Integrative Hospital Associates
Acupuncture, Holistic Medicine, Mind Body Medicine And More!





  HOME 
  About Our Practice  |  Patient Information  |  [Services Offered ]  |  Have a Question?  |  Appointments  |  Links  |  Stress Relief  |  Contact Us  |  Feldman Center Video  |  Search  |
 


Specializing in the Painless Acupuncture Method TM

HOME

Our practice is located in
 Holy Cross Hospital 
 The Feldman Center for Optimal Health
4725 N. Federal Hwy.
Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33308
Toll Free Phone No.  
888- 840-HEAL (4325)

Click here for the AAPM

Scott Denny is the nine time recipient of the Continuing Education Excellence Award in Pain Management  and the recipient of the 2007 Outstanding Acupuncture Associate Award from The Zachariah Family Wellness Pavilion at Holy Cross Hospital.


Scott Denny PhD Weblog

Click here to go to the Dr. Scott Denny Weblog

Develop Your Personal Plan For Health & Wellbeing, Click On The Icon Below 

Developing a personal plan for health and wellbeing


Florida Board of Acupuncture Information Brochure

"" Click to Download


 Press Releases

Florida Hospital Association Press Release

2008-2009 Mind, Body & Medicine Lecture Schedule At Holy Cross Hospital

"" Click to Download


Visit Our Other Practice Website In Davie Florida


The American Holistic Health Association Logo


American College for Advancement in Medicine Logo


A Traditional Technique

Gua Sha

Gua Sha is a healing technique used in Asia by practitioners of traditional medicine. 

Gua means to rub or friction. Sha is the term used to describe congestion of blood at the surface of the body. When friction is applied in repeated even strokes, the sha surfaces as small red petechiae. In minutes the petechiae fade Depiction of Gua Sha treatmentinto echymotic patches. The sha disappears totally in two to four days. The color and rate of fading are both diagnostic and prognostic indicators. It involves palpation and cutaneous stimulation where the skin is pressured, in a stroking manner using round-edged instruments. The purpose of raising sha is to remove stagnation and promoting circulation.

The benefits of Gua Sha are numerous. It moves "stagnation", promoting normal circulation to the muscles, tissues, and organs directly beneath the surface treated. The patient experiences immediate changes in stiffness, pain and mobility. Normal metabolic processes are restored by the movement of fluids as nutrients are carried to the tissues and metabolic wastes are carried away. Because Gua Sha mimics sweating, it resolves fever.

Typical Gua Sha tool made from jadeGua Sha cools the patient who is overheated, warms the patient who is chilled, nourishes the patient who is deficient, and clears the patient who is excess. Gua Sha is therefore considered an adaptogenic technique.

We consider applying Gua Sha in any case of pain or discomfort, stiffness, for upper respiratory or digestive problems, and for any condition where palpation indicates there is sha.

After Gua Sha, the patient is instructed to cover the area, avoiding wind and exposure to the sun or sudden change in temperature. Stretching is recommended but not a heavy workout on the day of treatment. 

Contraindications to Gua Sha includes inflammation of the skin, bleeding disorders, open wounds, phlebitis or unexplained lesions. 

Dr. Denny was trained in Gua Sha application under the guidance of Arya Nielsen, Senior Faculty member of Tri-State College of Acupuncture and author of Gua Sha A Traditional Technique for Modern Practice. For more information about Arya Nielsen, MS, MA, LAc, FNAAOM, please visit her website at www.guasha.com.


       Website Templates by YourWebPro! 
2007-2008 ©Scott Denny, PhD, LAc & IHA LLC, All rights reserved.