Acupuncture for tsunami
victims
Bucks Free Press
September 28, 2005
Sitala Peek
AN ACUPUNCTURIST who has been treating Sri Lankan
survivors of the Asian tsunami is returning to the
UK to set up a clinic in Bourne End.
Charlotte Brydon was part of a team of 28 trained
acupuncturists who volunteered for the Acupuncture
Sans Frontiere relief effort in Colombo, Galle and
Matara.
Treatment centres were set up in Buddhist
monasteries with the help and connections of the
venerable Buddhist monk Mangela Thero.
Miss Brydon said: "There was such a great demand
for treatment, that on the second day of opening the
Matara Clinic 1,000 people had arrived before 9.30am
from all over the country."
A combination of body and ear acupuncture was
used to treat patients with back pro-blems, sprained
ankles, numb-ness and sore necks and around 8,000
treatments were adm-inistered in a three week
period.
Miss Brydon said: "It was exhausting work, both
mentally and physically, but it was very rewarding.
What's great is that I work within a profession that
can make a direct and significant contribution to
the much needed healing process, that's worth
something of terrific value in my mind and I feel
honoured to have been able to help."
Miss Brydon trained in Reading at the College of
Integrated Chinese Medicine and is a member of the
British Acupuncture Council.
She hopes to establish her own clinic in Station
Road, Bourne End, and also plans to return to Sri
Lanka at Christmas or possibly in the New Year to
continue the work out there.
Miss Brydon added: "Acupuncture can make a
lasting and significant difference to people's
lives. With acupuncutre becoming recognised as a
leading healthcare option, there is no reason why
the acupuncture community should not be represented
at any world crisis."