids/clinic ok!
SkanRashke 3 years ago
yea im a physical therapy major and i plan on incorporating TCM to my practice when i'm done with school
TheKoukiMonster 3 years ago
Same here! Right now I practise holistic medicine as a hobby- Rolfing, myofascial, shiatsu, etc. Hopefully i can get an internship over at a clinic in China for a few years and integrate TCM plus a plethora of other manipulations.
SkanRashke 3 years ago
wow thats fascinating! thanks for the upload.
qloudz 3 years ago