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This is available as a Videocast on Substack with captions. Some interviews you schedule around convenience. This one we scheduled around continents.Sushila Gurung lives and works above the clinic she runs in Bajrabarahi, Nepal, which means that when we finally found a time that worked for both of us, it was late at night for me in Portland and early in the morning for her, with a wifi connection that did its best and occasionally reminded us just how far apart we actually were. Sushila joined the Acupuncture Relief Project as a medical interpreter when she was 18 years old and she now works as the Clinical Director for Good Health Nepal, where acupuncturists work as primary care providers in a rural region with a catchment area of 150,000 people. In this conversation we talk about what it means to become a practitioner in a country where acupuncture isn't yet fully regulated, the education pathway that exists and the one that doesn't yet, what the COVID reopening really looked like from the inside, and what she wants practitioners everywhere to understand about this medicine and what it can do.You can find out more about the Acupuncture Relief Project. https://acupuncturereliefproject.org.And you can make a donation to support Sushila, Satyamohan and their team at: https://acupuncturereliefproject.org/donate
By Dr. Rebecca Groebner, DAc, LAcThis is available as a Videocast on Substack with captions. Some interviews you schedule around convenience. This one we scheduled around continents.Sushila Gurung lives and works above the clinic she runs in Bajrabarahi, Nepal, which means that when we finally found a time that worked for both of us, it was late at night for me in Portland and early in the morning for her, with a wifi connection that did its best and occasionally reminded us just how far apart we actually were. Sushila joined the Acupuncture Relief Project as a medical interpreter when she was 18 years old and she now works as the Clinical Director for Good Health Nepal, where acupuncturists work as primary care providers in a rural region with a catchment area of 150,000 people. In this conversation we talk about what it means to become a practitioner in a country where acupuncture isn't yet fully regulated, the education pathway that exists and the one that doesn't yet, what the COVID reopening really looked like from the inside, and what she wants practitioners everywhere to understand about this medicine and what it can do.You can find out more about the Acupuncture Relief Project. https://acupuncturereliefproject.org.And you can make a donation to support Sushila, Satyamohan and their team at: https://acupuncturereliefproject.org/donate