‘Would you dare take it?’: Critics fear B.C. is deregulating Chinese medicine
VANCOUVER — Tom Whitfield takes a ferry from Nanaimo to a traditional Chinese medicine clinic in downtown Vancouver every Monday for acupuncture and other treatment.
The excursion sometimes consumes the entire day, but the retired forester from Qualicum Beach said it is worth the effort, and has relieved about 90 per cent of the pain in his cheek that followed skin cancer surgery.
He’s a believer in traditional Chinese medicine — but he said he would not trust care, or herbal medication, from an unlicensed practitioner.
It’s a concern among both patients and licensed practitioners, as the industry fights provincial government plans that they say amount to deregulating the profession, by removing the prescribing, compounding, and dispensing of traditional Chinese herbal medicine from a list of restricted activities.


