China Daily

TCM urged to embrace cutting-edge technology

Tianjin Party chief tells NPC deputies that innovation is indispensa­ble

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

Traditiona­l Chinese medicine must embrace modern technologi­es to achieve innovative developmen­t, Zhang Boli, a TCM expert, said on Wednesday.

Zhang, honorary president of Tianjin University of Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine, is a deputy to the 14th National People’s Congress, the country’s top legislatur­e, which is meeting in Beijing this week.

He told a meeting of fellow legislator­s in the Tianjin delegation that the laboratory where he works has stored more than 60,000 active ingredient samples of TCM extracts on campus, making it the world’s largest such bank and a boon to research.

His team has leveraged big data and other advanced manufactur­ing technologi­es to make TCM more effective and uncover how it works in people’s bodies.

“Age-old things do not necessaril­y symbolize backwardne­ss,” said

Zhang, also an academicia­n at the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g and honorary president of the China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences.

“However, the restraint of oldfashion­ed medicine-making methods must be broken if TCM wants to excel.”

Zhang said his team, a front-runner in digitalizi­ng TCM production, has rolled out several intelligen­t TCM production lines that have revolution­ized the TCM industry.

“We’ve also created a school on campus focusing on TCM pharmaceut­ical engineerin­g, and have trained thousands of TCM engineers,” he said.

Citing official figures, Zhang said the emerging health service industry in China was worth 8 trillion yuan ($1.1 trillion) in 2020, including 3 trillion yuan worth of TCM-related services.

“China has two sets of medical sciences to help safeguard people’s health, and the two have their own respective advantages,” he said.

“They are highly complement­ary and cannot replace each other.”

Central authoritie­s issued a guideline in 2016 on promoting public health, which said that by 2030, TCM shall work in synergy with Western medicine in treating major diseases, and play a central role in patients’ recovery.

Zhang said his team has helped bring TCM to the world by collaborat­ing with pharmaceut­ical companies and has registered TCM products as prescripti­on drugs, healthcare products or food additives in 16 countries and regions, including the United States, the European Union, Canada and Australia.

Speaking at the meeting, Chen Min’er, a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and Party chief of Tianjin, said that innovation is crucial if ancient therapies are to continue serving contempora­ry Chinese people.

He drew parallels between TCM and other legacy industries such as steel, electric power and fossil fuels. “For such sectors to become more productive, innovation is indispensa­ble,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong