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Traditional Medicine in Contemporary China

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The Institute of Science in Society

Science Society Sustainability

http://www.i-sis.org.uk

 

General Enquiries sam

Website/Mailing List press-release

ISIS Director m.w.ho

===================================================

 

Traditional Medicine in Contemporary China

**************************************

Traditional enjoys high status in China, which is good for the

health of the nation. Dr. Mae-Wan Ho reports.

 

Sources and references (http://www.i-sis.org.uk/full/GCM3Full.php) for this

article are posted on ISIS Members’ website. Details here

(http://www.i-sis.org.uk/membership.php).

 

Traditional (TCM) is fully institutionalised and supported by

the Chinese government, and very much a part of the contemporary Chinese

healthcare system.

 

It delivers almost 40% of total healthcare services, and like western

biomedicine, is predominantly based in hospitals. There are almost 3000

dedicated hospitals for TCM, and over 95% of western medical hospitals also have

fully-fledged Chinese medicine wards and outpatient departments.

 

TCM is practiced in its own right, integrated with western medicine, or used to

enhance the effectiveness of western medical treatments. In practice, however,

the distinction among the three ways of delivering TCM is blurred. Western

biomedical concepts and ideas have been assimilated into Chinese medicine, and

western drugs are routinely prescribed in Chinese-medicine wards and outpatients

departments. TCM physicians, for their part, face pressure from hospitals to use

revenue-generating biomedical diagnostic facilities such as ultrasound and

computed tomography.

 

TCM is also used by the China to promote Chinese culture. It is defined as a

‘national treasure’, which might have further insulated it from debate as a

science. Though such a debate should include a thorough critique on the

conceptual and practical deficiencies of the mainstream scientific model itself,

which is not what the majority who wants a debate has in mind.

 

The need to promote positive perceptions of TCM abroad is forcing internal

changes, nevertheless. For example, there are efforts to prohibit the use of

endangered species in preparation of TCM drugs, and to use research methods

acceptable to the dominant international drugs market, although this may not be

appropriate in many cases, and reflects an unquestioned acceptance of the

dominant reductionist medical model (see Globalisation Chinese medicine, this

series).

 

It could be argued that the strongest proof of the efficacy of TCM is the high

level of public support in China. A familiar sight that has remained unchanged

over the years of turmoil in China is the morning qigong exercises practiced in

the streets by millions of Chinese people.

 

More importantly, self-prescribed, ready-made Chinese medicines are an important

part of the people’s therapeutic regime. This includes a bewildering array of

‘quick dissolve’ herbal health drinks for treating or preventing a range of

diseases, from cancer and diabetes to inflammation, influenza and toxicity; or

else, like ginseng, they simply ‘regulate the body’ to promote a general state

of health. The ingredients are typically a mixture of well-known herbs and

flowers or food items.

 

Chinese people take responsibility for their own health most seriously, and the

use of medicine and disease prevention forms a continuum with food and

nutrition. Although most Chinese people may believe in the superior diagnostic

powers of western biomedicine, many prefer TCM treatments particularly for

chronic diseases where the side effects of western biomedicine are seen,

rightly, to often far outweigh the benefits.

 

The Chinese government is pressing hard for the systematisation of TCM disease

categories, diagnostic standards, and therapeutic techniques, and to enforce a

more stringent evaluation of therapeutic outcomes. At the same time, however,

the scientific status of TCM is not being doubted, it is decreed a priori by the

state.

 

One must remember, however, that TCM has thousands of years of accumulated

experience and knowledge behind it, and the government’s support for it is

crucial to prevent the kind of inter-professional struggles with the dominant

western biomedical model that have impeded the wide adoption of traditional

medicines in other countries such as Malaysia and India.

 

The World Health Organisation unveiled its first Global Strategy for Traditional

and Complementary Alternative Medicine in January 2002, to promote integrating

traditional medicine into national health systems globally. This is an

opportunity to build safe, affordable and effective national health systems,

especially for Third World countries rich in both medicinal plant resources and

traditional knowledge. China will be closely watched as an example, for better

or for worse, as she is actively pushing for global acceptance of her

traditional remedies and competing in the global drugs market.

 

 

Sources and references (http://www.i-sis.org.uk/full/GCM3Full.php) for this

article are posted on ISIS Members’ website. Details here

(http://www.i-sis.org.uk/membership.php).

 

===================================================

This article can be found on the I-SIS website at

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/GCM3.php

If you would like to be added to our mailing list - please send a blank

email to press-release with the word in the subject

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The Institute of Science in Society, PO Box 32097, London NW1 OXR

telephone: [44 20 8731 7714] [44 20 7383 3376] [44 20 7272 5636]

 

General Enquiries sam

Website/Mailing List press-release

ISIS Director m.w.ho

 

MATERIAL IN THIS EMAIL MAY BE REPRODUCED IN ANY FORM WITHOUT PERMISSION, ON

CONDITION THAT IT IS ACCREDITED ACCORDINGLY AND CONTAINS A LINK TO

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