Home  
  Interview  
  Curriculum Vitae  
  The Practice  
  Services  
  Your First Visit  
  Directions  
  Patient
  Testimonials
 
  News Releases  
  Current Events  
  Past Events  
  Workshops  
  Publications  
  Music  
     
     
     
News Releases


Thursday, June 21, 2007
Med school offers Wellness Center
By Tiffany Hill, Advertiser Staff Writer

Elizabeth Chen Christenson practicing Tai Chi
Elizabeth Chen Christenson, clinical associate professor
at the UH medical school, practices the Chinese art of tai chi
on the front lawn of the Wellness Center. Tai chi classes will
eventually be offered at the center, which opens next month.

Roseanne Harrigan photo

     Embracing the rising demand for complementary and integrative healthcare, the University of Hawai'i's John A. Burns School of Medicine will open a Wellness Center next month.
     The group practice, in partnership with modern medicine, will offer nontraditional methods of medicine as well as ancient traditional methods from India and China and teach classes to create a holistic approach to healing and wellness.
     The new facility will be open to the general public, and appointments can be made over the phone.
     "People are greatly using alternative methods of medicine," said Terry Shintani, associate chair of the practice and creator of the popular Hawaii Diet. "But we want to make sure the services that are available are legit, so that's why the university is getting involved."
     According to research headed by Rosanne Harrigan, chair of the Department of Complementary and Alternative Health Care, 78 percent of people in Hawai'i who are disabled from severe, chronic pain use integrative medicine.
     The center, located on the medical school's Kaka'ako campus, will offer a variety of integrated therapy services, including acupuncture, massage therapy, music therapy, and nutrition services and classes. In addition, meditation and yoga classes will be taught.
     Harrigan said it will eventually add other services and tai chi classes.
     "(The services) will be used as adjunctive therapy," said Harrigan. "But we will not stop using traditional methods."
     The large one-room center (divided by cubicle barriers) was originally intended by the university to be an exercise center but was unable to open because of a lack of money. However, Harrigan said the center's treadmills and health equipment along with the integration of traditional and nontraditional medical approaches will maximize patients' overall wellness.
     Ira Zunin, a primary physician at the Manakai O Malama Integrative Healthcare Group and Rehabilitation Center, said the new center's integrative services are a fresh solution in healthcare.
     "Integrative medicine ... is much more than bringing in several providers under one roof," said Zunin. "We have a bigger view about how to provide care ... in improving quality of life and lowering (healthcare) costs.
     "Integrative medicine is coming of age. It's not some pipe dream," said Zunin, also a professor at the university. "The economy needs it and Hawai'i needs it."
     Both Harrigan and Zunin stressed that integrative medicine should not strictly be classified as alternative medicine as it still includes the technology and methodology of modern medicine.
     Emphasis at the center will focus on wellness evaluation, diabetic care, obesity, heart disease and pain management.
     The Wellness Center will also incorporate ancient traditional forms of medicine, accentuating the university's ethnic diversity.
     Among them is Ayurvedic medicine, derived from India, which uses dietary and herbal techniques to regulate mind-body harmony.
     Moxibustion, the process of heating mugwort, a small, spongy herb, will also be available, Harrigan said. The herb increases circulation and relieves pain.


© COPYRIGHT 2007 The Honolulu Advertiser, a division of Gannett Co. Inc.
All materials contained in this news release are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of The Honolulu Advertiser. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content.

January 2007

     Dr. Christenson completed all academic requirements at the Institute of Clinical Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (ICAOM) in Honolulu in December, 2006, and received a Degree of Master of Science in Oriental Medicine with highest honors.  She also passed the National Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine board exam sponsored by the National Certification Commission for Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (NCCAOM) and received the Hawaii Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine license.  By successfully passing NCCAOM board exams, she has become a Diplomate of Acupuncture.  With duo Degrees and Board Certifications in Eastern and Western medicine, with duo professorship at the John A. Burns School of Medicine at the University of Hawaii at Manoa and at ICAOM, and with her bilingual abilities, she is ready to perform the work of bridging the best of Eastern and Western medicine, as well as combining spirituality and music into 21st century medicine.

 
 

Elizabeth Chen Christenson
MD, FAAMA, FCAP,
ABIHM, Dipl. Ac., L. Ac.

Medical Director,
CHI Medical Center

(Comprehensive
Health Innovations)
934 Maunawili Circle
Kailua, Hawaii 96734
USA

Phone: (808) 261-7801
Fax: (808) 261-7725
E-mail: chimedical@doctor.com

 
© 2007 Elizabeth Chen Christenson