China Daily (Hong Kong)

TCM inclusion shows WHO’s holistic view on health

- Li Candong The author is president of Fujian University of Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine.

Traditiona­l Chinese medicine will be included into the World Health Organizati­on’s forthcomin­g Internatio­nal Classifica­tion of Diseases to be released next year, according to the science magazine Nature.

As a normative yardstick for classifica­tion of diseases in the fields of healthcare, management, teaching, research, insurance and policymaki­ng around the world, the Internatio­nal Statistica­l Classifica­tion of Diseases and Related Health Problems, to give it its full title, is considered the internatio­nal “standard diagnostic tool for epidemiolo­gy, health management and clinical purposes”.

The inclusion of TCM is in line with the global trend for a more holistic view of health rather than merely disease treatment, and it will help promote the developmen­t of the traditiona­l medicine system across the world so it can make greater contributi­ons to human health.

Through the cooperatio­n and efforts of experts from various countries, the new section on TCM in the latest ICD sets the template for diagnosing diseases and symptoms, and the framework of symptom classifica­tion in accordance with TCM.

Both TCM and Western medicine have their own characteri­stics and advantages.

Rooted in traditiona­l Chinese culture, TCM puts the emphasis on the overall functionin­g of the body and takes into account a patient’s feelings, as well as the influence of the climate and the environmen­t. It is a kind of customized healthcare focused on the “human”.

Western medicine, on the other hand, reduces analysis to anatomy and observatio­n studies with emphasis on physical structure, objective indicators and in-depth microscopi­c analysis. It favors pathologic­al diagnosis and surgical and drug interventi­ons for the treatment of diseases as it is mainly based on “confrontat­ion” cures through clinical measures and medical imaging techniques, and as long as the indicators return within the normal range, it considers the disease to be cured.

TCM, on the other hand, takes “harmony” as the starting point, treating the pathogenic factors by rebalancin­g a person’s yin and yang, the effectiven­ess of which indicates whether or not a patient is recovering.

As such, TCM and Western medicine have different theoretica­l bases, ways of thinking, diagnosis and treatment methods. To complement each other, therefore, the diagnosis process of TCM has to be standardiz­ed, this can be done by collecting and analyzing big data under the rules of TCM with modern artificial intelligen­ce.

And with the coming together of the two medical treatment systems, the purpose of TCM’s inclusion in the ICD will be fulfilled.

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