Dr. Wang
Writer of Chinese Wellness Self-Care. Traditional Chinese Medicine practitioner and Master of TCM, with a professional direction in TCM internal medicine.
Half-anonymous author profile. Professional identity is shown without a personal photo.
Professional background
TCM Education and Practice
Dr. Wang is a Traditional Chinese Medicine practitioner and Master of TCM, with a professional direction in TCM internal medicine, 8 years of formal TCM education, and 8 years of clinical practice experience. This website uses that formal training and professional background to explain Chinese self-care in clear English for readers who want practical wellness education.
- Master of Traditional Chinese Medicine
- Traditional Chinese Medicine practitioner
- Professional direction: TCM internal medicine
- 8 years of formal TCM education, including undergraduate and graduate study
- 8 years of clinical practice experience in TCM internal medicine
- Focus on everyday self-care, safety, and practical routines
- Writes for education, not online diagnosis or treatment
Education
- Degree
- Master of Traditional Chinese Medicine
- Formal Training
- 8 years of structured TCM education, including undergraduate and graduate study.
- Academic Focus
- Traditional Chinese Medicine theory, clinical foundations, internal medicine direction, food therapy, acupuncture and acupressure foundations, and safety boundaries.
Professional Background
- Practice Field
- Traditional Chinese Medicine practitioner.
- Professional Direction
- TCM Internal Medicine.
- Clinical Experience
- 8 years of clinical practice experience in TCM internal medicine.
- Editorial Role
- Explains Chinese self-care in simple English for general wellness education, not diagnosis, prescriptions, or online treatment.
Why Dr. Wang Studies TCM
Dr. Wang was drawn to Traditional Chinese Medicine because of its depth and its long attention to daily wellbeing, habits, food, seasons, rest, and body awareness. This site was created to share that practical side of Chinese wellness with people who may not read Chinese or study medicine.
Chinese wellness can be deep, but it should not feel unreachable. My goal is to explain useful self-care ideas simply, safely, and honestly.
How Dr. Wang Writes for This Site
- Start from real reader questions, such as sleep, digestion, stress, warmth, and seasonal routines.
- Translate TCM concepts into everyday English instead of academic terminology.
- Keep medical boundaries clear: no diagnosis, no prescription, no treatment promises.
- Include safety notes and references where they help readers make conservative decisions.
- Present Chinese self-care as wellness education that can complement, not replace, professional healthcare.
Professional Boundaries
Dr. Wang does not provide individual medical advice, diagnosis, herbal formulas, treatment planning, or clinical consultations through this website. If you have a health concern, please consult a qualified healthcare professional in your area.
Disclaimer — wellness education, not medical advice. Chinese Wellness Self-Care applies the classical Tri-Factor Environmental Adaptation Model (yīn rén · yīn dì · yīn shí) to modern climate data. All quizzes, reports, and articles here are an algorithmic wellness framework — a structured way of matching your baseline pattern to your local environment and the week ahead. They are not a diagnosis, and they do not treat, cure, or prevent any disease. TCM body-pattern language (warm, cool, damp, dry) is used as an educational vocabulary, not as a clinical claim. Environmental data is drawn from public weather APIs and is provided as-is. If you are pregnant, take medication, or have a diagnosed medical condition, talk to a qualified healthcare professional before changing your diet, foot-bath practice, acupressure routine, or sleep timing based on anything on this site. Read our full safety notes · Feedback