Selected Product: | A Clinical Guide to Chinese Herbs and Formulae Hardcover Author: C. Song Yu, L. Fei Publisher: Churchill Livingstone Release Date: 1993-02-01 ISBN-10: 0443046808 ISBN-13: 9780443046803 List Price: $113.00 Average Customer Rating: | | Chinese Herbal Medicine: Materia Medica, Third Edition ISBN-10: 0939616424 ISBN-13: 9780939616428 List Price:$125.00 Chinese Herbal Medicine: Formulas and Strategies ISBN-10: 0939616106 ISBN-13: 9780939616107 List Price:$85.00 Chinese Medical Herbology & Pharmacology ISBN-10: 0974063509 ISBN-13: 9780974063508 List Price:$89.95 The Practice of Chinese Medicine: The Treatment of Diseases with Acupuncture and Chinese Herbs ISBN-10: 0443074909 ISBN-13: 9780443074905 List Price:$150.00 Dui Yao: The Art of Combining Chinese Medicinals ISBN-10: 0936185813 ISBN-13: 9780936185811 List Price:$29.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for A Clinical Guide to Chinese Herbs and Formulae by C. Song Yu, L. Fei (ISBN-10: 0443046808, ISBN-13: 9780443046803). At this time we have not yet written a review for A Clinical Guide to Chinese Herbs and Formulae by C. Song Yu, L. Fei (ISBN-10: 0443046808, ISBN-13: 9780443046803). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com This is a clinical handbook for practitioners of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) that provides quick and easy reference to the selection of herbs for treatment and their action alone and in combination. This is a handbook from two eminent teachers from the Nanjing College of Traditional Chinese Medicine who have between them accumulated over 60 years of clinical practice and teaching. They emphasizes how to combine herbs and differentiate between single herbs and formulae depending on the treatment strategy adopted. It contains case histories illustrating how to adapt formulae in practice. unsubstantiated claims | Customer Rating: | The merit of this book is in providing in a central location describing many traditional Chinese herbs and the ailments they claim to treat. Having said this, there is little else of merit. Much of the text describes unsubstantiated claims, at variance with the modern scientific understanding of human biology.
Maybe some of these herbs and treatments have true theraputic value. But the onus of proof is on their proponents. |
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