Should you accept insurance?
This course is a quick, hopefully objective, overview of the pros and cons of accepting insurance.
This course is a quick, hopefully objective, overview of the pros and cons of accepting insurance.
We will discuss what an acupuncturist needs to do before seeing insurance patients, during the patient visit, and after the patient leaves. This is a must take course for anyone who wants to promote our medicine to more patients while increasing revenues.
This course will look at fibromyalgia from both biomedical and Chinese points of view, and discuss Chinese medical diagnostics and therapeutics.
This is a non-CEU and absolutely free discussion of whatever we want as practicing Chinese medical professionals, whether it is acupuncture, herbs, insurance, business, biomedicine, current events affecting our profession, or just a strange philosophical interchange...
This seminar examines how to approach these potential drug-herb interactions. Both the nine drugs and ten herbs most prone to drug-herb interactions will be discussed.
This course will look at insomnia, from both a biomedical and Chinese medical point of view. We will discuss real world approaches to diagnosing and treating these conditions as well as educating our patients about them.
This is a non-CEU and absolutely free discussion of whatever we want as practicing Chinese medical professionals, whether it is acupuncture, herbs, insurance, business, biomedicine, current events affecting our profession, or just a strange philosophical interchange...
We are going to be recording three episodes of the Sperb's Herbs podcast. The first covers the the Chinese formula Si Ni Tang (Frigid Extremities Decoction), the second is another Chinese single herb, Gan Cao (Licorice Root), and the third episode covers an herb of the world Guggul (Commiphora wightii).
This course will look at various signs and symptoms of allergies from both a biomedical and Chinese medical point of view. We will discuss real world approaches to diagnosing and treating these conditions and will include a discussion of the major modalities of our medicine including both acupuncture and herbal interventions.
This is a non-CEU and absolutely free discussion of whatever we want as practicing Chinese medical professionals, whether it is acupuncture, herbs, insurance, business, biomedicine, current events affecting our profession, or just a strange philosophical interchange...