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Seminar 2 - 50 Years Acupuncture on 30 Acupoints Application For Common Illnesses 


Speaker:  Professor Shi Xue Min, with English translation

Date & Time: 10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, Sat; Sun,  12/03/11 - 12/04/2011

NCCAOM PDA Points:14

Location: New York College of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Mineola, NY

About the Speaker
Professor Shi Xue-min is a highly honored acupuncturist and an academician, with a distinguished record of over 50 years in the field. Professor Shi's remarkable accomplishments are well-founded in the ancient theories of Chinese medicine. He is known as the 'Father of Acupuncture.'  Prof. Shi Xue-min is the academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, the chief physician, and the honorary president of First Teaching Hospital of Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM). He simultaneously holds some posts of the vice director of Chinese Institute of Acupuncture and Moxibustion, president of Tianjin Society of Acupuncture and moxibustion, vice-president of Clinical Research Institute of Acupuncture and Moxibustion of China, advisor of European Traditional Chinese Medicine Association, consultant of American International Oriental Medical Foundation, the highest consultant of American College of TCM and Research Institute of TCM, and the first vice-president of Chinese Traditional Medical Research Institute of Bayer, Germany.

Prof. Shi Xue-min is a famous expert in the acupuncturology at home and abroad. In the recent forty years, he has done much work for the development and building of acupuncture and moxibustion in the world and has outstanding achievements. His laboratory research of various means and gene level on the action mechanism of acupuncture has taken the research of apoplexy treated with acupuncture deep into a new level. He was won 15 awards and 2 patents on the state, ministerial and municipal levels, published 12 works and more than 30 theses, and won 19 honorable titles on the state and municipal levels. He was elected an academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering in 1999.

Registration: http://www.nyctcm.edu/alumni/ceu.htm
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Early Acceptance Tuition Credit

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yemeng_chen.jpgApply by Dec. 3, 2011 and be eligible for a 10% credit on your first trimester tuition.

NYCTCM offers an Early Acceptance Tuition Credit to newly matriculated students or transfer students in the amount of a 10% credit applied to their first trimester tuition. The qualifying date for the Early Admission Tuition Credit for Winter 2012 trimester is December 3, 2011.

A non-refundable tuition deposit of $500 is due at the time a candidate accepts an offer of early acceptance from NYCTCM for Winter 2012 trimester. The deposit is separate and apart from financial aid. The $500 deposit and 10% tuition credit apply to the tuition for a student's first trimester of study at NYCTCM. Financial aid students will see the adjustment reflected in their first trimester tuition charges. The student who is eligible for EATI must make a full non-refundable deposit of $500, no matter if the student is on financial aid.

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Zhao Bao Tai Chi Straight Sword by Grand Master J. Teasley.  Grand Master Teasley will give a Continuing Education Program for Acupuncturists at New York College of Traditional Chinese Medicine on October 16, sponsored by ASNY, titled Tai Chi Chuan and its Application to the Acupuncture Practice.  

For more information see the post about Tai Chi on the NYCTCM Acupuncture TCM blog, or go directly to the ANSY Events page, Tai Chi Chuan and its Application to the Acupuncture Practice. to register. 

Right now there are 19 places available for the seminar, which gives acupuncturists 5 PDA points. 


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chineseherbs_acupunctureneedles.jpgChinese Herbology for pulmonary fibrosis 
Date: 2:00 - 5:00 PM on June 19, 2011
Speaker: Prof. En-Xiang Chao Chief of Internal Medicine, China-Japan Friendship Hospital, Beijing, China. With English translation. NCCAOM PDA Points: 3

Location: 
New York College of Traditional Chinese Medicine 
Room 106 
155 First St.,
 Mineola, NY 11501 

This seminar will be free for all attendees, The attendees will get free NCCAOM PDA 3 points.
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Matt Gross, NY Times Blogger for "Frugal Traveler" writes about his visit to NYCTCM Acupuncture Clinic in Manhattan.

"As the needle went into my skin, somewhere between the two biggest toes on my left foot, I felt an almost electrical jolt--my metatarsal bones pulsed with energy, like a muscle cramp but completely painless. It was as if my entire foot were a neon sign that had never been switched on before.

"Wow," I think I said, and the four people in white lab coats observing me hurried to ask if I was okay. Was it a burning pain? No. Was it subsiding? Um, maybe a little. Okay, then everything was fine.

Then they stuck more needles in me.

For aficionados of acupuncture, this is old hat. According to the tenets of Chinese medicine, tapping skinny needles into your pressure points is an age-old way of rebalancing the body and restoring, or ensuring, general health.

The first stop, at 10:30 a.m., was the New York College of Traditional Chinese Medicine (13 East 37th Street; 212-685-0888, http://www.nyctcm.edu), an accredited school with three- and four-year degree programs in acupuncture and Chinese herbology. It is located on the fourth floor of one of those anonymous office buildings in the East 30s, just north of Murray Hill. Inside, the school felt like a regular doctor's office, with forms to fill out detailing medical history and current problems, and lots of people in white lab coats...


After answering some intimate questions about my gastrointestinal workings, I was escorted into the treatment room, where I undressed, put on a paper hospital gown and lay down on a table. The needles went in, most of them painlessly, but every once in a while -- like when they went into my foot or lower back -- the feeling was incredible. I don't know how much store I put in Chinese medicine, but those pressure points are definitely connected to deep systems in the human body."


Visit New York College of Traditional Chinese Medicine Acupuncture Clinic

New York College of Traditional Chinese Medicine (NYCTCM)'s Teaching Clinic offers affordably priced Acupuncture and Chinese Healing Arts to the community while providing our advanced students with a clinical internship.

Our interns are senior-level students who have passed a series of qualifying exams that allow them to diagnose and prescribe therapies for the patients who come to our clinic. Licensed Acupuncturists and Traditional Chinese Medicine practitioners supervise our interns. Many of our supervisors have M.D. degrees from China, and all have considerable clinical and teaching experience.

Traditional Chinese Medicine or TCM encompasses both acupuncture and Chinese Herbal Medicine. While acupuncture is perhaps the most widely recognized area of TCM, Chinese Herbal Medicine is also very important in your treatment. Chinese Herbal Medicine administers natural herbal formulas specifically designed to correct imbalances in the body, aiding in the treatment of disease.

 Our clinic provides Acupuncture Therapy, Herbal Prescriptions, and Nutrition Counseling 
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Forty NYCTCM alumni, staff and students had a great time at "Back to School Day" in January 2011.  Back to School Day was part of  NYCTCM's 15th Anniversary Celebration.  The gala Anniversary Celebration will be at the Sheraton LaGuardia East Hotel in Flushing on June 12. There will be seminars during the day and a gala dinner in the evening. 


Traditional Tibetan Medicine Poster seen in Ch...

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Seminar 1: Modern TCM Diagnosis with Acupuncture Points Palpation (with English translation) 

This course will introduce the selection of effective acupoints for Modern TCM Diagnosis with Acupuncture Points Palpation on clinical experiences. Details will be given about the meridians and acupoints related to Modern TCM Diagnosis with Acupuncture Points Palpation. Detailed demonstration of Modern TCM Diagnosis with Acupuncture Points Palpation and clinical application 

Date & Time: 10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, Saturday, April 30, 2011 with 1 hour break
PDA Points: 7

Seminar 2: MicroAcupuncture for Facial Rejuvenation (with English translation) 

This course covers acupoints which are related to MicroAcupuncture application, basic procedures and principles of MicroAcupuncture, and detailed demonstration MicroAcupuncture needle techniques and clinical application 

Date & Time: 10:00 AM - 6:00 PM, Sunday, May 1, 2011 with 1 hour break 

PDA Points: 7 

Location: New York College of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Room 101, 155 First Street, Mineola, NY, 11501

 About the Speaker: 

Prof. Ren, Xiao Yan graduated from Heilongjiang University of Traditional Chinese Medicine in 1988 and is President of Beijing Renxiaoyan Implant Acupuncture Medical Study/Develop Center. She develops health implant acupuncture products by combining modern medical techniques on the basis of traditional medicine theory. 

She has close cooperating relationships with such medical institutions as Beijing Basic Medical Study, Institute of the Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Beijing No. 301 Hospital and Zhejiang Provincial Traditional Chinese Medicine Hospital, laying a solid foundation for developing a new generation of acupuncture technique and related products.

To Register:

Please register for the Continuing Education classes by Prof. Ren at the NYCTCM CEU page. 





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