anthropology in this regard should put the “old wine in a new bottle”; that is, examine and reconstruct the classical contents of Chinese cultural context from a
posttraditional perspective.
For further development of the qigong curriculum, what has been presented so far in this chapter may provide a rough guideline. In addition, some components of the
qigong training program include the following:
1. Introduction of
the traditional point of view, which distinguishes tradition from traditionalism (this is essential).
2. Integration from a dialectic synthesis of TCM and modern science.
3. Relaxation theory and practice.
4. Significance of regulating the body.
5. Basic posture of regulating the body (rooting, centering, and balancing).
6. Choice of positions in qigong exercise.
7. Introduction to the action of consciousness, implicit consciousness, and mindful/mindless qigong.
8. Tactics of generating conscious awareness, holding attention within, and stopping of thoughts.
9. Strategies for developing inner serenity and control over involuntary functions.
10. How to solicit transcendent intuition and understand it.
11. How to best use this symbolism by relating to Jungian theory.
12. Different approaches to qigong respiration.
13. General keys to regulating normal respiration.
14. Duration and other training requirements.
At present, Zou Du University in the Hai Ding District in Beijing offers a two-year training course for potential practitioners, and Tianjin University in Hebei province
also offers four quarterly medical qigong classes yearly. Short-term workshops and seminars have also been provided by TCM colleges, such as the Qigong Institute
of the TCM Academy of Shanghai, and universities, such as the Beijing Institute of Technology and Beijing University of Agriculture and Engineering in China. Both
the duration of training and the training requirements vary according to the goals and backgrounds of the students. Given that qigong is a form of TCM, Western
students may need a longer duration of training and more training requirements to reach the same goals. The curriculum components listed previously are geared for
trainees of qigong healers.
Quality Assurance
Until recently, few well-designed studies of medical qigong's efficacy have been recognized by mainstream researchers. To demonstrate medical qigong's efficacy by
ruling out the placebo effect and other alternative explanations, a double-blind and well-controlled design is necessary according to the standards of conventional
medicine. Admittedly, this evaluative process is not sufficient because the conventional approach is generally reductionistic, mechanistic, and outcome-oriented. As
such, it is less likely to evaluate a whole picture of the vital organism as well as the therapeutic process involved. To that end,
Geisteswissenschaften—the German
term for holistic human studies—should be applied to explore the therapeutic phenomena observed in the medical qigong process.
Geisteswissenschaften includes
phenomenology, hermeneutics, and so forth and is especially useful for carrying out studies that are embedded in the Chinese cultural context (
2
,
45
,
46
).
Unfortunately, few researchers use this approach to conduct the study of qigong.
Moreover, longitudinal follow-up of qigong healing is also required to confirm the long-term effect. Otherwise, qigong therapy may
just work like a drain opener, which
can only open the clogged drain for a while but cannot keep the water flowing forever. As far as we know, most longitudinal follow-up studies of qigong and other TCM
modalities have continued for only 6 months. Because the efficacy of qigong healing remains to be confirmed and the operational mechanism of qigong needs to be
demonstrated, quality assurance is difficult and often filled with controversy. Still, for the sake of the patients' physical, psychological, and financial concerns, such
measures should be attempted.
L
ICENSURE AND
C
ERTIFICATION
In the past two decades, there has been a rapid rise in the popularity of medical qigong as a form of therapy in China, where the official position has been “not to
publicize and not to deny.” This position means they accept but do not advocate it. On November 19, 1989, the Chinese Ministry of Public Health introduced on a trial
basis 14 regulations regarding medical qigong, and the Central Traditional Chinese Medicine Bureau tightened its control over qigong masters (
47
). Some of these
regulations may be adapted to other countries, as shown in the following list:
1. If a person provides treatment by emitting
chi, he or she has to apply to the medicine section or the medical administration for approval to practice. If the
treatment of 30 cases of the same kind is statistically confirmed as effective by the authorities, a certificate will then be issued to the applicant to provide such
specific type of treatment.
2. The treatment effect must be demonstrated longitudinally as well. Moreover, not only should the treatment outcome be examined, but the processes of learning
and providing service need to be monitored as well. The best way to do this is to require students to be interns or apprentices in a qigong hospital and clinic for
a certain period of time before taking the license examination. During their internship they can build up the 30 clinical cases under supervision for their
examination, and their case reports can be used by their affiliated hospital or clinic as partial fulfillment for the evaluation of that institution.
Unfortunately, not even such minimum requirements are present in the West.
L
EGAL
S
TATUS AND
R
EGULATION
Medical and public health authorities can employ qigong masters who have been qualified under the aforementioned regulations to perform qigong therapy. Should
qigong be used to treat disease, a full medical record must be kept to evaluate its long-term effectiveness.
Medical qigong activities must be documented reliably without selection bias. Misleading readers of advertisements by relating superstition with therapy is deemed a
violation of professional ethics. All advertisements and promotion materials about medical qigong should be approved by medical and public health authorities.
Anyone found to have contravened these regulations is warned, fined, and suspended or banned from practice. These actions are enforced by the medical and public
health authorities in conjunction with appropriate medical associations. All healers who have been in medical qigong practice before
the introduction of these
regulations must apply for approval of such practices.
Unfortunately, no such regulation of qigong practice occurs in the West except to prevent qigong practitioners from practicing medicine without a license. Thus,
anyone can hold themselves out as a qigong “master” without proof of training or competence. Patients and physicians should ask for documentation of training and
certification.
P
ROFESSIONAL
S
OCIETIES AND
C
ONTINUING
E
DUCATION
The China Research Society of Qigong Science is the major professional qigong association in China. Professional societies at local levels are numerous, and a
quarterly journal,
China Qigong, is published at Bei Dai He Qigong Hospital. As of 1990, the circulation of each issue was approximately 80,000. In general, the
associations or societies have sanction power, provide peer-review and referral services, and organize conferences for scholarly exchange and workshops or
seminars for continuing education. Any workshop or seminar has to be preapproved by the academic committee of the professional association, and official credits
are issued to the participants.
Reimbursement Status
In China, fees charged for qigong treatment are supposed to be reasonable and worked out jointly by the authorities and the local consumer council. Exorbitant
charges are prohibited. As discussed earlier, qigong healers claim to call on cosmic and divine power, which resides at a higher level than the secular level, to help
human beings. The aim of qigong healers is to help people relate to the
intention, or
mind, part of the body-mind-spirit tripartite system because the mind plays the
most important role in qigong practice (
48
). The mind provides the direction for the flow of the
chi, and purer intentionality induces better direction. Empirical research
(
49
) has also revealed that theta waves were lower and beta waves were higher during qigong practice that incorporated concentrative mind focus versus qigong
practice that employed nonconcentrative mind focus. During concentrative mind focus, any ideas other than helping the patient would distract the healer's mind and
misguide the
chi flow. However, the survival of qigong therapy as a profession is certainly dependent on financial support. Fees for service should be based
realistically to maintain the positive interaction between qigong therapists and their clients. Concerning reimbursement status of qigong therapy, it could be
commensurate with that of physical therapy.
No reimbursement for qigong generally occurs in the West except as part of other treatments. In those cases, it is usually treated as part of physical therapy.
Relation with Conventional Medicine
As
purported earlier, TCM–based qigong therapy and conventional medicine can be integrated in a dialectic synthesis. Conventional medicine is viewed as a thesis
built on reductionism originating from Auguste Comte, mind/body dualism initiated by Reneé Descartes, the concept of mechanic physics constructed by Issac
Newton, and analytic philosophy and logical positivism. In contrast, being rooted in TCM, qigong therapy is holistic in nature. In that sense, after it differentiates
complex phenomena into separate and simpler parts for analysis, it weaves them together as a whole web. The thread that connects every part is
chi, which manifests
itself in different forms within each segment of the mind-body-spirit tripartite system. In so doing, it is able to see not only each single tree in the forest, but also a
bird's-eye view of the whole forest.
In addition, qigong is better understood by quantum physics than the Newtonian mechanical concepts that explain conventional medicine. This is because quantum
physics recognizes aspects of reality beyond Newtonian mechanics and consequently helps to illuminate some of the mechanisms underlying qigong. In a similar
vein, the methodology commonly employed in mainstream medical research is insufficient for the exploration of qigong therapy. The fact that conventional research
methodology has difficulty assessing the observations seen in qigong therapy and practice is often used as a justification for refuting qigong.
PROSPECTS FOR THE FUTURE
Qigong has a long, time-tested track record as a therapeutic tool that has prevailed among a billion people in China. Its long-lasting prevalence cannot be attributed
completely to its medical value because economic, cultural, and other contextual factors also play an important role. As such, distinguishing the medical
sine qua non
of qigong from other contributing factors seems to be indispensable for its application to other sociocultural contexts. For that purpose,
a scientific approach to the
study of qigong is needed in modern global world culture.
The scientific approach suggested previously integrates both natural and social scientific methodology. The inclusion of natural sciences into the research design
here obviously requires no justification, whereas the main reason for taking social sciences into account is to comprehend the cultural, social, psychological, and
spiritual factors involved in qigong treatment. Given qigong as a synergistic system of body, mind, and soul, these factors have been much less attended to compared
with the scientific aspects of this modality, so they need to be affirmed in the future. The few available empiric studies addressing the issues related to the mind-body
connection can be seen in the work of Omura and Beckman (
37
), Sancier and Hu (
50
), and Tsai et al. (
22
). Among these studies, the work of Tsai et al., in which the
psychological variable—ability to function—was observed and measured, can serve as a model for further research along this line. Specifically, Tsai et al. evaluated
the qigong program's efficacy according to patients' subjective improvements, which were graded according to the Karnofsky scale. Patients' subjective feelings were
recorded faithfully, thereby indicating the patients' sense of well-being.
As pointed out previously, the identification of the operational mechanisms underlying qigong treatment is important for assuring the consistency of this modality's
quality as well as for demystification purposes. To that end, both process-oriented and outcome-oriented research design should be taken into account. So far, most
studies have been outcome-oriented, so researchers have not been able to monitor how the potential mechanisms work. Instead, the researchers can merely infer the
mechanisms indirectly from the final results. To design process-oriented research, idiographic methodology is more appropriate than is nomothetic methodology. The
former requires each subject to be observed intensively across different occasions of the temporal dimension and extensively across various situations on the spatial
dimension. In contrast, the latter methodology collects data only at one point of time, but uses large sample and quantitative analyses
so that general rules can be
drawn. A complete research design needs both methodologies, as demonstrated by Lee and Lei (
40
). Without the idiographic methodology
, the subject remains in the
black box; and without the nomothetic methodology, the research result cannot be generalized to other populations. To fully understand qigong, multiple research
methods across the full domains of knowledge, as described in
Chapter 4
, are needed.
Process-oriented study and idiographic design also help to verify the principal concepts of the qigong system that have been presented earlier, especially the stage
model of disease development shown in
Figure 23.1
. Many of those concepts are either metaphysical or metaphoric (e.g.,
yin/
yang) and thus short of empiric
substantiation. To substantiate these theoretic concepts, careful observations of the disease development at every step along the way are indispensable. After TCM
theory is empirically verified, it can be synthesized dialectically with conventional medicine, and both should be included hierarchically into postconventional medicine.
Integrated postconventional medicine is based both on quantum physics that goes over and beyond the metaphysics of TCM and on Western medicine's materialistic
world view. To carry on both postconventional medicine's theoretic reconstruction work and empiric studies to verify dialectically synthesized postconventional
medicine is a mission for contemporary medical students and scientists.
Author's Note: The authors wish to acknowledge the collegial support of Profs. Ellen D. Ciporen, Ronald Doviak, Sadie Chavis Bragg, and An- tonio Perez, without
which the present chapter could not have been completed on time.
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