Gloria Y Yeh, Andrew Ahn, Janet Clark, Michael R Irwin, Jian Kong, Helen Lavretsky, Fuzhong Li, Brad Manor, Wolf Mehling, Byeongsang Oh, Daniel Seitz, Ahmed Tawakol, William W N Tsang, Chenchen Wang, Albert Yeung, Peter M Wayne
{"title":"太极拳和气功作为整个人健康的科学-第二部分:证据差距和未来研究和实施的机会。","authors":"Gloria Y Yeh, Andrew Ahn, Janet Clark, Michael R Irwin, Jian Kong, Helen Lavretsky, Fuzhong Li, Brad Manor, Wolf Mehling, Byeongsang Oh, Daniel Seitz, Ahmed Tawakol, William W N Tsang, Chenchen Wang, Albert Yeung, Peter M Wayne","doi":"10.1089/jicm.2024.0958","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p><b><i>Background:</i></b> The emerging paradigm of whole person health shares many core principles with traditional complementary and integrative health frameworks, including Tai Chi and Qigong (TCQ). <b><i>Methods:</i></b> In the fall of 2023, the Harvard Medical School Osher Center for Integrative Health hosted the inaugural international conference on <i>The Science of Tai Chi & Qigong for Whole Person Health</i>: <i>Advancing the Integration of Mind-Body Practices into Contemporary Healthcare</i> at Harvard Medical School. A two-part white paper was written to summarize key conference topics, findings, and issues. <b><i>Results and Discussion:</i></b> Part II presented here summarizes evidence gaps and future research opportunities, including: understudied clinical conditions and populations, impact of long-term TCQ training, understanding the impact of specific TCQ styles, training regimens, dosage, and contextual effects; implementation, cost-effectiveness, and medical utilization research; individual data meta-analysis, and teaching competencies, credentialing, and licensure. Part I of this white paper discusses the rationale for the conference, synthesizes the state of evidence for TCQ as rehabilitative and preventive tools for a range of clinical conditions, and summarizes the translational research informing therapeutic mechanisms associated with TCQ training.</p>","PeriodicalId":29734,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Integrative and Complementary Medicine","volume":" ","pages":"521-534"},"PeriodicalIF":1.7000,"publicationDate":"2025-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12172645/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Science of Tai Chi and Qigong as Whole Person Health-Part II: Evidence Gaps and Opportunities for Future Research and Implementation.\",\"authors\":\"Gloria Y Yeh, Andrew Ahn, Janet Clark, Michael R Irwin, Jian Kong, Helen Lavretsky, Fuzhong Li, Brad Manor, Wolf Mehling, Byeongsang Oh, Daniel Seitz, Ahmed Tawakol, William W N Tsang, Chenchen Wang, Albert Yeung, Peter M Wayne\",\"doi\":\"10.1089/jicm.2024.0958\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p><b><i>Background:</i></b> The emerging paradigm of whole person health shares many core principles with traditional complementary and integrative health frameworks, including Tai Chi and Qigong (TCQ). <b><i>Methods:</i></b> In the fall of 2023, the Harvard Medical School Osher Center for Integrative Health hosted the inaugural international conference on <i>The Science of Tai Chi & Qigong for Whole Person Health</i>: <i>Advancing the Integration of Mind-Body Practices into Contemporary Healthcare</i> at Harvard Medical School. A two-part white paper was written to summarize key conference topics, findings, and issues. <b><i>Results and Discussion:</i></b> Part II presented here summarizes evidence gaps and future research opportunities, including: understudied clinical conditions and populations, impact of long-term TCQ training, understanding the impact of specific TCQ styles, training regimens, dosage, and contextual effects; implementation, cost-effectiveness, and medical utilization research; individual data meta-analysis, and teaching competencies, credentialing, and licensure. 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The Science of Tai Chi and Qigong as Whole Person Health-Part II: Evidence Gaps and Opportunities for Future Research and Implementation.
Background: The emerging paradigm of whole person health shares many core principles with traditional complementary and integrative health frameworks, including Tai Chi and Qigong (TCQ). Methods: In the fall of 2023, the Harvard Medical School Osher Center for Integrative Health hosted the inaugural international conference on The Science of Tai Chi & Qigong for Whole Person Health: Advancing the Integration of Mind-Body Practices into Contemporary Healthcare at Harvard Medical School. A two-part white paper was written to summarize key conference topics, findings, and issues. Results and Discussion: Part II presented here summarizes evidence gaps and future research opportunities, including: understudied clinical conditions and populations, impact of long-term TCQ training, understanding the impact of specific TCQ styles, training regimens, dosage, and contextual effects; implementation, cost-effectiveness, and medical utilization research; individual data meta-analysis, and teaching competencies, credentialing, and licensure. Part I of this white paper discusses the rationale for the conference, synthesizes the state of evidence for TCQ as rehabilitative and preventive tools for a range of clinical conditions, and summarizes the translational research informing therapeutic mechanisms associated with TCQ training.