“After I return to Kuwait, I want to start full-fledged acupuncture departments in hospitals or clinics for the benefit of my countrymen”

In a country where traditional medicine is a virtual no-no, a Kuwaiti princess is aiming to buck the trend by learning acupuncture so that she can take its benefits to the 4mn citizens back home.

Last week, a Mercedes driven by a female chauffeur halted outside a small clinic, located in a narrow lane in the congested Dadar area of south-central Mumbai. The chauffeur asked her distinguished passenger, Sheikha Alia Salem al-Sabah, the wife of Interior Minister Mohamed al-Khalid al-Sabah: “You have come here to meet a doctor?”

“Yes, since I have come here, you can well imagine what he must be...” the guest smiled, stepping inside the eight-bed clinic run by internationally-acclaimed acupuncturist Dr P B Lohiya.

Expecting his visitor, Lohiya, 63, founder of Indian Academy of Acupuncture Science (IAAS), was well-prepared, despite a large crowd of patients in the clinic.

“I want to learn acupuncture as I have great faith in its curative success and benefits,” Sheikha Alia, 55, said at the clinic full of patients with problems ranging from back pains, irregular menstrual cycles, cardiac problems and cancer.

In her home country, with Indians and Egyptians comprising the largest chunk of expatriates, traditional medicines are virtually a no-no, she explained.

“Yes, we have a small acupuncture department in a government-run hospital run by Chinese doctors, but there is lack of proper diagnostic systems and cures,” Sheikha Alia said.

In fact, along with her daughter, Sheikha Alia recently travelled to China to get basic knowledge of acupuncture, but after a week of grappling with the local language problems and lack of diagnostic systems, she gave up her efforts.

In China, a doctor informed her that she could learn a lot from the renowned Aurangabad-based acupuncturist Lohiya, the only Indian visiting professor at the prestigious Beijing Meridian Research Centre and vice president of the Beijing’s World Association of Chinese Medicine. (Lohiya spends the bulk of his time in Aurangabad but attends the Mumbai clinic for one week every month. He also devotes time to his clinics in cities like Pune, Kolhapur, Nagpur and Hyderabad, besides travelling abroad.)

“Well, with a little research and help from some officials I contacted Dr Lohiya and took the next flight to Mumbai,” said Sheikha Alia, a qualified aerospace engineer from the US.

At present she spends hours carefully observing Lohiya as he treats patients for various ailments, including those relating to the heart, lungs, kidneys, liver, muscles, bones, paralysis and tissues and brain disorders by pricking tiny needles at strategic points on his patients.

After a week-long sojourn in Mumbai, Sheikha Alia will travel with him to Aurangabad for a similar experience, topping off in Hyderabad with a fortnight-long intensive lectures-cum-practical sessions in acupuncture.

“After I return to Kuwait, I want to start full-fledged acupuncture departments in hospitals or clinics for the benefit of my countrymen as I feel this ancient form of treatment has tremendous healing and curative potential,” she added.

Lohiya has tentatively agreed to help start a clinic under his supervision in mid-2014 and even train Kuwaiti doctors in acupuncture along with other branches of traditional medicine.

Sheikha Alia said that her husband and daughter, who suffered from severe neck and back pain, got tremendous relief by acupuncture-cum-ozone treatments.

“A friend was advised to undergo a heart-lung transplant, but after an acupuncture-ozone session in Mumbai, he does not need any transplant,” Sheikha Alia said.

When asked how an aerospace engineer developed an interest in ancient medicine systems, Sheikha Alia, who loves Indian vegetarian cuisine, said it was because of a desire to help people overcome their big and small medical problems.

 

 

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