East or West? Both works best

By Todd Balazovic (China Daily)
Updated: 2008-04-18 14:43

It was during her time working with Dr Cooley at the Texas Heart Center in 1982 that Moncure first witnessed the power of Eastern medicine.

After discovering that one of their patients had a strong negative reaction to anesthesia, Moncure and her fellow pioneers at the Texas Heart Center decided to take an unconventional approach. They flew in a TCM practitioner, who used acupuncture in place of anesthesia. The patient felt no pain and the operation proved to be a smashing success.

Witnessing first hand the power of Eastern medical practices opened Moncure's eyes and mind to TCM. Several years later, after feeling unnatural levels of fatigue, Moncure decided to use the technique on herself.

Enlisting the help of two doctors scripted in Western medicine and TCM she recalls how well both methods seemed to mix and match.

"I watched the two of them work so well together, we blended both styles, and I am convinced that that's the only way to go," Moncure says.

The success of the treatment was so convincing that she recently began developing a branch in the United Family Hospitals and Clinics in Beijing devoted to the fusion of traditional Chinese and Western medicines. A branch she appropriately calls Integrative Medicine.

"We're in China, why not bring the two worlds together?" she says.

But medicine from the East has not always been viewed so openly in the United States. In 1989, while taking pictures of a hospital she was working at in Charlotte, North Carolina, Moncure remembers running into a patient being treated by Eastern medicine.

"There was this glistening up and down her back, it was acupuncture needles, and she looked almost like a peacock or something," says Moncure.

She says she did not use any of the photos of the procedure, because she feared that the unusual image would baffle the local community.

Such misunderstanding no longer exists in the US. "Now Eastern medicine is a multi-billion dollar industry in the US, people have embraced Eastern medicine through yoga, through herbal remedies and through other traditional Chinese methods," Moncure says.

She first arrived in China two years ago after spending several years in India helping develop the infrastructure for the Indraprastha Apollo Hospital as a manager for the Indraprastha Medical Co Ltd.

Under her direction, the hospital became the first Joint Commission International-accredited hospital in India.

With more than 20 years of managerial experience, Moncure has spent time working as a medical leader in the US, UK, India, France and Switzerland.

Recently, Moncure and an army of well-trained phlebotomists from the United Family Hospitals and Clinics network, in association with the Chaoyang blood administration, held a blood drive at the Expat Show that took place in the China World Trade Center exhibition hall.

Their goal, apart from building up pre-Olympic blood bank supplies, was to find RH negative donors. It is estimated that only 0.03 percent of Han Chinese are RH negative, compared to 15 percent of Western populations.

Attempts to stockpile valuable medical resources such as RH negative blood are being seen more and more as the medical community gears up for the rush of foreign crowds during the Olympic Games.

Moncure says the Chinese medical community is well prepared for the upcoming Games.

"For the Olympics, I think that the biggest challenge is going to be that we have communication. We should be able to communicate with the patients coming in," she says.

For the United Family Hospitals, however, the ability to speak and communicate with patients should not pose a problem. The hospital's medical providers, in addition to English, Spanish, French, German, and Arabic, are well versed in most Chinese dialects. For the less common languages, the hospital employs the use of several interpretation services.

(China Daily 04/18/2008 page19)

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