More and more people, including developed countries such as Europe and the United States, believe in the miraculous therapeutic effects of acupuncture. In 2002, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended acupuncture to all countries in the world as an effective treatment for the following diseases: cervical and lumbar pain, knee pain, sciatica, frozen shoulder, headache, allergic rhinitis (including hay fever), primary menstrual cramps, tennis elbow, acute gastric pain (peptic ulcer, acute and chronic gastritis, and stomach cramps), rheumatoid arthritis, sprains, depression (including depressive neurosis and post-stroke), and gastric pain (including depression and post-stroke). and stomach cramps), rheumatoid arthritis, sprains, depression (including depressive neurosis and post-stroke depression), postoperative pain, renal colic, biliary colic, acute bacillary dysentery, facial pain (including craniomandibular dysfunction), oral pain (including dental pain and temporomandibular joint dysfunction), leukopenia, induction of labor, malpresentation of fetus, vomiting in pregnancy, nausea and vomiting, adverse reaction to radiation and/or chemotherapy, primary hypertension, and Adverse reactions, essential hypertension, essential hypotension. 2, clinical studies have proved that acupuncture is effective, but still need further research: osteoarthritis, facial paralysis, acne, ovarian hypogonadism, female infertility, premenstrual syndrome, herpes zoster and its sequelae, fibromyalgia and fasciitis, gastric dysfunction, abdominal pain (acute gastroenteritis or gastrointestinal spasms), Tourette’s – obscurantine syndrome, bronchial asthma, cancer pain, cardiac neurological disorders, chronic pain, and other diseases, and the need for further research. , cardiac neurosis, acute exacerbation of chronic cholecystitis, cholelithiasis, competitive stress syndrome, closed craniocerebral injury, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, otalgia, epidemic hemorrhagic fever, ocular pain due to subconjunctival injections, facial dystonia, female urethral syndrome, gouty arthritis, hepatitis B carrier status, hyperlipidemia, insomnia, labor pains, lactation insufficiency, nonorganic male sexual dysfunction Meniere’s disease, neurodermatitis, obesity, opium, cocaine, and heroin dependence, endoscopy-induced pain, thromboembolic vasculitis pain, polycystic ovary syndrome (Stein-Syndrome), postoperative recovery, chronic prostatitis, pruritis, radicular pain, and myofascial pain syndromes, alcohol dependence and detoxification, primary Reynaud’s syndrome, recurrent infections of the lower urinary tract, and sympathetic nerve Dystrophy (reflex), urinary retention, trauma, schizophrenia, drug-induced salivary hypersecretion, dry syndrome, sore throat (including tonsillitis), acute spinal pain, stiff neck, temporomandibular joint dysfunction, costochondritis, tobacco dependence, chronic ulcerative colitis, urinary stones, vascular dementia, whooping cough, 3. Other therapies that are difficult to get right and are proved to be effective in clinical studies of acupuncture are worth trying. Diseases to try: chloasma, central plasma chorioretinopathy, color blindness, deafness, mental retardation, irritable bowel syndrome, spinal cord injury resulting in neurogenic bladder, chronic pulmonary heart disease, small respiratory obstruction. 4, in the provision of special knowledge of modern medicine and adequate monitoring equipment, can let the acupuncturist to try the following diseases: respiratory distress chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, coma, pediatric convulsions, coronary artery disease angina pectoris, diarrhea infants and children, post viral encephalitis sequelae in children, progressive and pseudo medullary paralysis.