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Precise palpation skills:
Treatment is largely based on the practitioner’s
ability to feel and work with qi throughout the
patient’s body. In accordance with tradition, Toyohari
employs the “four diagnoses” (asking, looking, listening
and touching), and focuses on discerning imbalances in
particular along the twelve main circulating channels or
meridians. Pulse diagnosis, whilst still based on simple
and systematic traditional principles, is taken to an
unusually high level, and other areas are also
considered during palpatory diagnosis (particularly the
hara or abdomen).
Influence of blind practitioners:
Its gentle
approach, which particularly emphasizes touch in
diagnosis, reflects the general approach to acupuncture
in a country which has been uniquely influenced by a
four-hundred year old tradition of blind acupuncture
practitioners. The founders of the Toyohari Association,
as well as most of its current senior practitioners were
and are blind or visually impaired.
Gentle, precise techniques:
Practitioners use specialised needle techniques
unique to Toyohari, which are very gentle and
non-invasive. These include a variety of specific
techniques for supplementation and dispersion, and use
superfine needles, particularly silver needles for
supplementation. What is often of most interest to
western acupuncturists is the fact that most of the
techniques can be very effectively learnt and used
non-insertively. Treatment effects are both subtle and
strong, and can also be carefully controlled.
Pulse feedback:
Progress during each treatment is carefully monitored
point by point by checking changes in the state of the
patient’s qi, with treatment continuously adjusted to
suit.
Toyohari also adopts the principle, originating from the
Nanjing, that, for needling to be effective it is not
necessary for the patient to experience heavy sensations
from the needling (often called deqi), something which
can be characteristic of other styles of practice. In
contrast, it is emphasised that the practitioner should
feel the qi which makes for a vastly different
experience for the patient.
Effective symptom control:
In addition specific and unique supportive treatment
techniques have been developed for controlling or
targeting symptoms. These include using the Eight
Extraordinary Vessels (kikei), the inguinal, sacral and
neck and shoulder regions (naso/muno), and
supplementation through Midday/Midnight associations
(shigo).
Unique continuing learning model:
Something which is unique to the Toyohari approach is
the use of the “Kozato Method” for small peer-group
learning. Using this, practitioners’ diagnostic
abilities are continuously improved by consensus
experiential learning, as individual needle techniques
are fed back through real-time monitoring of the
patient’s pulse. This makes for a dynamic and empowering
constant improvement in skills. Such an approach has
been shown to create exciting learning curves for the
new comer to Toyohari which can often be revelatory,
providing a window to an awareness of acupuncture
practice which previously seems only to have been
accessible to a gifted few.
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