Miriam Lee
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Miriam Lee is one of the pioneering acupuncturists in the United States and was responsible for acupuncture being legalized in the state of California.
Miriam Lee was born in China but left the mainland in 1949. In China, she was a nurse-midwife before becoming an acupuncturist. Lee lived through the Second Sino-Japanese War. After leaving China, she lived in Singapore for 17 years before coming to the United States. When she arrived in California, acupuncture was illegal. So Lee worked on a factory assembly line and gave treatments quietly out of her home. Later, she shared a space with a supportive medical doctor. [1] In 1974, Lee was arrested for practicing medicine without a license. At her trial, her patients filled the courtroom to protest her arrest, claiming their right to the only medicine that had truly helped them. Within a few days, acupuncture was legally made an experimental procedure by Governor Ronald Regan. In 1976, Governor Jerry Brown signed the legislation that once and for all legalized acupuncture. In 1976, she was one of the first licensed acupuncturists in the state of California.
In the 1970s and early 1980s Lee was the acupuncture teacher of probably 70% of practitioners working in Northern California. She was famous for using a special set of points based on the work of one of her teachers, Dr. Tung known as the "Master Tung Magic Points." These are published in a book by Blue Poppy Press. She remained inventive and innovative throughout her career. During the height of her practice she would see up to 10 patients an hour and worked 80 hours a week.[2]
She popularized a 10 point protocol used in her book, Insights of A Senior Acupuncturist. In her book Lee describes a combination of points that have wide application: ST36, SP6, LI4, LI11, and LU7. This set of points, with slight adjustments is shown to be helpful for the majority of common complaints seen in the Western acupuncture clinic, using the combination of points to balance the major organ systems. [3] She also popularized the Master Tung Magic Points, a nontraditional point system.
The Acupuncture Association of America was founded in 1980, and run by Dr. Lee until 1998 when she retired and passed the care of AAA over to her student, Susan Johnson, L.Ac. The purpose of the organization is to promote public acupuncture education, provide continuing education for licensed practitioners, to engage in legislative advocacy, and to promote acupuncture research.[4]