Natural Health Center
Celebrating 20 Years in Practice
485 Los Coches Street
Milpitas, CA 95035
The Natural Health Center is currently accepting new patients. Call (408) 946-9332 to schedule an appointment.
Fertility Home
Fertility Treatment
Fertility Articles
Allergy Treatment
Other Conditions
General Information
  About Modern Acupunture
  About Robin Hays
  How It Works
  Insurance Info
  Contact Info/Directions

More women being pointed (and pricked) toward holistic alternative health treatments

By K. Oanh Ha
Sunday, June 26, 2006

After three years of trying to conceive and three failed attempts at in-vitro fertilization, Tracey Carroll, 33, desperately turned to the East for help. She sought the needles and herbs of an acupuncturist.

In fact, her new in-vitro doctor insisted. After she had her fourth session of getting pricked, her menstrual cycle became regular for the first time in three years. Carroll also swallowed 18 pills of "smelly, yucky herbs" of which the ingredients were derived from cow spleen and pituitary gland believed to regulate her hormones.

Six months later, the Hayward woman is now expecting twins, due in December -- and believes acupuncture played a large role.

Carroll is among an increasing number of American women who are turning to alternative, Eastern medicinal arts for problems with infertility, menopause, weight loss and even dry skin.

Once dismissed as mystical quackery by many medical doctors, acupuncture treatments are now recommended by some in-vitro specialists as a way to increase fertility. Meanwhile, other women turn to ayurveda, a 5,000-year-old practice from India that incorporates mind, body and spirit to ensure health. Women turn to it to rid their body of toxins and dull skin. Both Eastern holistic approaches employ herbs and massage or acupuncture to bring the body into balance.

Carroll, a teacher, said that in her first session, Milpitas acupuncturist Robin Hays diagnosed that her natural killer cells in her immune system were elevated, which meant her body might attack an embryo. A week later, blood tests confirmed it.

Acupuncture, an integral part of traditional Chinese medicine, stimulates blood flow and better circulation. Needles are inserted into the body at various energy points, which correspond to organs in the body. Acupuncturists also employ herbs to bring balance to the body.

For women trying to conceive, acupuncture often focuses on the uterus, says Hays.

"It's creating a fertile valley to grow a seed or an embryo," she says. Hays, who turned to acupuncture for a sprained ankle two decades ago, was so delighted with the results that she pursued it as a profession. She graduated from San Francisco's American College of Traditional Chinese Medicine in 1985.

Back then, it was mostly Chinese and older hippies who turned to acupuncture, Hays says. Her patients didn't even tell their primary doctors about their treatments because most of the medical establishment eyed it suspiciously. Now, some insurance plans cover acupuncture. And she's getting referrals from doctors, including Dr. Christo Zouves of the Zouves Fertility Center in Daly City.

Eight-five percent of patients at the fertility center undergo acupuncture as part of their treatments, Zouves says. He also recommends yoga, meditation and eating healthily to his patients.

"It's about the mind/body connection," says Zouves, who adopted Eastern holistic approaches to his practice a decade ago.

His experience and medical studies show that acupuncture stimulates blood flow to the pelvis and uterus. "We don't know how it works, but it does," he says.

At Hays' practice, about half of the patients see her for women's health issues, including premenstrual syndrome, irregular menstrual cycles and menopause. She also treats many patients for pain disorders and allergies. "Most of my patients come because they don't want to take drugs," she says.

For complete arcticle, see The Mercury News.



Copyright 2006, Robin Hays, All rights reserved
Home | Contact