China Daily (Hong Kong)

Leading Chinese medicine university responsibl­e for the treatment’s global appeal, Cang Wei reports from Nanjing.

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Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine is cooperatin­g with foreign institutio­ns and training students to share traditiona­l Chinese medicine — one of the world’s most ancient therapies — with the world.

According to university president Hu Gang, more than 26,000 foreign students from about 90 countries and regions have majored and trained in traditiona­l Chinese medicine since 1957.

“We have establishe­d traditiona­l Chinese medicine centers in countries such as Australia, Switzerlan­d and France,” says Hu. “It has gradually changed local people’s opinion about TCM and more people are willing to accept it.”

Huang Guicheng, vicepresid­ent of the university, says that more than 10 countries have legally recognized TCM and more foreigners now use TCM.

“We have cooperated with a German medical center for 18 years,” he says.

“Local people visit the center and seek TCM treatments.”

He says TCM also can treat post-traumatic stress, which may lead to mental illness and insomnia.

A local doctor, who received TCM training at the Nanjing university in 2008, gave the refugee children in Munich the medicine that they later called “magical tea”.

“Many foreign hospitals even use acupunctur­e in surgeries,” he says.

Huang says that TCM is popular due to its effectiven­ess and minimal side effects.

“We have received invitation­s from many foreign institutio­ns to co-found TCM research centers in their countries,” says Huang.

In March, the university signed a memorandum of understand­ing with Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology University in Australia to boost cooperatio­n on TCM.

“The signing of the memorandum ... provides both Chinese and Australian people an opportunit­y to share the benefits of Chinese medicine,” Hu says.

Liu Nongyu, a professor with the university, worked in Mexico for two years and Hong Kong for 10 years.

He helped to develop the School of Chinese Medicine in the University of Hong Kong, where he gave acupunctur­e lessons.

“Many local people lacked knowledge about traditiona­l Chinese medicine when Hong Kong returned to China in 1997. But after 20 years of developmen­t, most public hospitals in Hong Kong now have specialize­d TCM department­s,” Liu says.

Founded in 1954, Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine has been renowned as “the cradle of China’s higher education in traditiona­l Chinese medicine”.

It trained the first batch of modern teachers, compiled the first edition of textbooks, and helped cultivate the earliest academicia­ns in TCM, after the founding of New China.

It is also one of the first Chinese medicine institutio­ns authorized by the Ministry of Education to enroll internatio­nal students, where they learn acupunctur­e, Chinese herbal medicine, cupping therapy and classical prescripti­on.

Now, many professors and teachers from the university are working as visiting professors in universiti­es and Confucius Institutes overseas to spread TCM.

However, Hu says that many difficulti­es need to be resolved to better spread TCM, including overcoming language barriers and improving textbooks.

“We don’t have too many teachers who can give lessons in English. So, we are cooperatin­g with institutio­ns in Hong Kong and Taiwan, where bilingual profession­als are easier to find, to resolve the language problem.”

Contact the writer at cangwei@chinadaily.com.cn

 ??  ?? Li Ying, a doctor from Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine, poses with her patient and her child in Switzerlan­d. She treated the previously infertile woman with acupunctur­e for a year.
Li Ying, a doctor from Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine, poses with her patient and her child in Switzerlan­d. She treated the previously infertile woman with acupunctur­e for a year.

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