Dr. Angelica Kokkalis, O.M.D L.Ac.

Picture of Angelica

Beijing Medical University Celebrates 100 Years

Dr. Angelica Kokkalis Plans to Attend 100 Year Celebration in China

In 1998 Beijing University celebrated it’s 100 year anniversary and this October 2012, Beijing Medical University will celebrate it’s 100 year anniversary. Dr. Angelica Kokkalis, Indianapolis acupuncture and Eastern medicine doctor, is planning to go to China for two weeks to attend the celebrations.

Dr. Kokkalis was invited to give a talk as one of the first foreign student medical graduates and she hopes she can collaborate with the university doing some research on the effects of acupuncture and autism. The department of Neuroscience and the leading world renown prof Ji Sheng Han have already great results from preliminary studies.

About Beijing Medical University (now called Peking University Health Science Center)

Established by the central government of China on October 26, 1912 in the city of Beijing, Beijing Medical University was the first of the kind in China to teach western medicine and train medical professionals. In 1923 it adopted the name Beijing Medical University, but in the year 2000 it merged with Peking University and is now named Peking University Health Science Center.

According to Wikipedia, “PUHSC offers a full range of courses for 8 specialties including basic medical sciences, clinical medicine, preventive medicine, stomatology, pharmacy, nursing, medical laboratory diagnosis and biomedical English. It has 57 accredited doctoral programs and 66 master programs. In addition to offering undergraduate and graduate programs, it also plays an active role in continuing education. PUHSC hosts 6 postdoctoral programs. PUHSC now has enrollment of 10112 students, including 927 doctoral students, 1036 master program students, 3196 undergraduates, 696 junior college students, 3994 adult learning program students, and 388 international students. It has many international students.

PUHSC has developed 20 disciplines that have gained national recognition. Besides, it has 1 national key laboratory, 10 ministry-level key laboratories, 23 joint research centers, and 20 research institutes at university level. PUHSC has 11 schools, 1 institute and 1 division, namely, School of Basic Medical Sciences, School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, School of Public Health, School of Nursing, School of Stomatology, the First School of Clinical Medicine (Beida Hospital), the Second School of Clinical Medicine(the people’s Hospital), the Third School of Clinical Medicine (the Third Hospital), Institute of Mental Health (the Sixth Hospital), the School of Oncology (Beijing Tumor Hospital), Peking University Shenzhen School of Medicine, Peking University School of Telemedical Education, and the Division of Humanity and Fundamental Sciences. In addition, 15 hospitals in Beijing serve as teaching hospital.”

Reprinted with permission from the Zionsville Times Sentinel, LIVESMART, Wednesday, September, 12, 2007

In my 25 years of experience in Chinese treatments and medicines, this is the first time I’ve felt compelled to talk about the changes taking place in The People’s Republic of China.

In May 2007, I took my boys, Akis, 13, and Dennis, 11, and my friend Connie to introduce them to the country in which I spent nine years studying Western and Chinese medicines. It was not the first time I had returned to China. Five years ago, I was there to hear about the latest research in Chinese medicine at Hangzhou Zheng Jiang Zheng Jiang Yi Xue Yuan, one of the country’s largest schools of traditional Chinese medicine.

While in Beijing, I found my former school, Beijing Medical University, now called Beijing University Health and Science Center. I didn’t recognize a single building. There was a new science center, library and foreign students’ dorm. The teaching hospital had been replaced by a state-of-the-art, multilevel building.

I met with Professor Han Ji Sheng, Director of the Neuroscience Research Institute of Beijing Medical University. For 42 years, he’s researched the neurochemical basis of pain relief using acupuncture. For the last 15 years, he’s also researched the clinical effects of withdrawal in the addicted. Today, he’s involved in a National Institute of Health/National Institute of Drug Abuse study on alternative therapies for alcohol and drug abuse and the prevention of cocaine relapse using electro acupuncture. He is also a visiting professor at Harvard University’s Center for Alternative Medicine.

After talking with Professor Han, I became interested in studying how to sup­press withdrawal symptoms in those tak­ing morphine and other opioids. Professor Han encouraged me to apply for a National Institutes of Health grant to support the study. Most striking on this year’s trip, howev­er, were the dramatic changes in both Shanghai, in the south, and the capi­tal, Beijing, in the north. Back in 2002, Shanghai looked almost like cosmo­politan Hong Kong. But Beijing still had a conser­vative northern look, with bicycles and vendors on the streets, and ancient narrow alleyways and parks side-by-side with apartment complexes, small shops and restaurants. It was a friendly and relaxing environment. The cost of living was quite affordable for locals and visitors, but I sensed concern about where the city was headed.

I observed that changes in politics, new laws, stricter regulations and opportunism have erupted in the last five years. I thought Beijing, as the capital, would pre­serve its cultural traditions. After all, the south had always rebelled from the north. The north was always known for being conservative and slow-to-change. But today, its economy, people, streets and buildings have changed. In my wildest dreams, 1 never imagined I would visit a modern Beijing. I would even compare it to New York City!

The streets are six-lane highways with high-end cars no more than five-years old — mostly European models made in China with names like Mercedes, BMW, Audi, and Volkswagen. Virtually everyone carried a satellite cell phone. New buses were everywhere, taking smart cards for payment, and featuring flat-screen TVs and air conditioning. Grand, multi-level • department stores offered name-brand products and a Starbucks coffee shop sat on every corner. Restaurants offered free drinks while customers waited to be. seat­ed; some even provided complementary manicures for the ladies. When asking for directions, I was told that every three months a new map of Beijing is needed to update its changing face.

The third week of our trip we visited Hangzhou, which I remembered as the most beautiful city in the country. But now it was nothing like what I remem­bered from five years earlier. It all looked new. What had happened to that beautiful, old city? What had happened to the coun­tryside? It was all gone. I instead saw pedestrian bridges, six-lane highways and new architecture. Along with these advances, both prices and air pollution have risen.

Overall, my trip to China was amazing. I thoroughly enjoyed seeing this new world, and while there I was given a new direction in my own life.