Chinese Nutrition Postgraduate Course

About the Course

What is Chinese Nutrition?

In Chinese medicine, every food has a type of energy in addition to its physical components: foods are warming or cooling, drying or moistening, and so on. Chinese medicine also differentiates between hot and cold diseases or problems, which are made worse by warming and cooling foods, respectively. Different foods also affect different organs of the body in the Chinese system, so that a patient’s diet may be altered to specifically target, say, the liver or kidney. As such, the Chinese system considers how food affects the body, on an energetic level, when it is eaten.

Chinese Nutrition is, therefore, a holistic system of diagnosis and therapy, where each patient’s individual characteristics are taken into account to provide a unique diagnosis and a personal treatment programme. A ‘wonder’ of Chinese Nutrition is that simple, practical recommendations along the lines of “eat a little more of one thing, but a little less of another” can often lead to the desired result – a subtle shift in the overall balance of the diet that promotes healing.

The strong practical focus of this course will allow you, as a practitioner regardless of discipline, to broaden your therapeutic scope and immediately begin using your new skills.

Module 1

Key Features

  • Introduction to Chinese medical theory
  • Understanding Qi
  • Causes of disease
  • Diagnosis by observation
  • Qi, blood and body fluids
  • tongue and pulse diagnosis
  • Environmental factors
  • Chinese diagnosis in practice
  • The spirit (psychological and emotional conditions)
  • Practical diagnosis sessions
  • Diagnosing complex cases

Module 2

Key Features

  • Basics of Chinese nutrition – understanding food energetic
  • Types of food and their effect & food intolerance
  • Dietary adjustments & food temperatures
  • Diets for health and illness
  • Working with food energetics
  • Hot and cold conditions
  • Treating dryness, dampness and phlegm
  • Treating deficiency and stagnation
  • Using ‘superfoods’ and Chinese herbs in cooking
  • Making a therapeutic meal
  • Treatment of specific and complex conditions
  • Acute conditions, mental and emotional imbalances
  • Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)
  • Myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), fibromyalgia etc

Prerequisites

Open to all qualified practitioners, including traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) practitioners/acupuncturists, herbalists, homeopaths, osteopaths, chiropractors, medical doctors, etc.

Diploma(s)

  • Postgraduate Diploma in Chinese Nutrition

Study Programme and Locations

Study Programme

Module I (2 Weekends): Next dates to be confirmed
Module II (4 Weekends): 24 September - 11 December 2011

Qualified TCM practitioners/acupuncturists are exempt from Module 1 and can join Module 2 directly.

Module I

Course Times Dates
Weekend 1 10am - 6pm Next dates to be confirmed
Weekend 2 10am - 6pm Next dates to be confirmed

Module II

Course Times Dates
Weekend 1 10am - 6pm 24 - 25 September 2011
Weekend 2 10am - 6pm 15 - 16 October 2011
Weekend 3 10am - 6pm 12 - 13 November 2011
Weekend 4 10am - 6pm 10 - 11 December 2011

Location

41 Riding House Street, London W1W 7BE (Tube: Oxford Circus)
Location Map
(opens in new window)

Cost

Please contact our registration advisors for exact course pricing, discounts, and financing options.

How to Apply

Tags: ,

Ayurveda Postgraduate Course

About the Course

What is Ayurveda?

Ayurveda - an ancient philosophy for the modern world

Practiced in India for over 5,000 years, Ayurveda is one of the oldest and most established healing systems in the world. Traditionally, the word “Ayurveda” is a contraction of two separate words or ideas: “ayu”, meaning “life”, and “veda”, meaning “knowledge” or “science”. Ayurveda is, therefore, the “science of life”. With a postgraduate diploma in Ayurvedic Medicine from the College of Naturopathic Medicine, you can begin to apply Ayurveda, the science of life, in your everyday practice.

At the core of Ayurvedic philosophy and practice is the concept of the doshas, meaning literally “that which deteriorates” and more easily understood as mind–body or constitutional type. According to Ayurveda, each person’s health is determined by the balance of their doshas. A key skill of the Ayurvedic practitioner is to determine their natal constitution and any current imbalances they may have. Balance can then be restored through the use of Ayurveda and the many appropriate treatments that are available within this system of medicine.

Ayurveda will enable you to find the cause of a problem or disease and to formulate a highly individual treatment protocol using diet, herbs and lifestyle management for each patient.

Course Overview

Key Features

  • Principles of Ayurveda
  • Ayurvedic anatomy and physiology
  • Body tissues, Channels and organs
  • Digestion and disease
  • Constitutional analysis and pathology
  • Pathology and toxins
  • Diagnostic and therapeutic approaches
  • Tongue, pulse, face and nail diagnosis
  • Ayurvedic clinical nutrition and practical sessions
  • Menu planning
  • Tailoring herbs to constitutions
  • Herbal pharmacology
  • Ayurvedic herbal analysis
  • Patient and disease management
  • 2-day Ayurvedic clinic

Prerequisites

Open to all qualified practitioners regardless of therapy: nutritionists, herbalists, traditional Chinese medicine practitioners, acupuncturists, osteopaths, chiropractors, homoeopaths, medical doctors, etc.

Diploma(s)

  • Postgraduate Diploma in Ayurveda

Study Programme and Locations

Study Programme

10 weekends (dates to be arranged)

Location

41 Riding House Street, London W1W 7BE (Tube: Oxford Circus)
Location Map (opens in new window)

Cost

Please contact our registration advisors for exact course pricing, discounts, and financing options.

How to Apply

Tags: ,