TCM Insights
Explaining TCM Diagnosis Patterns to Patients in Plain Language
Patients Google your pattern names minutes after you say them. Giving clear, accurate explanations builds trust and reduces dropout when improvement is gradual.
Table of Contents
Why Pattern Language Matters to Patients
When patients understand “your body is not circulating Qi smoothly around the shoulder,” they tolerate a longer course of care better than when they only hear mysterious terminology.
A 60-Second Explanation Framework
- What we see (symptoms + tongue/pulse in simple terms)
- What it means (pattern in plain language)
- What we will do (acupuncture, lifestyle, herbs)
- How we will know it is working (measurable signs)
Examples: Stagnation, Deficiency, Heat, Damp
Qi stagnation: “Energy not moving freely—often feels like tightness, sighing, irritability.” Spleen deficiency: “Digestion and energy production need support—fatigue, loose stools, poor appetite.” Keep metaphors consistent visit to visit.
Written Summaries and Handouts
Portal messages or printed care sheets reinforce verbal teaching. Avoid promising cures; focus on process and partnership.
Reflecting Education in Your SOAP Note
Subjective can note: “Patient states understanding of Kidney Yang deficiency pattern and agrees to 8-week trial.” That line supports informed participation and billing continuity.
Streamline your acupuncture documentation
Aura Cure EMR helps TCM clinics draft structured SOAP notes, track tongue and pulse trends, and share clear treatment plans—with HIPAA/PIPEDA/GDPR-oriented privacy controls.
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