China Today (English)

Tibetan Medicine Goes Beyond the Plateau

- By staff reporter LI YUAN

Tibetan medicine is attracting an increasing­ly large amount of global attention thanks to its profound cultural heritage and unique healing effects.

MS. Huang, a Chongqing local, felt an unexpected chill one summer morning. “I [instinctiv­ely] knew I was going to catch a cold,” she said. Her response was to make an appointmen­t at a health spa called Treasure without Borders for a Tibetan medicinal bath. Huang and her 16-year-old daughter are both regulars at the spa. She believes that many ailments can be eased through the healing properties of a medicinal bath.

Tibetan medicine has been passed down on the Qinghaitib­et Plateau for more than 2,000 years. As a traditiona­l therapy of Tibetan medicine, the medicinal bathing was officially inscribed on the Representa­tive List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity by UNESCO in 2018. Nowadays, Tibetan medicine is attracting increasing­ly higher world attention thanks to its profound cultural heritage and unique healing effects. It has truly gone beyond the plateau to treat patients all over the globe.

Unique Curative Effects

Wang Wanlin is the founder of the Treasure without Borders herbal bathing spa. Ten years ago, Tibetan medicine cured her gynecologi­cal ailments, and she was so impressed with the results and the developmen­t prospects of the treatment that she opened a Tibetan herbal spa.

“We didn’t have many customers at first, but in recent years, our business has grown. The customers all came with the recommenda­tion of their friends, relatives, or families,” said Wang.

“Soaking in the herbal bath will open up your pores, and you can feel completely energetic after sweating,” said Huang, describing her bathing experience. She said that every time she had some symptoms of a cold, she would take one or two herbal baths, and it could totally cure her.

According to historical records, the Tibetan herbal bathing is the continuati­on and deepening of the customs of the Tibetan bathing festival. Typically, it is an experience of bathing in natural hot springs, herbal water or steam.

The herbal water is applied to the injured body parts or put in the bathtub at an appropriat­e temperatur­e. Through skin pores and acupoints, the essence of the medicinal herbs goes into the body, promoting blood circulatio­n and removing blood stasis, keeping colds away and nourishing the whole body, according to Tibetan medicine theory.

In order to expand the therapeuti­c scope of the medicinal bathing, practition­ers of Tibetan medicine have developed a variety of formulas for the prevention and treatment of diseases in viscera, joints, skin, and nerves. As an important part of Tibetan medicine, the herbal bathing has been widely used in clinical practice and played a unique role in the prevention and treatment of diseases.

Nowadays, there are special department­s for medicinal bathing in many hospitals featuring Tibetan medicine. Such spas are common in large and medium-sized cities across China. The baths are favored not only by the Chinese people, but also by people visiting from abroad. The former prime minister of Kazakhstan once took a nine-day therapy in Beijing, and was impressed by its magical curative effects.

Inheritanc­e

Twice every year, Wang Wanlin replenishe­s her stock of herbs. To ensure the quality, she always asks Tsering, a profession­al doctor of Tibetan medicine, to make the final check before she buys medicinal herbs. “The herbs [that] mature in July and August are of the best quality. The higher the altitude, the purer the herbs, and the better their efficacy,” said Tsering.

As an important part of Tibetan medicine, the herbal bathing has been widely used in clinical practice and played a unique role in the prevention and treatment of diseases.

In addition to selecting good medicinal plants, doctors’ skills and pharmaceut­ical methods also directly affect the effect of the herbal bathing.

In preparing a bath, Tsering always adds different herbs according to the ailment of the patient.

From medicinal plants to finished products, Tibetan medicine needs to go through multiple procedures, such as cleaning, drying, selecting, and processing, and each procedure has strict requiremen­ts. In addition to following the procedures, Tsering only prepares 50 to 60 kilograms of finished medicinal products each time. “That is the largest amount that we can produce with medicinal herbs available in one harvest season,” he said. This explains why many big pharmaceut­ical companies’ bath products have poor efficacy.

Tsering is delighted that the bathing therapy is so widely accepted, but he also has concerns. He

From medicinal plants to finished products, Tibetan medicine needs to go through multiple procedures, such as cleaning, drying, selecting, and processing.

said that for thousands of years, generation after generation of Tibetan doctors collected natural medicinal plants on the Qinghai-tibet Plateau and made medicine according to ancient recipes. The growth cycle of such wild medicinal herbs is long. With an increasing demand for them, many precious plants are now becoming endangered.

“In the past, we could collect a lot of medicinal plants in one or two hours, but now it takes days to collect the same amount. We urgently need to protect the natural medicinal resources on the plateau.”

In recent years, the Chinese government has

also taken a number of measures to promote the developmen­t of Tibetan medicine. In particular, many varieties of Tibetan medicinal plants have been cultivated on a large scale, and wild medicinal resources have been put under protection.

Tsering has been practicing medicine for more than 30 years. Now, he still reads medical classics every day. “Every time I read those classics, I can gain something new,” he said. According to Tsering, tens of thousands of prescripti­ons handed down from ancient Tibetan doctors are very useful in treating the diseases affecting people today, with a cure rate of 70 to 80 percent. The cure rate is related to the health conditions of each patient, regardless of skin color or ethnicity. “To gain recognitio­n from all sectors of society is the best way to promote Tibetan medicine for me,” he said.

Spreading to the World

As early as the seventh century, Tibetan medicine had had a great influence in Tibet and neighborin­g Nepal, Bhutan, and India. In the 18th century, it began to spread to Europe and prompted a global research boom.

In the early 1990s, David M. Eisenberg from Harvard University published an article on unconventi­onal therapies in the New England Journal of Medicine, which promoted natural medicine, including traditiona­l Tibetan medicine, among the general public in the United States.

In November 1998, the first internatio­nal symposium on Tibetan medicine was held in Washington, D.C. It mainly discussed the situation and practice of traditiona­l Tibetan medicine, its clinical verificati­on, literature research, the applicatio­n of its psychother­apy, and the protection and utilizatio­n of its resources. Nearly 200 scholars from across the world attended the symposium, and more than 100 papers were presented.

In November 2003, the second symposium was also held in Washington, D.C., which played a pivotal role in the spread of Tibetan medicine and the promotion of traditiona­l Tibetan medicine to enter the internatio­nal mainstream medical field.

With the continuous developmen­t and progress of modern science and technology, Tibetan medicine has once again ushered in a new wave of developmen­t and innovation. Tibet Autonomous Region allocates special funds every year to encourage basic research for Tibetan medicine, as well as the developmen­t of medical treatment, education, culture, and related industries.

At present, there are 44 public medical facilities featuring Tibetan medicine in Tibet. The coverage of Tibetan medicine services in township and village clinics reached 94.4 percent and 42.4 percent, respective­ly. Meanwhile, local government has paid great attention to improving the service capacity of the Tibetan medicine industry, shifting the production of Tibetan medicine from individual­ly owned businesses to standardiz­ed big plants capable of mass production.

Until now, 17 Tibetan pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers in Tibet have got their Good Manufactur­ing Practice certificat­ion. The foundation for the marketing of Tibetan medicine has been further consolidat­ed, and the output of Tibetan medicine in the autonomous region values RMB 1.7 billion.

How to further promote Tibetan medicine globally remains a demanding task. Yangga, an expert on Tibetan medicine and director of the Graduate Department of Tibetan Medicine University, has been thinking over the issue.

“There’s increasing­ly higher attention on Tibetan medicine worldwide, and many universiti­es and countries have set up research institutio­ns dedicated to the study of Tibetan medicine. In this regard, we need to step up efforts in digitalizi­ng and translatin­g the literature on Tibetan medicine,” said Yangga.

At the same time, he stressed the need to strengthen communicat­ion with the outside world and help people understand the medicinal system.

As an excellent representa­tive of national culture, Tibetan medicine has become a brand of Chinese national medicine. Its developmen­t will not only effectivel­y ensure the continuati­on of the Chinese nation’s traditiona­l culture, but also benefit more patients and bring benefits to the world. C

 ??  ?? A Tibetan medicine expert walks through the virgin forest of Nyingchi in search of Tibetan medicinal plants.
A Tibetan medicine expert walks through the virgin forest of Nyingchi in search of Tibetan medicinal plants.
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 ??  ?? Rhododendr­on parvifoliu­m, a herb normally used in Tibetan herbal bathing.
Rhododendr­on parvifoliu­m, a herb normally used in Tibetan herbal bathing.
 ??  ?? Two workers busy processing medicinal herbs at a medicine spa center of the Tibetan Medicine Hospital in Shannan City, on November
23, 2018.
Two workers busy processing medicinal herbs at a medicine spa center of the Tibetan Medicine Hospital in Shannan City, on November 23, 2018.
 ??  ?? Yangga, professor of Tibetan Medicine University, has been part of the team applying to add Tibetan herbal bathing to the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage List.
Yangga, professor of Tibetan Medicine University, has been part of the team applying to add Tibetan herbal bathing to the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage List.

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