This is our UK/Europe website. If you are in North America, please click here to visit our other site.
After a promising start in the early part of the nineteenth century, the practice of acupuncture all but disappeared in the United States between 1860 and 1970. A small number of Chinese medicine practitioners helped to keep acupuncture alive in some parts of the country during this time. Among the earliest was Ah Fong Chuck, who emigrated to the United States in the 1860s and practised in Idaho for nearly six decades. A classically trained physician and skilled herbalist who also had extensive training in acupuncture, Ah Fong won the legal right to practise medicine in 1901, making him arguably the first ‘licensed’ acupuncturist in American history.
For the cost of 5 articles (students) or 10 articles (practitioners) you can buy a year's access to the entire Journal of Chinese Medicine article archive.
Subscribe online now
SKU: JCM97-5
Availability: In stock
With this product, you earn 4 loyalty point(s).
Orders shipped outside of Europe are eligible for VAT relief and will not be charged VAT.
This website requires cookies to provide all of its features. For more information on what data is contained in the cookies, please see our Privacy Policy page. To accept cookies from this site, please click the Allow button below.