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Traditional Thai medicine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Traditional Thai medicine is a system of methods and practices, such as herbal medicine, bodywork practices, and spiritual healing that is indigenous to the region currently known as Thailand. While not all Buddhist medicine is Thai, Thai medicine is considered Buddhist medicine.

History

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Traditional Thai medicine stems[1][2] from pre-history indigenous regional practices with a strong animistic foundation, animistic traditions of the Mon and Khmer peoples who occupied the region prior to the migration of the T'ai peoples, T'ai medicine and animistic knowledge, Indian medical knowledge (arriving pre-Ayurveda) coming through the Khmer peoples, Buddhist medical knowledge via the Mon peoples, and Chinese medical knowledge (arriving pre-TCM) with the migration of the T'ais who came largely from southern China.

In the early-1900s, traditional medicine was "outlawed as quackery" in favor of Western medicine, however by the mid-1990s traditional medicine was once again being supported by the Thai government. The Seventh National Economic and Social Plan for 1992–1996 stated that "[t]he promotion of people's health entails the efforts to develop traditional wisdom in health care, including Thai traditional medicine, herbal medicine, and traditional massage, so as to integrate it into the modern health service system." In 1993 the government of Thailand created the National Institute of Thai Traditional Medicine, under the supervision of the Ministry of Public Health. The goal of the institute is to "systematize and standardize the body of traditional Thai medicine knowledge", to "gather knowledge, revise, verify, classify, and explain traditional Thai medicine knowledge", and to "compare and explain the philosophies and basic theories of traditional Thai medicine and to produce textbooks on traditional Thai medicine".[3]

Divisions

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Regional differences between healing arts practitioners across Thailand and the recent codification of traditional Thai medicine by the Thai Ministry of Public Health have led to the existence of several variations of Thai medicine. These can be understood as follows:

  • Traditional Thai medicine - while this umbrella title is used to describe all traditional medicine practices in Thailand, it can also be used to describe the system of medicine as systematized and taught by the Ministry of Public Health.
  • Traditional medicine of Thailand - Traditional Thai medicine is based on this system, which is based on ancient texts, and varies a bit between practitioners throughout the kingdom.
  • Local/Indigenous/village medicine - local practices based largely on oral tradition and local texts handed down from teacher to student.
    • Lanna medicine - A regional form of local/indigenous/village medicine requiring its own category due to the unique nature of being possibly the most preserved form of the roots of Thai medicine.

Branches

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Traditional Thai medicine (used as umbrella term for all medicine of Thailand) consists of five primary branches:

  • Internal medicine - Primarily the use of herbs and diet to promote health
  • External medicine - All therapies applied to the external body including but not limited to:
    • Bone setting (indigenous chiropractic)
    • Thai cupping
    • Thai scraping (a practice similar to Chinese Gua Sha)
    • Thai massage techniques including compression, Thai acupressure, beating, passive stretching and focus on sen channels (pathways of movement in the body such as tendons, ligaments, nerves and circulatory vessels)
    • External application of herbs through unique herbology of balms, liniments, compresses and poultices
  • Spirit medicine - Use of amulets, incantations, sak yan tattooing and shamanistic involvement with spirits for the purpose of healing
  • Divination - Use of vedic astrology, numerology, palmistry and geomancy to determine health predisposition and remedial measures
  • Buddhism - seen as the mental health branch of Thai medicine.

Licensing

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Licensing and promotion is gaining ground in Thailand due to concerns about quality and safety. In fiscal year 2013, almost one million people used traditional therapy under the universal health scheme, which partially subsidized the treatments. About 6,000 hospitals are equipped with clinics having licensed traditional medical practitioners.[4] One of the leading hospitals in Traditional Thai medicine is Chaophraya Abhaibhubejhr Hospital in Prachinburi Province.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Salguero, C. Pierce. Traditional Thai Medicine: Buddhism, Animism, Ayurveda, Hohm Press, 2007.
  2. ^ Ratarasarn, Somchintana. The Principles and Concepts of Thai classical medicine. Bangkok: Thai Khadi Research Institute, Thammasat University, 1986
  3. ^ Viggo Brun (2003). "Traditional Thai Medicine". In Selin, Helaine; Shapiro, Hugh (eds.). Medicine Across Cultures. Springer. p. 129. ISBN 9781402011665.
  4. ^ "B400m boost for Thai therapies". Bangkok Post. 29 November 2013. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
  5. ^ "Chao Phraya Abhaibhubejhr Hospital to Be Developed as a Thai Traditional Medical Hub in ASEAN".