Gua Sha
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Gua Sha (刮痧), literally "to scrape for cholera", sometimes given the descriptive French name "tribo-effleurage" by English speakers,Huard & Wong (1977), p.126. They also cite a French romanization for the same set of two Chinese characters: koua sha. is an ancient medical treatment that is still widely used by practitioners of Traditional Chinese Medicine. It is used even more widely as a "folk" technique, by Chinese, as a preventive or remedial treatment.Gua sha is reported almost exclusively in Western literature as 'cao gio'; somewhat equivocally as 'not abuse, pseudo-abuse, or pseudo-battery'. This being a result of East Asian immigrant population's relocation to the West during and after the Vietnam war, and the Western medical community's mixed reaction to that population's use of their traditional medicine. The words "cao gio" are Vietnamese, meaning roughly to "scrape wind" - as in Vietnamese culture catching a cold or fever is often referred to as "trúng gió" or "to catch wind". Cao gio is an extremely common remedy in Vietnam and for overseas Vietnamese.It is also widely used in Indonesia. It is a traditional Javanese technique, known as kerikan (lit., "scraping technique") or kerok , Although most Indonesians would understand it to have a far more general meaning of something like "to take out "the wind" by scraping". and it is very widely used, as a form of "folk" medicine, upon members of individual households.
Gua Sha: the "folk" technique
In describing the Gua Sha techniques as a form of "folk" medicine, the term "folk" is not being used in any pejorative sense. It is used to emphasize:
The Gua Sha technique
Gua Sha involves repeated pressured strokes over lubricated skin with a smooth edge. Commonly a ceramic Chinese soup spoon was used, or a well worn coin, even honed animal bones, water buffalo horn, or jade. A simple metal cap with a rounded edge is commonly used.In cases of fatigue from heavy work a piece of ginger root soaked in rice wine is sometimes used to rub down the spine from head to tail.The smooth edge is placed against the pre-oiled skin surface, pressed down firmly, and then moved down the muscles -- hence the term "tribo-effleurage" (i.e., friction-stroking) -- or along the pathway of the acupuncture meridians, along the surface of the skin, with each stroke being about 4-6 inches long.This causes extravasation of blood from the peripheral capillaries (petechiae) and may result in sub-cutaneous blemishing (ecchymosis), which usually takes 2-4 days to fade. Sha rash does not represent capillary rupture as in bruising, as is evidenced by the immediate fading of petechiae to echymosis, and the rapid resolution of sha as compared to bruising. The color of sha varies according to the severity of the patient's blood stasis -- which may correlate with the nature, severity and type of their disorder --appearing from a dark blue-black to a light pink, but is most often a shade of red. Although the marks on the skin look painful, they are not. Patients typically feel immediate sense of relief and change.Practitioners tend to follow the tradition they were taught to obtain sha: typically using either gua sha or fire cupping. The techniques are not used together.One of the first to introduce the technique of Gua Sha to non-Chinese students in the United States was James Tin Yau So (1911 - ).Indications
In classical Chinese practice, the Gua Sha technique is most commonly used to:
Cross-cultural confusion with physical abuse
A slightly different form of Gua Sha, using the edges of coins, rather than porcelain, is practiced as a "folk medicine" technique, by individuals amongst their own family members, in many Asian cultures such as Vietnam (where the coin scraping is known as "cạo gió", scraping for wind), in Cambodia, and in their immigrant communities abroad.Cao Gio was introduced to the USA in 1975, when large numbers of Vietnamese were airlifted from South Vietnam near the end of the military conflict between North and South. Well-meaning practitioners of western medicine are sometimes shocked at the sight of these marks and fear that a child with the marks has been abused. The practice was observed by military physicians who publicized the harmless nature of this practice.In 1980, it was found that many Vietnamese still distrusted US medical practitioners in part due to fear of being falsely accused of child abuse.For professionals in this position, it is helpful to be familiar with the appearance of Gua Sha marks and to understand its traditional therapeutic value, and to be able to make the distinction between gua sha marks and signs of abuse.Gua Sha is not known to be harmful. The technique called cupping also leaves distinctive, petechial marks on the skin, but is also harmless.In 2001, a movie called "Gua Sha" (see The Treatment) was made addressing this practice and the cultural misunderstandings it causes. The movie stars Tony Leung Ka-Fai.Notes
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