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Information for Traditional Chinese Medicine Practitioners

Petition - click here to downloadThe CATT coalition hosted a booth and give a presentation at the Third International Conference of Traditional Medicine in Toronto, Canada, September 20-22. They emphasized the joint interests of TCM and conservation in saving wild tigers and other endangered species. They also launched a petition for TCM specialists worldwide to sign in support of developing TCM free of tiger bone. Completed forms will be presented as a "gift" to China's Green Olympics in the summer of 2008.

We invite TCM Practitoner's around the world to help take the lead in promoting healthy people and a healthy planet. Download the Petition Form.

Recently, a coallition of conservation organizations wrote a letter to the Chinese Premier reaffirming the value of existing laws banning the trade in tiger parts. Read the Joint Statement on China’s New Regulation for Import and Export of Endangered Species of Wildlife

Read the letter from the President, Council of Colleges of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (US) to the Chinese Premier about the TCM industry's support of wild tigers.

Read IFAW's brochure "What's Hiding inside your Traditional Medicine?" English   Chinese

Explore this website about endangered species and TCM compiled by the American College of Traditional Chinese Medicine and WWF http://www.tcmwildlife.org/

Substitutes for endangered TCM products

Mending The WebMending the Web of Life: Chinese Medicine and Species Conservation is a book for students and practitioners of Chinese medicine, conservationists and anyone interested in endangered animals and plants used in the Chinese materia medica. It begins by providing an overview of international conservation agreements, the concept of sustainable use and identification and nomenclature and their impact on the trade of endangered medicinal species. By using philosophical ideas of the medicine itself as a motivation for protection, it offers a paradigm for conservation that can be understood and supported by practitioners of Chinese medicine from any culture or country. Mending the Web of Life also presents profiles that include the distribution, biology, threats and conservation strategies of these species, which will enable the reader to appreciate them beyond their medicinal use as unique and valuable life forms in their own right. It also provides the results of a peer reviewed, survey of practitioners on substitutions and replacements for these species in traditional formulas. There is a chapter on the importance of cultivation in conserving medicinal plant species, and also on United States Laws and Treaties that govern their import or export. Finally, there is a list of suggested actions the reader can take that will instill hope and a sense of direction for medicinal species conservation. Ultimately, the model for protection outlined in Mending the Web of Life can be applied to any species threatened by extinction and helps humans gain perspective on their responsibility in preserving biodiversity for the health and well being of people as well as the Earth. Order your copy here

 
 
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