Park Slope Acupuncture & Chinese Herbs/Sarah E. Rivkin, DAHM, LAc, Dipl. OM

Park Slope Acupuncture & Chinese Herbs/Sarah E. Rivkin, DAHM, LAc, Dipl. OM The core of our practice is women’s health, chiefly fertility, pregnancy, and postpartum care.

We help you find your personal path to wellness, utilizing all that make up Traditional East Asian medicine--acupuncture, herbs, massage, qigong and other movement therapies, and diet. At Park Slope Acupuncture & Chinese Herbs, practitioner Sarah Rivkin helps each client find their personal path to wellness, utilizing the full range of modalities that make up Traditional East Asian medicine--acupuncture, herbs, massage, qigong and other movement therapies, dietary strategies, and more. In a private, serene environment we support you on your recovery from illness, journey to parenthood, or help you achieve your goal of a better and more vibrant life. However we also treat children and are skilled at addressing a variety of health concerns, from chronic and acute pain to digestive and respiratory conditions, emotional problems, and skin diseases.

Awesome facial acupuncture class this weekend with  and ironic to see this car parked outside! No Botox for me.
09/08/2025

Awesome facial acupuncture class this weekend with and ironic to see this car parked outside! No Botox for me.

I was delighted to chat with  Max on the Qiological Podcast about translation, language, and clinical practice.  To list...
08/20/2025

I was delighted to chat with Max on the Qiological Podcast about translation, language, and clinical practice. To listen, click on the link in the first comment 👇🏼

We explore what it means to translate not just texts, but meaning itself, the unseen weight of choosing one word over another, the challenges of translating classical Chinese into a modern context, how diagnosis itself is a kind of translation, and the subtle power of bias in everything we do—from clinic to scholarship.

08/19/2025
08/19/2025
08/08/2025

Curious about facial acupuncture? You’re not alone! See below 👇

Yup!
07/12/2025

Yup!

'The Office' alum, Jenna Fischer, said she was “fully skeptical” but “almost all my hot flashes were gone” within two sessions.

In China (and many other cultures) it's a tradition for new moms and babies to stay in and rest for the first 30 days af...
07/01/2025

In China (and many other cultures) it's a tradition for new moms and babies to stay in and rest for the first 30 days after birth--no cold food, no cold showers, no hair-washing. This postpartum "championship window" can have a profound effect on a woman's future health. If proper care is given, it's a rare opportunity for her to resolve chronic health issues--but once it passes, you've lost your chance.

Modern life allows little time for rest, so this practice is often dismissed as old-fashioned or impractical. That's what the mom in this story from This American Life thought too. But then she tried it.

Listen to her story at the link in the first comment 👂👇

Pop quiz! For how long do you think there have been steel acupuncture needles?A. 50 yearsB. 250 yearsC. At least 2000 ye...
07/01/2025

Pop quiz! For how long do you think there have been steel acupuncture needles?

A. 50 years
B. 250 years
C. At least 2000 years
D. 10,000 years

Answer: C!

China's earliest known steel acupuncture needles have been discovered in the famed tomb of the Marquis of Haihun in east China's Jiangxi Province. The needles, expertly crafted using sophisticated puddling steel technology, date back over 2,000 years to the Han Dynasty (202 BC-220 AD).

See link below to read more: 👇

Acupuncture is everywhere!
05/23/2025

Acupuncture is everywhere!

How the tariffs will decimate the practice of herbal medicine:
05/09/2025

How the tariffs will decimate the practice of herbal medicine:

Dispensary owners say a protracted trade war would harm a niche but popular sector in which imported herbs are prescribed to treat colds, pain and other ailments.

🌿Look what my dog found today! East Asian medicine in the wild! Varieties of mugwort (artemisia) are used in internal me...
04/25/2025

🌿Look what my dog found today! East Asian medicine in the wild! Varieties of mugwort (artemisia) are used in internal medicine to stop bleeding, treat pain, and dispel itching. Leaves are dried and processed to be burned on or near the skin for moxibustion therapy. The leaves are also eaten fresh in Japan in sweets, soups, and tea. Chinese name 艾葉(艾叶) ài yè; Japanese: yomogi 蓬 or よもぎ.

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292 7th Street, Suite A
Brooklyn, NY
11215

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