Traditional Chinese Medicine is a 2,000-year-old complete system of health built on the frameworks of qi, yin and yang, the five elements, and meridian pathways — offering both a coherent philosophy of how health is maintained and practical tools including acupuncture, herbal medicine, dietary therapy, and movement practices. Its theories do not translate directly into biomedical language, and that is not a flaw but a feature of a different explanatory framework — one that emphasizes pattern, relationship, and balance over mechanism and pathology. An increasing body of evidence supports specific TCM interventions, while the theoretical framework continues to be a productive source of clinical insight.
Each step builds on the last.