

Dr. Jake Fratkin: Building Acupuncture and Herbal Medicine in America
Your 39GEN host Sean sits down with veteran clinician and teacher Dr. Jake Fratkin, who has spent 45 years in East Asian medicine. Jake traces his path from 1970s apprenticeships in Chicago with Dr. In-yeon Moon and herbal pharmacy work with fellow YSU colleague Dr. Lau, to translating and co-teaching with Dr. Guo Zhengong, and a life-changing year of hospital training in Beijing. He explains the split between classical Shang Han Lun approaches and the modern hospital style of Chinese herbal medicine, why Japanese meridian therapy shaped his acupuncture, and how specialization made him a go-to for respiratory cases and pediatrics. Jake shares how swine flu and later COVID pushed his research into antiviral herb categories and long haul patterns, which he describes as a mix of lingering pathogen and blood stasis. He argues that good history taking often beats pulse and tongue, and urges new practitioners to find what they love and what they do best, then go deep. He also offers practical Qigong, daily meridian circulation sets, and reflects on a single career regret, not holding an MD for institutional clout, while affirming that his heart is in Qi, channels, and herbs. Resources mentioned include his book Essential Chinese Formulas and his site drjakefratkin.com, plus his China photo archive.