| Literature DB >> 29890675 |
Byeongsang Oh1,2,3, Albert Yeung4, Penelope Klein5, Linda Larkey6, Carolyn Ee7, Chris Zaslawski8, Tish Knobf9, Peter Payne10, Elisabet Stener-Victorin11, Richard Lee12, Whanseok Choi13, Mison Chun14, Massimo Bonucci15, Hanne-Doris Lang16, Nick Pavlakis17, Fran Boyle18, Stephen Clarke19, Michael Back20, Peiying Yang21, Yulong Wei22, Xinfeng Guo23, Chi-Hsiu D Weng24, Michael R Irwin25, Aymen A Elfiky26, David Rosenthal27.
Abstract
Evidence of the health and wellbeing benefits of Tai Chi and Qigong (TQ) have emerged in the past two decades, but TQ is underutilized in modern health care in Western countries due to lack of promotion and the availability of professionally qualified TQ instructors. To date, there are no government regulations for TQ instructors or for training institutions in China and Western countries, even though TQ is considered to be a part of Traditional Chinese medicine that has the potential to manage many chronic diseases. Based on an integrative health care approach, the accreditation standard guideline initiative for TQ instructors and training institutions was developed in collaboration with health professionals, integrative medicine academics, Tai Chi and Qigong master instructors and consumers including public safety officers from several countries, such as Australia, Canada, China, Germany, Italy, Korea, Sweden and USA. In this paper, the rationale for organizing the Medical Tai Chi and Qigong Association (MTQA) is discussed and the accreditation standard guideline for TQ instructors and training institutions developed by the committee members of MTQA is presented. The MTQA acknowledges that the proposed guidelines are broad, so that the diversity of TQ instructors and training institutions can be integrated with recognition that these guidelines can be developed with further refinement. Additionally, these guidelines face challenges in understanding the complexity of TQ associated with different principles, philosophies and schools of thought. Nonetheless, these guidelines represent a necessary first step as primary resource to serve and guide health care professionals and consumers, as well as the TQ community.Entities:
Keywords: Qigong; Tai Chi; accreditation; certification; guideline; standards
Year: 2018 PMID: 29890675 PMCID: PMC6023434 DOI: 10.3390/medicines5020051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicines (Basel) ISSN: 2305-6320
Figure 1Current Tai Chi and/or Qigong instructors without health professional academic degrees.
Figure 2Current Tai Chi and/or Qigong instructors who have work experience at Hospitals without health professional academic degrees.
Figure 3Current Tai chi and/or Qigong instructors with health professional academic degrees.
Figure 4Current Tai Chi and/or Qigong Instructors without supporting documents.
Figure 5Accreditation Guidelines for Tai Chi and Qigong Training Institutions.