Ryan Bemis Ryan Bemis

NPR: El Paso shooting response

After the 2019 Walmart shooting in El Paso, Las Cruces’ local NPR station featured Crossroads’ disaster-relief clinics offering free ear-acupuncture for survivors and first responders.

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Ryan Bemis Ryan Bemis

Acudetox at Amador for spice and other addictions

Free ear acupuncture clinics are offered throughout the southern New Mexico region, through Crossroads Acupuncture’s acudetox training program. One of the programs that year in year out offers free addictions recovery, as well as harm reduction care, is Amador Health Center (formerly known as St. Luke’s Health Clinic). Damien Willis of the Las Cruces Sun News featured this innovative program back in 2016.

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Ryan Bemis Ryan Bemis

East meets (South)west by Zak Hanson

On Jan. 1, 2014, Crossroads will ring in the New Year, close it's clinic as a for-profit, and the new non-profit organization will re-open as Crossroads Community Supported Healthcare, a non­profit, al­lowing them to further their goal of providing affordable health ser­vices to, truly, everyone.

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Ryan Bemis Ryan Bemis

Qiological interviews Ryan Bemis: Acu in the borderlands

Acupuncture is a portable medicine. In the 1960’s the barefoot doctors in China took Chinese medicine into the countryside. Over the years acupuncturist’s response to natural disasters has show us that acupuncture can be practiced in makeshift shelters or tents. It also has a place in refugee camps, churches of impoverished communities and rural villages. In this conversation acupuncturist and activist Ryan Bemis talks about how acupuncture and liberation theology go together and can help to relieve a lot of suffering.

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Ryan Bemis Ryan Bemis

Service through training and access

Whether it’s using acupuncture to relieve pain, seek behavioral health solutions or provide a venue to promote artists, Crossroads Community Supported Healthcare is about serving people.

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Ryan Bemis Ryan Bemis

Acupuncture for healing on the border, latina lista interview with Ryan Bemis

"A lot of our students migrated from other parts of Mexico to Juarez with their families to work in the maquiladoras, and a lot of the people they help are employed in the factories (or used to be until they got laid off). Our new school is inspired by another migrant and factory worker who is credited as the founder of acupuncture in the West: Miriam Lee. Back in the 70’s, she assisted other factory workers in California after she immigrated from China. It’s fitting that we are teaching her techniques and her spirit of service has caught hold among our students.

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