TCM goes around the world to help fight COVID-19
Traditional
Chinese medicine (TCM) and TCM doctors are playing increasingly important roles
in global efforts to fight the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19), as the
pandemic impacts countries more heavily with each passing day.
On March
18 local time, a Chinese medical team made up of 13 medical experts, including
two TCM experts, arrived at Milan Malpensa Airport, Italy, with nine tons of
supplies donated by east China’s Zhejiang province for medical treatment and
protection.
Yang
Junchao, vice president of the Zhejiang Provincial Hospital of TCM, was one of
the two TCM experts in the team. It was the first time China had sent TCM
experts to a foreign country to help fight COVID-19.
The
combination of TCM and Western medicine has led to significant achievements in
China’s efforts to fight the epidemic, said Yang, adding that TCM is drawing
increasing attention from other countries.
“We will
introduce China’s experience in fighting the epidemic to Italy,” Yang said. She
disclosed that they will share China’s TCM treatment plans and clinical
thinking for COVID-19 with Italy, introduce TCM and its theory to the country
to enhance Italian people’s scientific understanding of TCM, and provide
medical advice for local communities and overseas Chinese.
TCM has
been a highlight in China’s efforts to fight COVID-19, said Zhang Boli, an
academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering (CAE) and one of the leading
experts advising on the epidemic fight in central China’s Hubei province,
epicenter of the epidemic in China.
Zhang,
who is also the president of Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese
Medicine, disclosed that some academic institutions in South Korea, Japan, and
Italy have sent letters to China asking it to share its experience in fighting
COVID-19 and its use of TCM, and asking China to provide Chinese patent
medicines.
On
various online medical consultation platforms around the world, the combination
of TCM and Western medicine has already played important roles in fighting
COVID-19 worldwide and helping overseas Chinese.
Wencheng
county in Wenzhou, east China’s Zhejiang province, has set up 40 WeChat groups
to provide health consultation services for overseas Chinese whose original
family homes are in the county. Each WeChat group has nearly 500 people.
The
members of the WeChat groups can describe their symptoms, and also upload
relevant materials including laboratory test reports and pictures of coating on
the tongue to seek doctor’s advice, which is based on both TCM and Western
medicine.
“There
is a TCM doctor in each of the WeChat groups, and all overseas Chinese from
Wencheng county can ask for medical consultation in the WeChat groups,” said
Zhou Jie, deputy administrative director of the publicity department of
Communist Party of China (CPC) Wencheng county committee.
“Wencheng
county is a well-known hometown of overseas Chinese. Almost every family here
has family members living abroad. These overseas Chinese have a special
preference for TCM and put a lot of trust in it,” Zhou said, stressing that
“the combination of TCM and Western medicine has significantly alleviated the
anxiety of overseas Chinese over the disease.”
As part
of efforts to help overseas Chinese fight the epidemic, the Federation of
Jiangsu Returned Overseas Chinese in east China’s Jiangsu province, helped
launch the “online clinic” of Jiangsu Provincial Hospital of Chinese Medicine,
allowing TCM to benefit more overseas Chinese and help with the global fight
against the virus.
The
phone number of the “online clinic” has now become an “international hotline”,
as more and more patients are now making video calls from other countries to
seek medical consultation for COVID-19, according to Wu Wenzhong, vice
president of Jiangsu Provincial Hospital of Chinese Medicine.
The
hospital is making the appropriate arrangements for connecting with TCM
institutions in countries including Germany, the Netherlands and Canada, and is
also preparing to launch a platform that helps overseas TCM practitioners
consult with the hospital on COVID-19, Wu disclosed.
TCM doctors
at the hospital have recently held discussions with overseas TCM experts on
different TCM treatment and prevention plans against COVID-1 on its
international TCM telemedicine teaching cooperation platform. The platform
links institutions in more than 10 countries and regions including the U.S.,
Canada, the UK, Australia, Switzerland, Brazil, Ireland, and Singapore.
Traditional
Chinese patent medicine, Chinese herbal tea, and TCM decoction have also become
increasingly popular with people in many countries.
Since
Feb. 27, Chinese doctor Chen Zhen, chairman of TCM company Oriental Herbs, has
offered people free herbal tea in Budapest, capital of Hungary, at 11 a.m.
every day.
The
prescription for the herbal tea was based on guidelines for TCM diagnosis and
treatment released by China’s National Health Commission (NHC) and various
provinces, according to Chen.
Chen and
another TCM doctor named Zhang Qingbin have also developed several other TCM
prescriptions to help treat the disease, and posted them online to help
overseas Chinese, Chen explained.
“So many
people come for the herbal tea. There’s a long queue here every day. Many
Chinese living in Hungary’s neighboring countries drive here specially for the
herbal tea. And it’s not just Chinese: many local residents also come with
thermos cups and jugs to take the herbal tea home for their families,” Chen
told People’s Daily while giving out the herbal tea and preparing medicinal
materials.
Besides
Hungary, TCM is being eagerly sought after in many other countries during the
epidemic.
“Many
people come to my clinic and ask for 20 or even 30 bags of TCM for prevention
of the epidemic. We’re about to run out of stock. I need to restock TCM
quickly,” said Wu Binjiang, dean of the Ontario College of Traditional Chinese
Medicine and also vice chairperson of the World Federation of Chinese Medicine
Societies.
According
to media reports, US orders for TCM for relief of cold and flu symptoms and
boosting immunity have almost doubled since this February, with some Chinese
patent medicines sold out and some Chinese herbal medicines becoming hard to
find.
In
addition to traditional Chinese herbal medicine, many physical methods used in
TCM for boosting immunity and enhancing epidemic prevention and control have also
been introduced to foreign countries to fight COVID-19.
On March
12, some German patients were seen practicing a set of exercises named Ba Duan
Jin, which literally means “eight steps to healthy living”, at Koetzting
Hospital of Chinese Medicine in Bavaria, Germany, under the instruction of a
TCM doctor.
Ba Duan
Jin, the ancient Chinese martial art of Tai Chi, and TCM therapy known as Er
Xue Ya Dou, which means “pressing granules on auricular acupoints”, are all
important methods used in TCM to boost immunity and prevent and control the
epidemic, said Dai Jingzhang, president of the Koetzting Hospital of Chinese
Medicine.
“We have
also developed epidemic prevention TCM decoctions for German patients based on
the practical experience of TCM services for patients in China, and offered the
decoction to our patients and colleagues,” Dai disclosed.
The
hospital is now attempting to provide prescriptions for their epidemic
prevention decoctions and various TCM methods which are useful for coping with
COVID-19 for everyone in Germany and Europe, said Dai.
In
addition, Beijing University of Chinese Medicine, co-founder of the Koetzting
Hospital of Chinese Medicine, is also making arrangements to send medical teams
and offer medical supplies including Chinese medicine to Germany and other
countries in Europe, according to Dai.
Italians welcome the second
Chinese medical team made up of 13 experts at Milan Malpensa Airport, Italy,
with a banner saying “We are spindrifts of the same sea, leaves of the same
tree, and flowers of the same garden.” (Photo/Courtesy of Blazing Youth
Community)
TCM goes around the world to help fight COVID-19
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