For 9-year-old Peng Lin, she found it difficult to understand what “destiny” means, but her father Peng XX had a deep understanding of it. When Peng Lin’s brain cancer left her on the brink of death after seeking medical help in the United States, the appearance of “New York’s Good Doctor Tak Chio Cheong” completely changed her fate.
Watching Tak Chio Cheong use traditional Chinese medicine to save his daughter from the hands of death, and imagining his healthy daughter embracing a better future, Peng XX was deeply touched: “Selling the family’s assets, traveling thousands of miles to the United States, hoping that advanced medical technology in the United States can save my daughter’s life, but in the end, it was still the famous Chinese medicine doctor in New York who created a miracle of life!”
Writing a miraculous story
Two years ago, Peng Lin was diagnosed with brain cancer. Peng XX, who was doing business in Lijiang, Yunnan, China, decided to give up his thriving business and accompany his daughter to the United States for treatment. Unfortunately, after more than a year of efforts, two famous cancer hospitals in the United States finally announced the failure of treatment. In despair, a friend recommended Peng XX to seek help from Dr. Cheong, who was known as the “magic needle Cheong.”
With a complex mood of half-trust and half-doubt, Peng XX took his daughter to the “De Yu Tang” in New York to receive treatment. Seeing his daughter’s condition improve day by day after receiving “pure Chinese medicine” treatments such as acupuncture, herbs, and massage, and finally breaking free from the “restraint” of death, Peng XX was completely conquered by Cheong’s medical skills.
Talking about the wonders of traditional Chinese medicine, Cheong, who hails from Hubei, China and claims to be a fellow villager of Li Shizhen, said: “This is the charm of Chinese medicine – Western medicine treats diseases, while Chinese medicine treats people.”
Eleven years ago, Cheong, who was too immersed in his work, was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and was in the late stage of extreme danger. At the moment he was pushed into the operating room, a friend tearfully said to him, “You may not be able to get off the operating table!”
Cheong smiled and said, “Don’t worry, I won’t die!”
After the tumor was removed, Cheong prescribed himself Chinese medicine while lying in bed, and had his family bring the boiled medicine into the ward every day, secretly drinking it while the doctors were not paying attention. A week later, his physical strength gradually recovered, and Zhang Dechao decided to completely give up Western medicine treatment and return home to use his family’s traditional and personal anti-cancer treatment methods.
After completely recovering, Cheong’s story of defeating cancer with Chinese medicine spread far and wide, and patients who sought medical help from “De Yu Tang” in New York did not stop coming.
Last summer, a bone cancer patient from Latvia, XXX, and her husband came to New York. Looking forwardly at Cheong, she said, “The doctors in my own country can no longer save me! Please save me. My two children are still too young. Our family dog is also too cute…”
XXX suffered from pain caused by friction between muscle tissue and steel plates after surgery, and the remaining cancer cells were still causing trouble. After several months of acupuncture treatment by Cheong, all the remaining cancer cells in XXX’s.
This passage is about Dr. Cheong, a renowned Chinese traditional medicine practitioner in New York who uses acupuncture and herbal medicine to treat cancer patients. The article features a testimonial from an anonymous stage 4 nasopharyngeal cancer patient who experienced remarkable improvement after only one month of treatment from Dr. Zhang. The patient praises Dr. Zhang’s medical skills and ethical values, and raises a question about why Dr. Zhang did not become wealthy despite his expertise.
The article explains that Dr. Cheongis a generous person who often charges only the cost of treatment for financially struggling patients and helps Chinese immigrants in need. It also mentions that Dr. Cheong had practiced Chinese medicine in Macau and Brazil before settling in the US.
Dr. Cheong shares his vision of establishing an American Chinese Anti-Cancer Foundation to help more patients, growing Chinese medicinal herbs in the US to ensure their quality, offering training programs to teach people how to prevent illnesses, and producing effective cancer treatment formulas in bulk to benefit more patients. He believes that Chinese medicine, including acupuncture and qi gong, is gaining acceptance and legal protection in the US, and will enter a new stage of development as it achieves greater breakthroughs in treating major diseases.