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Tai Chi at NYCTCM

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New York College of Traditional Chinese Medicine is pleased to announce the opening of a Tai Chi Course to the public. The course will be starting September 18, 2009, once a week, on Fridays, from 10 am to 11 am, for 10 sessions in total. We will only charge $100 as an administration fee for this 10-session class.

Tai Chi, or Tiaji, was originally developed in China a few hundred years ago. It is a type of martial art that is primarily known for its health benefits, including means for dealing with tension and stress.

World Tai Chi Champion, Mr. Sitan Chen will be the instructor for this Community Tai Chi Course. You will have a chance to learn Tai Chi from a Master.

This is a great opportunity. Don't miss it. Limited to 20 participants for each course. The class will take place at New York College of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Mineola.

Please send a check for $100 payable to NYCTCM by September 11, 2009. For more information call 516-739-1545 or

email:




Sitan Chen will be offering a community Tai Chi course at New York College of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Mineola, Long Island, New York in May 2009. The class will be on Fridays from 1:30 to 2:30 pm for 10 Fridays.

See NYCTCM website, Community Services page, for details. You must pre-register before May 7. $100 for 10 sessions.
C_fs.jpgCommunity Tai Chi Course (New Session starting May 2009)

New York College of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Mineola, Long Island, NY is pleased to announce the opening of a new Tai Chi Course to the public.

The course will be starting in May 2009, once a week, for 10 sessions in total. We will only charge $100 as an administration fee for this 10-session class.

World Tai Chi Champion, Mr. Sitan Chen, will be the instructor for this Community Tai Chi Course. You will have this special opportunity to learn Tai Chi from a Master.

This is a great opportunity. Don't miss it. Limited to 20 participants for this course.

Course Time: Fridays 1:30 PM - 2:30 PM (Starting from May 2009) - Total 10 sessions;

You only pay $100 administration fee

Location:

New York College of Traditional Chinese Medicine
155 First St.
Mineola NY 11501

Tel. 516-739-1545

Email: president@nyctcm.edu

Please send a check for $100 payable to NYCTCM at the above address by May 7, 2009

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The Boston Center for Refugee Health and Human Rights (BCRHHR) at Boston Medical Center recently treated many of the large number of Tibetan refugee monks who fled violent religious persecution. These individuals arrived in Boston suffering from symptoms of traumatic stress, interfering with their meditative practice. The monks were diagnosed by their traditional healers as having srog-rLung, a life-wind imbalance. Recognizing that barriers exist between western and eastern medicine, the BCRHHR researched and implemented its own complementary therapy options to heal them. These findings appear online in the March issue of Mental Health, Religion and Culture...

According to the researchers, in order to provide complimentary therapy for the monks, eastern and western medicine needed to be integrated to properly address both conditions.

... Ancient Tibetan Bon tradition of yogic practice was used to induce the mind into a relaxed state necessary to purify oneself through motion. This yogic practice combines movement of the body and controlled breath with movements of the mind to bring mental stability and offers an alternative to the monks' inability to eliminate invasive thoughts. Another therapy that was used is singing bowl therapy--a form of music therapy, as sound has a direct connection to the heart, which aligns with srog-rLung experienced by the monks...

"This research and treatment involving patients accustomed only to traditional medicine, presented an opportunity for the acceptance of non-traditional therapeutic approaches," explains Michael Grodin, MD, professor of health law, bioethics and human rights at Boston University School of Public Health, and professor of psychiatry, sociomedical sciences and community medicine at Boston University School of Medicine. "The difference between Tibetan and Western disease pathologies represents the need for evidence-based complementary therapies...

Grodin said the refugee health center at BMC integrated techniques of western medicine, such as anti-depressant prescribing and psychotherapy, with Tibetan healing practices, including medicines prescribed by Tibetan Amchi, meditation advice, Tai Chi and Qi Gong exercises. Grodin is trained in traditional Chinese medicine, such as acupuncture and meditation.

Source: Boston University. Go to the link for complete article

http://sciencemode.com/2009/03/13/treatment-of-traumatized-tibetan-refugee-monks/


Tai Chi benefits older adults' mobility, study shows

In two studies - one quantitative, one qualitative - presented... at the North American Research Conference on Complementary & Integrative Medicine, lead researcher Yang found that healthy seniors who practiced a combination of Qigong and Tai Chi three times a week for six months experienced significant physical benefits after only two months.

Not only did participants demonstrate noticeable improvements in laboratory-controlled tests designed to measure balance, lower body strength and stance width, a subset of participants who contributed responses in the qualitative study provided dramatic evidence of how Tai Chi and Qigong practice had also enhanced their lives from a mental, emotional and spiritual perspective.

For example, in assessing the effects of Tai Chi and Qigong practice on participants, the researchers used a number of standard physical-activity measurements, among them, the single leg stand, or SLS. The SLS measures the length of time an individual can stand on one leg, with eyes closed and eyes open.

"With eyes open, we saw an 83 percent improvement after two months," Yang said. "With eyes closed, we did not see results - 29 percent improvement - until the end of six months.

Numbers alone don't tell the full story of the results, however, Yang said.

"But when you see how it translates to functional performance ... how meaningful it is to their daily life - putting on jeans, taking groceries out, even the posture you have when you hold your grandchildren - the results are significant."

Also telling, he said, is the strong desire among study participants to continue practicing Tai Chi and Qigong beyond the bounds of the research.

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (2006, June 29). Research Reinforces Findings That Chinese Exercises Benefit Older Adults. ScienceDaily.

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Older adults who adopt an exercise regimen combining Taiji and Qigong may get an extra boost from their annual flu shot.

"We have found that 20 weeks of Taiji can increase the antibody response to influenza vaccine in older adults," said the study's lead author Yang Yang, an adjunct professor of kinesiology and community health, and a Taiji master with 30-plus years of experience as a practitioner and instructor.

"In this study, we found that five months of an easily performed behavioral Taiji and Qigong intervention could improve the magnitude and duration of the HI anti-influenza antibody titer response in a small cohort of older adults," write the authors, who also include Karl S. Rosengren, a U. of I. professor of psychology and of kinesiology and community health, and Jeffrey A. Woods, a kinesiology and community health professor who researches the effects of exercise on immune function. Rosengren and Woods helped design the study. Other co-authors are former U. of I. graduate students Rachel A. Mariani and Jay Verkuilen, and Scott A. Grubisich and Michael Reed of the Center for Taiji Studies, Champaign.

According to Yang, one problem with the flu vaccine is that older adults often do not reach what are considered to be "protective levels" after receiving the vaccination.

On average, he said, the Taiji group had much higher antibody responses to the vaccination than the control group, and the percentage of persons who achieved protective levels also was higher in the Taiji group.

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (2007, August 14). Traditional Chinese Exercises May Increase Efficacy Of Flu Vaccine. ScienceDaily. Retrieved August 27, 2008

Tai Chi program adopted in Senior Community Centers in Oregon

In the July issue of the American Journal of Public Health, Oregon Research Institute (ORI) senior scientist Fuzhong Li, Ph.D., describes how senior community centers in Lane County, Oregon successfully adopted an evidence-based Tai Chi program to prevent falls among older adults. Based on this success, the Oregon Department of Human Services, in partnership with 4 counties in Oregon, has now adopted the Tai Chi program as part of its efforts to disseminate evidence-based interventions to promote physical activity and reduce falls among community-living older adults.


New York College of Traditional Chinese Medicine & Nassau County NY sponsor Tai Chi Day

Last Fall New York College of Traditional Chinese Medicine (NYCTCM) and Nassau County, as part of the Healthy Nassau program, co-sponsored Tai Chi Day at Eisenhower Park in Nassau County. NYCTCM staff taught Tai Chi to about 70 participants.

In the top picture, Nassau County Executive Thomas Suozzi participates in Tai Chi. In the 2nd picture, World Tai Chi Champion Mr. Sitan Chen instructs Tai Chi class. Here, Dr. Chen is pictured with Thomas Suozzi at Tai Chi Day.

See the rest of the pictures from Tai Chi Day at NYCTCM Visits '07 page.

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