Abstract: In the past decade, the physician-patient narrative has been revisited and appreciated in both the West and the East because of the negative impact of biochemical medicine in the past two centuries in healthcare. Biochemical medical system simply marginalized physicians and patients(Jewson, 2009). More research and practice of "doctor's benevolence" and "humanistic medicine" have called for the return of the physician-patient narrative. This paper interviewed a few non-Chinese overseas Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) practitioners, whose clients were non-Chinese, too. We adopted discourse analysis to explore our data. We found that they actively engaged in physician-patient narrative with localized interpretation of TCM. We believe such a return to basic physician-patient narrative is caused by fundamental needs for physician-patient narrative coincidentally goes along with loose control of TCM practices in the studied countries. This discovery can inspire further study on re-establishing physician-patient narratives in each healthcare institution by re-positioning biochemical medicine.
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