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International News Canadian Doctor Brings Touch of Chinese Healing to Thai MedicineJanuary 3, 2008 Acupuncture is not a part of traditional medicine in Thailand. However, since 2004, Vancouver naturopathic doctor Laura Louie has employed acupuncture and massage to help HIV/AIDS patients at the Mae On Clinic cope with the pain, fatigue, numbness, loss of appetite, and insomnia caused by the disease and side effects of antiretroviral therapy. While on a short trip to Thailand in 2002, Louie first observed Mae On Clinic personnel working with HIV patients and volunteered to help. It took some convincing and demonstrations of acupuncture before she received the hospital director's approval to begin the free HIV-acupuncture clinic outside the government-run hospital. Louie went back to Vancouver to raise funds from family and friends for the project and returned with $30,000 (US $30,262) to found the clinic, she said. The money helped buy desks, filing cabinets, hot water bottles, needles, and other, clinic supplies, and it paid for a Thai-speaking doctor to help her train the five nurses who volunteered to learn acupuncture. Louie visits the clinic three times a year for six to twelve weeks. In small surveys taken at the clinic, 96 percent of patients said they experienced physical improvements from the acupuncture, and 86 percent said their quality of life has improved. Ottawa Citizen 01.02.2008; Aileen McCabe, CanWest News Service ![]() Thai Health Ministry Takes "Bold Step" in Breaking Patent, Issuing Compulsory License for Antiretroviral Kaletra, Editorial Says This article was provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a part of the publication CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update. Visit the CDC's website to find out more about their activities, publications and services.
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