The story appears on

Page A8

August 15, 2013

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

HomeNation

Bee stings work say acupuncture patients

Patients in China are swarming to acupuncture clinics to be given bee stings to treat or ward off life-threatening illness, practitioners say.

More than 27,000 people have undergone the painful technique — each session can involve dozens of punctures — at Wang Menglin’s clinic in Beijing, says the bee acupuncturist who makes his living from believers in the concept.

But except for trying to prevent allergic reactions to the stings themselves, there is no orthodox medical evidence that bee venom is effective against illness.

“We hold the bee, put it on a point on the body, hold its head, and pinch it until the sting needle emerges,” Wang said at his facility on the outskirts of the capital.

The bee — Wang said he uses an imported Italian variety — dies when it stings.

“We’ve treated patients with dozens of diseases, from arthritis to cancer, all with positive results,” said Wang.

Bee stings can be used to treat “most common diseases of the lower limbs,” he added, and claimed they also work as a preventative measure.

But sciencebasedmedicine.org, a US-based website, says that such claims of panaceas and cure-alls are “always a red flag for quackery.”

“There is no scientific evidence to support its use,” it says of “apitherapy”, or treatment with bee products.

One of Wang’s patients said doctors told him he had lung and brain cancer and gave him little over a year to live, but he now believes he has almost doubled his life expectancy and credits bee stings for the change.

“From last year up until now, I think I’m getting much stronger,” the patient said.

On its website, the American Cancer Society makes clear: “There have been no clinical studies in humans showing that bee venom or other honeybee products are effective in preventing or treating cancer.

“Relying on this type of treatment alone and avoiding or delaying conventional medical care for cancer may have serious health consequences.”

Bee venom is one of the many traditional Chinese medicine treatments derived from animals and plants.

TCM is a major part of China’s health care system and a booming industry which continues to receive significant investment and support from the central government.

Older people also favor traditional remedies because of deep-rooted cultural beliefs in the power of natural, rather than modern, ingredients.


 

Copyright 漏 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

娌叕缃戝畨澶 31010602000204鍙

Email this to your friend