Abstract

For decades, professional divisions have been represented as the main structural divisions in Western medicine throughout the world. In Taiwan, medical policymakers are also interested in designing professional divisions of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). Therefore, this study evaluated the current status and potentiality of professional divisions of TCM in Taiwan using data from the year 2012 obtained from the National Health Insurance Research Database; the database provides information regarding age and gender of TCM physicians (TCMPs); total visit counts; contracted medical institution codes; groupings of diseases classified under International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification codes; numbers of children and female patients seeking treatment; and claim disposition codes used by each TCMP. The results indicated that there were 5522 TCMPs in 2012, and 4876 (90.3%) TCMPs practiced in primary clinics. The proportions of pediatric visits to these TCMPs were mostly below 0.2, and acupuncture or traumatology-related visit proportions were below 0.5. Only a few of the studied Taiwan-based TCMPs practiced gynecology and pediatrics, but most of them performed “internal medicine”, or “acupuncture” or “traumatology” treatments. Thus, the number of TCM specialists practicing gynecology or pediatrics is insufficient, indicating that a policy that forms professional divisions of TCM practitioners in Taiwan should be reconsidered.

Highlights

  • Western medicine has been classified into four main professional specialties and many subdivisions, the classification of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) can be divided into only two categories: internal herbal medicine, and external procedures

  • Due to the large sample size, this study achieved high statistical power and precision, and provided a basis for conducting further international studies of medical policies. This novel study investigated the trends of professional divisions among TCM physicians (TCMPs) in Taiwan

  • The 2012 NHI Research Database (NHIRD) data were adopted to analyze the claim codes and ICD-9-CM codes of the patients in addition to other factors for each TCMP, thereby determining whether a tendency existed toward the development of professional divisions of TCMPs

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Summary

Introduction

Western medicine has been classified into four main professional specialties and many subdivisions, the classification of traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) can be divided into only two categories: internal herbal medicine, and external procedures (acupuncture, moxibustion, manipulative therapy, etc.). The official classification of TCM was first introduced in 624 AD. Medical Bureau of Tang dynasty classified TCM into four main subjects: “medicine”, “acupuncture”,. “massage (which encompasses orthopedics)”, and “charms and incantations”, and practitioners were. Res. Public Health 2018, 15, 1992; doi:10.3390/ijerph15091992 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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