The practitioner will suggest dietary food changes, perhaps detoxification and elimination diets, reinforcing and tonifying the organs' and glands' ability to improve function. In the philosophy of Oriental Medicine, food is meant to support and regulate bodily functions. Nutrition is very specific to the individual's overall condition, not just the symptoms of a particular disorder. Direct consultation with the practitioner is recommended for this reason.
In Chinese Medicine foods are grouped into four categories: cold-hot-cooling-warming. They are also classified according to their benefits and harmful effects on each of the internal organs and channels.
Some foods with hot/warming qualities:
Fruits: plums, olives, papayas, grapes
Sugars: honey, bleached and raw sugar
Lentils
Walnuts
Vegetables: ginger, garlic, onion
Meat: chicken, duck, beef, deer
Fish: carp, shad, shrimp, catfish
Some foods with cold/cooling properties
Grains: rice, oat, tofu
Fruits: pears, watermelon, lotus roots
Game: hare, deer
Fish: eel, lobster, clam, oyster
Some neutral foods
Grains: glutinous rice, black beans, soy beans, peas
Vegetables: calabash, pumpkin
Fruits: green plums, peanuts
Meat: pork, goose
Unlike the concept of nutrition in Western Medicine, Traditional Chinese Medicine looks at more than the nutritional value of each food. For example, Western Nutritionists will look at the ingredients of foods such as fat, sodium, sugar, protein and fiber, before recommending a diet regimen to address a particular condition such as diabetes, obesity, or pregnancy. Oriental nutritional therapy also takes into account the nature and quality of food products. For example, how and where the food was grown, pesticide use and shelf-life. Oriental nutrition therapy looks at how the food will affect the flow of Qi. Does a particular food product have warming or cooling characteristics? Is it moistening, drying, astringent, or purgative?
In Oriental medicine, observations are made based upon the way that the food impacts the body after they are eaten, both dramatically and subtly. Does it affect metabolism, emotions, and organs? Does it aid in the healing of one part of the body but produces a negative effect on other parts? For example, a food product may be good in the treatment of water retention but may also cause diarrhea. A Traditional Oriental practitioner will prescribe diets according to the stage and quality of a disease.