Joseph Brady, L.Ac., Dipl. OM, MSTCM
CORE FACULTY & CHAIR FOR CCMU RESEARCH DEPARTMENT
Clinical Medicine Department, DAOM Program Faculty, Master Program Faculty, PD Program Faculty, Research Department
Joe earned his Master’s degree in Traditional Chinese Medicine from the CCMU in 2006. Currently a clinic supervisor and faculty member at CSTCM, Joe is also on faculty at the University of Denver. An internationally recognized expert on healthy aging, Joe has spent over 25 years teaching t’ai chi, qigong and Traditional Chinese Medicine at the University of Colorado, Health Sciences Center, the University of Denver, and Metropolitan State University. Former columnist on healthy aging for the Rocky Mountain News, he has presented at many scientific and medical conferences including at the Harvard Medical School’s Osher Institute on Integrative Medicine and has twice been a featured presenter at the Oxford Roundtable at Harris Manchester College in the University of Oxford U.K. He currently runs his own clinic in Denver Colorado.
Jing Fan MD(China), PhD, LAc, Dipl. OM
DAOM Adjunct Professor
DAOM Program Faculty, Research Department
Dr. Jing Fan holds an MD and PhD in Orthopedics from Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine and completed his postdoctoral training, and research fellowships at Harvard Medical School. He currently serves as a full-time Acupuncturist at the Cleveland Clinic’s Department of Wellness & Preventive Medicine – Center for Integrative & Lifestyle Medicine. He is licensed to practice acupuncture and TCM in both China (Jiangsu Province) and the United States (Texas, Ohio), and is certified by the NCCAOM as an Oriental Medicine Practitioner. Additionally, he holds certifications from AOBTA as a Qigong and Tui Na practitioner.
Dr. Fan has extensive experience in clinical practice, teaching, and research in both TCM and integrative medicine. He specializes in combining acupuncture, herbal medicine, orthopedic techniques, and mind-body training to treat musculoskeletal, neurological, and metabolic bone disorders. He also employs multi-dimensional pattern differentiation and quantitative models from both traditional and modern integrative medicine to treat constitutional and multi-system dysfunction disorders. His main research interests include the nonlinear analysis of dynamic biomedical complexity through the integration of TCM and Western medicine, the role of connective tissue in chronic musculoskeletal pain, the mechanisms behind acupuncture and manual therapy, the quantitative analysis of TCM constitution, and the development of small-molecule drugs targeting endoplasmic reticulum stress pathways.