Our goal at Care Comfort Cure is to offer excellent Traditional Chinese Medicine Care to all our patients, Comfort them with a better holistic understanding of their health conditions and promote the Cure of their illness by stimulating an innate healing process that is safe, effective and drug-free.
Dr. Ching Ching Chi founded Care Comfort Cure in order to fill a gap in the world of modern medicine practices. She has been treating patients with complex disorders with great effectiveness using her in-depth knowledge of Eastern and Western medicine protocols. Together with the team of practitioners, personally trained by her, they deliver excellent care that has been a hallmark of Care Comfort Cure.
Dr. Ching Ching Chi founded Care Comfort Cure in order to fill a gap in the world of modern medicine practices. She has been treating patients with complex disorders with great effectiveness using her in-depth knowledge of Eastern and Western medicine protocols. Together with the team of practitioners, personally trained by her, they deliver excellent care that has been a hallmark of Care Comfort Cure.
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Dr. Billy Tang has been practicing medicine for many years. His career started in 1999 at Palmer College of Chiropractic West and continued with Traditional Chinese Medicine at Five Branches University. Dr. Tang holds dual licenses from State of California in acupuncture and chiropractic. Dr. Tang integrates the best of both worlds by using ancient wisdom of natural healing approaches combined with modern medical diagnostic procedures.
2) Before you sign in, we ask that you clean your hands with the hand sanitizer we provide (containing >70% alcohol). 3) We limit the number of patients waiting in the lobby to one person (or one party if you come as a couple or family); we will direct other patients to separate rooms. If you see someone already in the waiting room, please stay outside of the clinic until they exit the lobby.
Your hands may touch viruses and germs while you are getting ready to go out. If you accidentally touch the inner side of your mask, the viruses and germs may go into your mouth or nose. The best way is to wash you hands after you get ready and then put on the face mask. Your hands may touch public facilities such as escalator handrails, handles of buses, office door knobs, elevator buttons, etc.
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