Acupuncture is a traditional Chinese medicine that is well known to the people of China, but I am sure we do not know much about what diseases acupuncture can actually treat. In 1979, the World Health Organization (WHO) first promoted the suitable diseases for acupuncture to the world, and in 1996, it was revised and supplemented as follows: In 1979, WHO identified 43 suitable diseases for acupuncture: 1, upper respiratory tract diseases: acute (chronic) sinusitis, acute (chronic) rhinitis, cold, acute (chronic) tonsillitis. 2, respiratory system diseases: acute (chronic) bronchitis, bronchial asthma. 3.Ophthalmic diseases: acute conjunctivitis, central retinitis, myopia, cataract. 4.Stomatological diseases: toothache, post-extraction pain, gingivitis, acute and chronic laryngitis. 5, gastrointestinal system diseases: esophagus, erratic portal dysostosis, erratic, gastric prolapse, acute and chronic gastritis, gastroacidosis, chronic duodenal ulcer (pain relief), simple acute duodenal ulceritis, acute and chronic colitis, acute (chronic) bacillary dysentery, constipation, diarrhea, intestinal paralysis. 6, nerve, muscle and bone diseases: headache, migraine, trigeminal neuralgia, facial nerve palsy, mild paralysis after stroke, peripheral nerve disorders, pediatric poliomyelitis sequelae, Meniere’s syndrome, neurogenic bladder dysfunction, enuresis, intercostal neuralgia, cervicobrachial syndrome, shoulder coagulation, tennis elbow, sciatica, lumbago, arthritis. In 1996, WHO identified 64 suitable diseases for acupuncture: 1. The indications for acupuncture that have been randomly controlled and tested using similar acupuncture methods or traditional therapies are: alcohol withdrawal, allergic rhinitis (hay fever), athletic syndrome, facial palsy, biliary colic, bronchial asthma, cardiac neurosis, cervical spondylosis, chronic pain of the locomotor system (neck, shoulder, spine, knee, etc.), depression, drug addiction, dysmenorrhea, headache, hemiplegia or other sequelae of encephalopathy, herpes zoster, hypertension, voluntary hypotension, impotence, induced labor, insomnia, leukopenia, low back pain, migraine, pregnancy reaction, nausea and vomiting, frozen shoulder (frozen shoulder), post-surgical pain, premenstrual tension, nerve root pain syndrome, renal colic, rheumatoid arthritis, sprains and strains, jaw joint dysfunction, tension headache, smoking cessation, trigeminal neuralgia, urinary tract stones. 2. Indications for acupuncture with a sufficient number of patients as a sample but without randomized controlled trials are: acute tonsillitis and acute pharyngitis, back pain, biliary ascariasis, chronic pharyngitis, fetal malposition, pediatric enuresis, tennis elbow, gallstones, irritable bowel syndrome, Meniere’s disease, myofasciitis, childhood myopia, simple obesity, post-tonsillectomy pain, schizophrenia, and sciatica. 3, there are repeated clinical reports, faster results or some trial-based indications for acupuncture are: constipation, lack of milk, diarrhea, female infertility, gastric prolapse, erratic, urinary incontinence, male infertility (lack of sperm, lack of sperm motility), painless delivery, urinary retention, sinusitis.