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Chinese Nutritional Strategies

"The middle jiao and food has always been of central importance in the Chinese quest for health. Hopefully all practitioners realise the potential of this area and view the legacy of traditional information available from China with respect and awe; this app is a good avenue to access some of this information."
Peter TorssellJournal of Chinese MedicineFebruary 2014

"People who practice medicine must first thoroughly understand the source of the disorder and know what has been violated. Then, use food to treat it, and if food will not cure it, afterwards apply herbal medicine."

Sun Simiao (Tang Dynasty)

The Chinese Nutritional Strategies (CNS) app is a tool designed to allow practitioners of Chinese medicine convenient and complete access to centuries of nutritional insights.

The heart of the CNS app is the database of more than 300 common foods, along with their temperature, flavor, actions, indications, notes, seasonal recommendations, and differential diagnosis categories. The database is searchable by any of these criteria and sorting through it allows the practitioner to compile a list of recommended foods, and then share those recommendations via email or as a hard copy with the patient.

In addition, all aspects of the database may be altered by the practitioner. For example, this is the data set for watermelon:

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Temperature: ColdFlavor: Sweet

Actions: Enters the heart, stomach and urinary bladder channels, clears heat from heart, stomach and urinary bladder, relieves summer heat, augments yin fluids, drains damp, moistens the intestines

Indications: Thirst, mouth sores, palpitations, overheated during the summer with inability to urinate, edema

Notes: "Nature's Bai Hu Tang"
- Chinese medical saying

Wood (Spring): AvoidFire (Summer): ModerationEarth (Late Summer): Seek outMetal (Fall): Seek outWater (Winter): Avoid

Lu Qi Deficiency: ContraindicatedKid Yang Deficiency: ContraindicatedUrinary Bladder Damp Cold: Contraindicated Urinary Bladder Damp Heat: IndicatedHeart Yang Deficiency: ContraindicatedHeart Fire: IndicatedSpleen Qi Deficiency: ContraindicatedSpleen Yang Deficiency: ContraindicatedStomach Fire: IndicatedStomach Qi Deficiency with Cold: ContraindicatedStomach Food Stagnation: Contraindicated

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Any of the above characteristics may be altered and saved to the database. For example, the Chinese dietary tradition that you follow may consider watermelon to have a neutral temperature and be indicated for cough. Simply change these characteristics in the database and any future searches for neutral temperature foods or cough will include watermelon in the results.

An especially unique feature for the CNS app is the seasonal recommendations feature which addresses the "When" of prescribing Chinese nutrition. Again using the watermelon example, if the practitioner diagnoses urinary bladder damp heat and has the seasonal recommendation feature switched on in the winter then watermelon will be moved from the seek out to the avoid category. This seasonal recommendation feature allows the practitioner to emphasize the local climate and growing seasons when dispensing dietary advice.

Compiled, edited, and translated by Toby Daly, MS, LAc. Toby Daly received his undergraduate degree in Food Science from the California Polytechnic State University at San Luis Obispo. He began studying Chinese medicine in 1997 with Sunim Doam a Korean monk trained in the Saam tradition. He earned his master’s degree in Traditional Chinese Medicine in 2001 upon completion of Chinese medical training in San Francisco as well as China. During his four years of training in San Francisco, he interned with the prominent San Francisco acupuncturist Dr. Angela Wu famous for her treatment of infertility with Chinese medicine. He is currently pursuing a PhD in Classical Chinese Medicine with 88th generation Daoist priest Jeffery Yuen.

Category : Medical

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Reviews (9)

Max. S. Feb 21, 2019     

Good app, fairly easy to navigate. Would be great if more TCM herbs were included as well as foods. + not sure if some fields for foods are not applicable (e.g. no contraindicated patterns), or just incomplete. Also indicated and contraindicated patterns could be compiled into 1 list, and just have indicated and contraindicated foods for each pattern. And the indications could lead to a list of possible patterns rather than directly to foods for that symptom.

Jas. T. Dec 12, 2018     

Poor layout and limited information. I expected this to be much more interactive.

Kat. N. Apr 11, 2019     

anytime i click on anything im thr app it crashes and i cant open it don't waste your time with yhis app ☹️😡

Buc. H. Jun 18, 2021     

This app works great and has helped me so much!

Kar. E. May 29, 2018     

I will revise my rating after use, but my initial impression is that this is a great idea that needs a lot of refining. It isn't an app I'd recommend to the people I treat, because they would likely be bewildered by the diagnoses and differentiation. It doesn't contain information that I do not already have in my library, and so I am wondering if this really will be handier than pulling a book from the shelf. Considering the fact that the search only pulls up words exactly as they are written in the app, I have my doubts.

Joe. P. Feb 9, 2018     

Great database. Would also love a diagram/pie chart or some kind of tool of the core concepts qi, yin, yang, heat, cold, fire etc. and how they influence each other in relation to the foods...

Lau. M. Dec 26, 2013     

Chinese Nutritional Strategies has been a really helpful resource in my clinic. Giving patients information on dietary suggestions has been made much more streamlined and easy. I like that I can change the app according to my teachers instructions as well. I highly recommend this for your Chinese medical clinic.

Car. M. Jul 13, 2016     

Excellent tool to quickly look up diagnostic properties of foods and diagnostic contraindications.

Ray. S. Nov 5, 2017     

Basic and organized information presented in a useful manner.