Future College of Integrated Medicine

As you may have read in the past on this blog, Dr. Vincent Shu’s acupuncture has helped me immensely with a disc in my back that is shot from over or improper use. One session with him alleviates pain for about 9-12 months, and that relief is something I have not been able to find in any other practitioner or discipline.

Dr. Shu, who is also a board-certified Internist, Geriatrician, and Cardiologist specializing in both Western and Eastern forms of medicine, is one of the humblest, most hard-working men you could ever meet. In fact, I often wonder if he does anything but work each and every last hour of every day in the pursuit of helping others.

His current mission is to create a College of Integrated Medicine in a location like Rosario where a medical university from Taiwan can come and teach acupuncture, herbal medicine, meditation, yoga, nutrition, and a host of other aspects. This university will also supply all of the funding, so raising money is not an issue.

Are you interested in helping this happen?

If so, you can contact Dr. Shu directly at vshu@wins-medicine.org in order to become part of a group working toward this long-term goal that benefits our island community immensely.

Below is more information straight from his website:

FUTURE HOME OF W.I.N.S. COLLEGE OF INTEGRATED MEDICINE

Our plans for a dynamic college include an initial School of Acupuncture and Herbal Medicine with plans to expand with a School of Mind, Body, Spirit with an emphasis on Meditation and Yoga, and a School of Nutrition.

PROGRAM DESCRIPTION

Washington Institute of Natural Sciences (W.I.N.S.) School of Acupuncture and School of Herbal Medicine will be an ACAOM (Accreditation Commission for Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine) accredited academic institution of complementary and integrative medicine located on Orcas Island. The college will provide world-class education, modern research opportunities, and premier clinical services in a variety of medical modalities including Acupuncture, Oriental Medicine, Western Herbal Medicine, Integrative Medicine, and Holistic Nutrition as well as Mind-Body-Spirit disciplines (Tai Chi and Yoga).

The W.I.N.S. College of Integrated Medicine will be founded upon an unwavering commitment to excellence, compassion, and truthfulness. It will be a place where the east meets the west. Founded by Dr. Vincent Shu, a board-certified Internist/Geriatrician/Cardiologist trained in both eastern and western medicine, its organizers recognize that education in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) is at all times heavily linked to classical writings, in particular the Yellow Emperor’s Internal Canon written thousands of years ago. While accepting the importance of the knowledge contained in such classical Chinese writings, he found that the greatest hurdle for western-trained scientists and/or clinicians with a firm foundation in western bio-sciences when studying TCM was not simply access to the knowledge, but also the ability to explore and model the Chinese way of thinking of Yin-Yang and “five elements” theories. He believes that using the common language of western bioscience to conceptualize the theory of TCM could be the path to address this issue.

Accordingly, the W.I.N.S. College will, through western-recognized modalities, endeavor to investigate, validate, and perhaps transform the knowledge and properties of acupuncture and herbal medicine as they have evolved through 5,000 years of tradition. The Institute, using this approach, will offer a depth of instruction simply not available at any other school of Acupuncture and Chinese Herbal Medicine in North America.

4 KEY QUESTIONS

Despite the recent economic downturn, American consumers have been spending approximately 34 billion dollars per year for “Alternative Medicines” claiming to be “secret remedies of thousand(s) of years.” As consumers, we have legitimate reasons to question the presence of evidence-based data to support such usage, for example:

  1. Are Western medicine approaches to new drug discovery superior to those of Eastern medicine?
  2. With the advent of new fast and relatively inexpensive DNA sequencing technology making personalized medicine a real possibility, can either western or eastern medicines favorably modify the behavior of genetic profiles sufficiently to prevent or modify the expression of certain diseases?
  3. Can a retirement community model for green land and natural beauty conservation evolve into one that drives younger generations to accomplish the same goals?
  4. Can we reshape our future to retain our children by developing local careers engaged in solving growing national issues in healthcare, environment, and green energy?

PROGRAMS OFFERED

  • A 3-year Herbal Medicine/Acupuncture Practitioner Master’s degree program.
  • A certificate and diploma in Herbal Medicine.
  • Scholar farmer/scholar gardener programs to teach how to grow key herbs used in Chinese Herbal Medicine and to discover new herbs and plants in the San Juan Islands that can be used as Herbal Medicine.
  • Internships for Chinese citizens and students to learn Acupuncture and Chinese Herbal Medicine as well as how to grow Chinese Herbal Medicine in the Pacific Northwest.
  • Clinical experience in the W.I.N.S. Community Clinic Center for Integrative Medicine.

MEASURABLE OBJECTIVES

  • To present comprehensive 3-year programs that encompass the five modalities of traditional Chinese medicine, including the requisite Western Biomedical Sciences as well as other required subjects.
  • To assist students in attaining an understanding of the principles of herbal medicine and experience and study the function of that paradigm in everyday life.
  • To prepare students to meet all of the qualifying examinations and regulations concerning acupuncture and traditional Chinese medicine, as such regulations and licensing come into force.
  • To prepare students to become responsible healthcare providers and able practitioners.
  • To offer a curriculum that meets or exceeds all academic and clinical requirements required by the profession’s regulating bodies.
  • To provide compassionate, comprehensive, integrative healthcare for the diversified population of the San Juan Islands including low socioeconomic and/or no income population.
  • In collaboration with oncologists at UW Medicine, Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Island Hospital Cancer Care Center, and Peace Island Medical Center to provide complementary alternative medicine for islanders undergoing chemotherapy in order to improve their quality of life and prolong their life by mitigating chemotherapy-associated adverse side effects.
  • To grow Chinese medicinal herbs – both traditional as well as newly discovered – locally in the San Juan Islands, and then validate their therapeutic properties before clinical usage.
  • To maintain and enhance community economic vitality by creating an intellectually challenging environment that encourages and supports our children and grandchildren to develop local careers in solving growing national issues of health care, farming, and environment, for example, in evidence-based natural healing centers and clinics, herb-growing farms, as well as green energy production.

IMPACT SUMMARY

In the relatively near future, we envision that medical care decisions will link with Western genetics-based personalized medicine, and through this link, the better treatment outcome can be predicted and evidenced by either herbal medicines or (reduced dosage of) western medicine or both, with accompanying significant healthcare cost savings and improving quality of life.

While working on medicinal herb research projects at W.I.N.S., grant-sponsored scholar gardeners/farmers will help sustain local economic vitality and meaningful land usage, thereby also helping to fulfill the missions of, for example, San Juan County’s Land Bank and Agricultural Guild.

Nature-Science College Academic Programs will bring in diverse talented professionals in the fields of medicine, herbs, agriculture, green energy, and environmental science, helping the San Juan Islands to become renowned for personalized medicine-based healing, attracting people seeking not only the enjoyment of natural beauty but also healthy life.

The San Juan Islands will over time become a center for organically-grown, science-validated medicinal herbs in North America. Locally held research seminars in Herbal Medicine and Acupuncture will attract many people around the world to both work and visit.

W.I.N.S. will provide a supporting source of academic unbiased data and act as a liaison between the western and eastern practitioners with resultant improved treatment outcome and quality of life in patients with chemotherapy and/or chronic diseases.

 Photo free from Ryutaro Tsukata on pexels.com

5 Comments:

  1. wow! Edee, juat what I need. I will contact him.

  2. Love the concept! It feels right for Orcas — another big step like Moran’s appreciation and visualization that also included embracing new approaches. (e.g. impounding Mt. lake and Cascade to create a hydro-electric system) I may want to help.

  3. Bruce: Glad to hear your feedback and support.

    If a renowned medical university in Taiwan specialized in integrative medicine is willing to dedicate its expertise, resources , time and efforts to organizing and establishing W.I.N.S. College of Integrative Medicine in our community by using its own funding in a location like Rosario, do you think that our community will welcome this idea?

  4. Carok Owens, gjc

    Edee!
    My forst vosit with Dr Shu today.
    OMG.
    we must talk. Thank you thank you for your article on him. Much less
    pain already.
    AND! I can ho him with his WINS!
    so grateful!
    Carol

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