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Let us decode the body message & work out the best solution in the most natural & organic way. I am here to support you in finding your rainbow again. FAQs

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My Story

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Decode Body Messages

Innate Healing

Acupuncture & Chinese Herbal Medicine

Endometriosis

IVF

Psychotherapy

Fertility

Infertility

Gut Health

Christine Shen

Chinese Herbal Medicine

Decode Body Messages

Innate Healing

Acupuncture & Chinese Herbal

Chinese Herbal Medicine

Health Issues

Infertility Acupuncture

Endometriosis

Gut Health

Anxiety

Northshore

Northern Beaches

Manly

Mosman

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FAQs

MY PASSION IS

TO RESTORE YOUR BODY'S

NATURAL HEALING POWER

FAQs

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Frequently Asked Questions

Honest, detailed answers to the questions we hear most often at Rainbow Medicine

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About Acupuncture

Most people are pleasantly surprised to find that acupuncture is far more comfortable than they anticipated. Acupuncture needles are very fine — approximately the width of a human hair — and they bear no resemblance to the hollow hypodermic needles used for injections. Insertion is typically barely perceptible, and many people feel nothing at all during the process.

What you may feel is a sensation called "De Qi" — a characteristic heaviness, warmth, tingling, or mild aching around the needle, which is considered a positive sign that the point has been effectively stimulated. This sensation is distinct from pain and most patients find it quite tolerable. If any needle placement feels genuinely uncomfortable, please let Dr Shen know immediately — adjustments are always made.

Most people find acupuncture deeply relaxing and many fall asleep on the table. The post-treatment feeling of calm and wellbeing is one of the aspects that brings people back consistently.

This depends significantly on your condition, its duration, and your overall constitution. As a general guide: acute conditions (a recent injury, a short-term illness) may respond within four to six sessions. Chronic or long-standing conditions — which have typically taken months or years to develop — require a more sustained investment, commonly eight to twelve sessions before significant and stable improvement is achieved.

For fertility preparation and reproductive support, we recommend a minimum of three full menstrual cycles (approximately twelve weekly sessions) to work through the 90-day gamete maturation cycle and create meaningful constitutional change. This is not a commercial consideration but a biological reality — the egg maturing this month began its development three months ago.

Dr Shen will give you an honest assessment of treatment expectations at your initial consultation, and this will be revisited and adjusted based on your progress. We do not recommend indefinite treatment without clear goals and regular reassessment.

Acupuncture has a broad therapeutic scope. The World Health Organization recognises acupuncture as having demonstrated efficacy for conditions including chronic pain (back pain, neck pain, osteoarthritis, headache, migraine), dysmenorrhoea (period pain), infertility, chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting, depression, and hypertension, among many others.

At Rainbow Medicine, Dr Shen commonly treats fertility challenges (natural and assisted reproduction), a full range of women's health conditions (PCOS, endometriosis, irregular cycles, PMS, perimenopause and menopause), chronic pain and musculoskeletal conditions, digestive disorders (IBS, bloating, constipation), stress and anxiety, insomnia, immune deficiency, and men's health.

If you are unsure whether acupuncture is appropriate for your condition, we welcome a brief phone consultation to discuss your situation before you commit to a booking.

Acupuncture is generally considered safe throughout pregnancy when administered by a qualified and experienced practitioner. Dr Shen has extensive experience treating pregnant women and adjusts her treatment approach carefully for each trimester. During the first trimester, certain acupuncture points are contraindicated due to their strongly moving and descending actions; Dr Shen is thoroughly trained in these restrictions and applies them rigorously.

Acupuncture during pregnancy can be highly beneficial for conditions including morning sickness and hyperemesis gravidarum, pelvic girdle pain, back pain, anxiety, insomnia, breech presentation (using moxibustion, particularly around 34–36 weeks), and cervical ripening in preparation for labour.

Please always inform Dr Shen at the start of each session if you are pregnant or suspect you may be, and advise your obstetrician or midwife that you are receiving acupuncture as part of your prenatal care.

Yes — and you would be far from alone. Many of Dr Shen's most grateful patients had a significant needle phobia before their first appointment. It is worth understanding that acupuncture needles are categorically different from the needles used in medical procedures. They are extremely fine, solid (not hollow), and designed to cause minimal tissue disruption. The insertion experience for most people who fear needles is genuinely surprising in how innocuous it feels.

Dr Shen is experienced in working with anxious patients. She will always go at your pace — starting with just one or two needles in relatively comfortable locations, talking you through each step, and pausing at any point if you need to. Most needle-phobic patients who follow through with that first session find that subsequent sessions carry no anxiety at all.

If your needle phobia is significant, please mention it when booking so Dr Shen can allocate additional time for your initial appointment and ensure the environment is as calm and supportive as possible.

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Chinese Herbal Medicine

Chinese Herbal Medicine (CHM) is a sophisticated, clinically validated system of botanical medicine with a documented history of over 2,000 years. Unlike Western supplements — which are typically standardised single-compound extracts designed to address specific deficiencies or biochemical pathways — Chinese herbal formulas are prescribed as customised multi-herb combinations tailored to the individual's unique pattern of imbalance.

A typical formula contains between 6 and 16 individual herbs. Each herb plays a specific role: the chief herb addresses the primary pattern, the deputy herbs support its action or address secondary patterns, assistant herbs modify the formula's properties, and envoy herbs guide the formula to specific organ systems and harmonise the blend. This synergistic approach allows for far greater precision and adaptability than any single-ingredient supplement can achieve.

Crucially, the formula is not fixed — it is reviewed and adjusted at each consultation to reflect changes in the clinical picture. This responsive, individualised approach is one of the most clinically powerful aspects of Chinese herbal prescribing.

When prescribed by a qualified, AHPRA-registered Chinese Medicine practitioner, Chinese herbs are very safe for the vast majority of people. Dr Shen holds a Bachelor of Chinese Medicine & Acupuncture from the Sydney Institute of Traditional Chinese Medicine and has extensive postgraduate training in herbal pharmacology and safety. All herbs used at Rainbow Medicine are sourced from TGA-listed suppliers who meet strict quality and purity standards, including heavy metal and pesticide testing.

Herb-drug interactions are a genuine consideration and one that Dr Shen takes seriously. At your initial consultation, you will be asked to disclose all medications and supplements you are taking. Some herbs can affect the metabolism of medications through cytochrome P450 pathways, and certain herbs are contraindicated alongside specific pharmaceutical classes. Dr Shen assesses this for every patient and prescribes accordingly. If there is any doubt, she will contact your GP or specialist to coordinate care.

Please always inform Dr Shen of any changes to your medications during the course of treatment, and let your GP know you are receiving Chinese herbal medicine as part of your integrative care.

At Rainbow Medicine, Chinese herbs are most commonly dispensed as concentrated granular extracts — a fine powder that dissolves in hot water to create a tea-like drink. This form offers the flexibility and potency of traditional decoctions (raw herb teas) without the time-consuming preparation involved in raw herbal cooking. Most patients find the granule format manageable, particularly when taken twice daily with hot water.

For patients who find the taste challenging, we can also arrange formulas in capsule form for a range of conditions. Some formulas are also available as patent pills — pre-made tablets for straightforward, well-established presentations. Dr Shen will discuss the most appropriate format for your situation and preferences at your consultation.

The taste of Chinese herbal medicine varies considerably depending on the formula — some are quite palatable, others are more robustly flavoured. Most patients adjust to the taste within the first week and find it unremarkable thereafter. Mixing with a small amount of warm honey or apple juice can help.

The timeline depends on the condition being treated and its chronicity. For acute conditions such as a cold, flu, or acute digestive upset, Chinese herbal medicine often produces noticeable improvement within two to four days. For conditions affecting the menstrual cycle — including PMS, period pain, PCOS, and cycle regulation — improvement typically becomes evident within two to three menstrual cycles, as each cycle provides an opportunity to assess and refine the formula.

For deeper constitutional conditions, including fertility preparation, chronic fatigue, and long-standing hormonal imbalances, a meaningful treatment course is three to six months. This timeline reflects the physiological reality of how long it takes to build or restore foundational organ function. It is not possible to tonify Kidney Jing in two weeks — that process occurs at the level of cellular regeneration and constitutional change.

Dr Shen will always give you honest expectations at the outset, and will reassess regularly throughout. If a formula is not producing the expected response within a reasonable timeframe, it is modified or the diagnosis is reconsidered.

Ethical sourcing is a matter of genuine importance to Dr Shen and is reflected in the suppliers she has selected for the Rainbow Medicine dispensary. All herbs are sourced from CITES-compliant (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species) suppliers, and no endangered plant or animal species are used in any prescriptions at this clinic. Dr Shen does not prescribe any formulas containing animal products derived from threatened species.

All herbal products used at Rainbow Medicine are listed with or approved by Australia's Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) and are sourced from suppliers who provide certificates of analysis for heavy metal content, pesticide residues, and microbiological safety. This level of quality assurance is non-negotiable.

We recognise that sustainability in Chinese herbal medicine is an ongoing challenge as global demand increases. Dr Shen selects suppliers who prioritise cultivated over wild-harvested sources where possible, and continues to monitor developments in sustainable herbal medicine sourcing.

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Fertility & Women's Health

This is a question Dr Shen is asked every week, and she always answers it with the same commitment to honesty. The research evidence for acupuncture in fertility is genuinely mixed — some studies show meaningful improvements in clinical pregnancy rates, particularly for IVF support, while the largest and most methodologically rigorous trials have produced more equivocal results. Dr Shen believes in accurate information above optimistic claims.

What the evidence consistently supports is that acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine can improve the biological terrain in which conception occurs: regulating the menstrual cycle, supporting healthy ovulation, improving uterine blood flow, reducing cortisol and stress hormones, improving sperm parameters, and addressing underlying patterns such as PCOS, endometriosis, and Kidney deficiency that may be subtly compromising fertility.

In Dr Shen's clinical experience years of practice, a well-designed three-month TCM fertility preparation protocol produces meaningful improvements in cycle health for the vast majority of patients — and many conceive, both naturally and in assisted reproduction cycles, during or shortly after that preparation period. She cannot guarantee outcomes, but she can offer a genuinely comprehensive approach that Western medicine alone does not provide.

Ideally, three months before your planned egg retrieval. This 90-day window corresponds to the maturation timeline of the developing egg — the cohort of follicles that will be stimulated in your IVF cycle began their development approximately three months earlier. Improving the systemic environment during this window — through acupuncture, herbal medicine, and targeted lifestyle changes — can meaningfully influence the quality of those developing eggs.

If three months is not possible due to your IVF timeline, beginning even six to eight weeks before retrieval is beneficial, particularly for stress regulation, endometrial preparation, and coordination around the stimulation protocol. If you are coming to us with an IVF cycle already underway, we will adjust the approach to offer what support is possible within the current timeframe.

For the IVF cycle itself, we recommend continuing acupuncture through the stimulation phase, around egg retrieval, on transfer day, and during the two-week wait. Chinese herbal medicine is typically paused during active stimulation to avoid any potential interaction with medications, and resumed after transfer with Dr Shen's guidance.

In Dr Shen's clinical view, "unexplained infertility" is one of the conditions most likely to benefit from TCM evaluation — because it represents cases where standard Western diagnostic tools have reached the limits of what they can detect, and where a different diagnostic framework may reveal what has been missed. TCM's assessment of Kidney Jing quality, Blood nourishment, Liver Qi regulation, and the cyclical pattern of menstrual health addresses dimensions of reproductive vitality that no hormone panel or ultrasound can fully capture.

In practice, when Dr Shen sees a patient labelled "unexplained," she almost invariably finds a clear TCM pattern — whether it is subtle Kidney Yang deficiency with a consistently low basal body temperature, Liver Qi Stagnation producing an irregular cycle, Blood deficiency manifesting as a thin uterine lining, or Phlegm-Damp accumulation subtly compromising follicular development. Treating these patterns creates measurable improvements in cycle health that frequently translate into successful conception.

The experience of unexplained infertility is also emotionally devastating — the absence of a diagnosis that can be targeted can leave couples feeling helpless. TCM offers not only a treatment approach but a comprehensible framework: a way of understanding what may be happening and what can be done about it.

Yes — and this is one of the conditions Dr Shen has particular clinical depth in treating. Endometriosis is understood in TCM primarily as a pattern of chronic Blood Stasis, often combined with Liver Qi Stagnation and, in some presentations, Cold obstruction or Kidney deficiency. The treatment strategy focuses on invigorating Blood circulation to gradually break up established stasis, soothing Liver Qi to prevent further stagnation, and addressing any underlying deficiency that has allowed the condition to develop.

Clinical outcomes for endometriosis treated with acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine typically include: reduced period pain (often significantly), lighter and less clotted menstrual flow, reduced premenstrual symptoms, and improved quality of life. Many patients are also able to reduce their dependence on analgesics. For endometriosis-related fertility challenges, treatment addresses the pelvic inflammatory environment that impedes conception while simultaneously improving the constitutional foundation.

Endometriosis is a chronic condition requiring sustained treatment. Dr Shen generally advises a minimum treatment commitment of six months for meaningful results, and always works collaboratively with the patient's gynaecologist or specialist.

Yes, acupuncture is safe in the first trimester when administered by a practitioner with specific pregnancy training and clinical experience, as Dr Shen has. The precautions required in early pregnancy are well understood in Chinese Medicine: certain acupuncture points with strongly descending, moving, or uterine-stimulating actions are avoided during the first trimester, and the overall treatment is gentler and more tonifying in nature.

There are good reasons to continue acupuncture in the first trimester for patients who have conceived after fertility treatment. These include: supporting implantation and early placentation, managing first-trimester nausea and vomiting (for which acupuncture has excellent evidence), supporting Kidney Yang to maintain the warmth of the early uterine environment, reducing anxiety, and maintaining the therapeutic relationship through a physically and emotionally demanding period.

Dr Shen will always discuss the specific treatment plan at each session and is transparent about the precautions she is observing. Please ensure you inform her of any bleeding, cramping, or concerns at the beginning of each appointment.

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Appointments & Practical

Initial consultations at Rainbow Medicine are 75 to 90 minutes. This extended time reflects Dr Shen's commitment to thorough assessment — there is no such thing as a meaningful TCM diagnosis in 15 minutes. During your initial consultation, Dr Shen will take a comprehensive health history covering your presenting complaint, menstrual and reproductive history (where relevant), medical history, current medications and supplements, diet, sleep, exercise, and emotional wellbeing. She will then perform tongue and pulse diagnosis.

Following the assessment, Dr Shen will explain her findings in clear, accessible language — your TCM pattern diagnosis, what it means for your health, and her proposed treatment plan including the likely duration and frequency of treatment. If acupuncture is to be included in the first session, this typically follows the assessment.

Follow-up appointments are 45–60 minutes and include a brief check-in, pulse and tongue reassessment, and treatment. Please allow adequate time in your schedule and avoid rushing after your appointment, as the post-treatment calm is part of the therapeutic experience.

Yes. Rainbow Medicine is a registered provider with all major private health funds in Australia, including Medibank Private, Bupa, HCF, NIB, Australian Unity, CBHS, and others. Acupuncture consultations are rebatable under the extras/ancillary cover of most health insurance policies, and Chinese herbal medicine consultations are also rebatable with many funds.

The rebate amount varies depending on your level of cover and fund. We recommend contacting your fund directly before your appointment to confirm your acupuncture rebate entitlement. HICAPS is available at the clinic, enabling you to claim your rebate on the spot and pay only the gap at the time of treatment.

Please note that private health fund rebates cannot be combined with Medicare rebates for the same service. If you are unsure about your coverage, our reception team is happy to assist you in contacting your fund before your appointment.

Yes. Rainbow Medicine offers telehealth consultations for Chinese herbal medicine — both initial and follow-up appointments. This service is available to patients throughout Australia and is particularly valuable for patients in regional and rural areas, those with mobility limitations, and those who have established an in-person treatment relationship with Dr Shen and need herbal review consultations between clinic visits.

Telehealth herbal medicine consultations are conducted via secure video link. Dr Shen will assess you via observation (including viewing the tongue via camera), a comprehensive verbal history, and discussion of any recent test results. Herbal formulas are dispensed from our clinic and posted directly to your address, typically arriving within two to three business days.

Please note that acupuncture cannot be delivered via telehealth and requires in-person attendance. For new patients seeking primarily acupuncture care, an initial in-person consultation is required before any telehealth follow-ups.

There are a few practical things that will make your first appointment more productive. If you have recent relevant test results — blood tests, ultrasound reports, semen analysis, or specialist letters — please bring these or email them to the clinic in advance. This saves consultation time and allows Dr Shen to review them before your appointment.

On the day of your appointment: eat a light meal two hours beforehand — neither fasting nor eating a heavy meal immediately before treatment. Wear or bring loose, comfortable clothing that allows easy access to your lower legs, forearms, and abdomen, as these are commonly needled areas. Avoid alcohol and recreational drugs for 24 hours before your appointment.

For tongue diagnosis, avoid anything that might stain your tongue in the two hours before your appointment — coffee, coloured foods, and tongue scrapers. Your tongue coat is an important diagnostic indicator, and Dr Shen needs to see it in its natural state. If you are a woman, note the day of your menstrual cycle as this is relevant to the assessment.

We request a minimum of 24 hours notice for appointment cancellations or rescheduling. This allows us to offer the appointment to another patient who may be waiting. Cancellations made with less than 24 hours notice, or appointments that are not attended without prior notice, may incur a cancellation fee of 50% of the consultation fee.

We understand that life is unpredictable — genuine emergencies, sudden illness, and unavoidable circumstances will always be considered individually and sensitively. If you are unwell, please do not attend — we ask that you contact us as soon as possible so we can reschedule your appointment. There is no cancellation fee for illness-related cancellations when we are notified in advance.

To cancel or reschedule, please phone the clinic on 0410 699 065 or email christine@rainbowmedicine.com.au. Online cancellations through the booking portal are accepted if made with sufficient notice.

Can't find what you're looking for? Call us on 0410 699 065 or email the clinic.

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