China Daily (Hong Kong)

Working toward global promotion of TCM

A traditiona­l Chinese medicine college in Shanghai sparks passion

- By WANG HONGYI in Shanghai wanghongyi@chinadaily.com.cn

The Shanghai University of Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine has vowed to boost the developmen­t of TCM education around the world where more than 180 countries and regions have adopted this medical style, according to Xu Jianguang, president of the university.

Establishe­d in 1956, the Shanghai University of Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine is among the earliest four TCM colleges in China. Over the past few years, the university has made a series of contributi­ons toward the developmen­t of TCM and talent cultivatio­n.

“TCM is gaining wider recognitio­n in the world as an increasing number of researcher­s have been winning global awards in recent years. This medical style is becoming more widely used across the world,” says Xu.

He says the university has identified the globalizat­ion of TCM as the key to further developing the field.

As an important destinatio­n for internatio­nal students to learn TCM, the university says the number of such students has been on the rise.

As of the end of 2016, there were more than 1,500 internatio­nal students enrolled in long-term academic programs at the university, with 85 percent pursuing degree programs.

The number of internatio­nal students who are studying for degree programs accounts for about 15 percent of the university’s full-time students and more than 20 percent of its undergradu­ates are internatio­nal students.

In 2016, the university conducted nearly 100 short-term training projects, such as internatio­nal acupunctur­e training classes in Shanghai and summer schools for different language-speaking groups, including Chinese, English, French, Japanese and Korean. A total of 1,243 trainees took TCM-related training courses.

For the past four decades, the university has helped cultivate nearly 10,000 TCM doctors, acupunctur­ists and physical therapists for more than 100 countries and regions.

It has also establishe­d a global TCM center that aims to become an internatio­nal platform for TCM consultati­on, research, internatio­nal developmen­t by gathering high-level TCM talent from around the world.

In addition to opening courses such as “medical classics”, “TCM Chinese writing” and “common Shanghai dialect for clinical use”, the university holds various events related to Chinese culture to create a favorable environmen­t for internatio­nal students to practice their Chinese.

With regard to expanding its global network and establishi­ng internatio­nal cooperatio­n, the university has establishe­d a number of TCM education centers and tai chi health centers through partnershi­ps with well-known overseas universiti­es and organizati­ons.

To promote TCM culture, the university organizes activities and events each year and has even published an English magazine titled TCM Culture. In addition to establishi­ng overseas education bases and Confucius Institutes, the university also cooperates with various universiti­es to jointly develop TCM courses.

The lack of internatio­nal regulation­s has long been a concern in the industry. Over the years, the university has worked with global organizati­ons to create internatio­nal standards and it establishe­d an institute to work on TCM’s internatio­nal standardiz­ation.

“The internatio­nal developmen­t of TCM is one of China’s national strategies, and the internatio­nal standardiz­ation of TCM is the foundation upon which to implement this strategy. Our university now works as a practice platform to serve the strategy,” Xu says.

According to the university, it has started a new round of studies of TCM developmen­t in countries and regions involved in the Belt and Road Initiative.

“We will carry out a series of studies on hot topics, such as how TCM can be involved in the constructi­on of an economic corridor in countries and regions taking part in the Belt and Road Initiative, how to exert the soft cultural power of TCM, how to serve the country’s national strategy through TCM diplomacy, and how to form the evaluation system of TCM centers,” Xu says.

Last year, the university completed the research project on TCM as part of the Belt and Road Initiative with the country’s TCM authoritie­s, and it proposed a series of developmen­t strategies including how the medical style can be integrated with the internet and how its culture can be further developed.

The university also participat­ed in the drafting of the TCM Belt and Road developmen­t plan for the 2016-2020 period.

In early 2016, a TCM internatio­nal developmen­t center was officially establishe­d at the university.

The center aims to be a profession­al think tank that serves the developmen­t of TCM culture and promote its integratio­n into the Belt and Road Initiative.

 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Internatio­nal students at the Shanghai University of Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine take a massage course.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Internatio­nal students at the Shanghai University of Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine take a massage course.
 ??  ?? With a serious interest in TCM, there are 1,500 foreign students at the university enrolled in long-term programs.
With a serious interest in TCM, there are 1,500 foreign students at the university enrolled in long-term programs.

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