
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The language we use in healthcare deeply influences our practice, and the phrase "prescribing points" has quietly infiltrated modern acupuncture, bringing with it a flawed pharmaceutical mindset. This article argues that treating acupuncture points like pills—inserting a needle and passively waiting for a result—strips the practice of its true clinical power. Instead of memorizing textbook formulas and relying on static protocols, practitioners must recognize that points are merely portals. Real healing requires tactile intelligence, proper timing, and dynamic modulation to elicit deqi (qi engagement) and move energy through the body. The author urges a profession-wide shift in terminology from "point prescription" to "point selection strategy." This strategic approach empowers students and seasoned clinicians alike to adapt when a patient's tissue resists or symptoms contradict the textbooks. By reclaiming this sensory, highly adaptable craft, acupuncturists can stop functioning as mere delivery mechanisms. Emphasizing the invisible labor of sensing and adjusting at the needle's edge ensures that the practitioner remains an irreplaceable healer rather than someone who could be swapped out for an algorithm.
By Acupuncture Today4
66 ratings
The language we use in healthcare deeply influences our practice, and the phrase "prescribing points" has quietly infiltrated modern acupuncture, bringing with it a flawed pharmaceutical mindset. This article argues that treating acupuncture points like pills—inserting a needle and passively waiting for a result—strips the practice of its true clinical power. Instead of memorizing textbook formulas and relying on static protocols, practitioners must recognize that points are merely portals. Real healing requires tactile intelligence, proper timing, and dynamic modulation to elicit deqi (qi engagement) and move energy through the body. The author urges a profession-wide shift in terminology from "point prescription" to "point selection strategy." This strategic approach empowers students and seasoned clinicians alike to adapt when a patient's tissue resists or symptoms contradict the textbooks. By reclaiming this sensory, highly adaptable craft, acupuncturists can stop functioning as mere delivery mechanisms. Emphasizing the invisible labor of sensing and adjusting at the needle's edge ensures that the practitioner remains an irreplaceable healer rather than someone who could be swapped out for an algorithm.