The Borneo Post

Chinese medical portal censored after doubting herbal ‘Covid remedy’

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BEIJING: A popular Chinese medical informatio­n site has been censored by authoritie­s for “violation of relevant laws and regulation­s”, months after its criticism of a government-backed herbal Covid-19 treatment sent shares in a pharmaceut­ical giant tumbling.

DXY, which counts tech giant Tencent among its investors and runs a host of health-related services, previously questioned the value of Lianhua Qingwen, a herbal remedy marketed for fever and sore throats, as a Covid-19 treatment.

China approved the concoction — made up of ingredient­s like honeysuckl­e and apricot seeds — as a Covid-19 treatment in 2020, and it was distribute­d to Shanghai residents during the city’s outbreak this year.

DXY’s article, which has now been deleted from its website, was part of a wave of reports that caused shares in Lianhua Qingwen’s producer — one of China’s largest traditiona­l medicine companies — to plunge.

The website has now been banned from posting on at least five of its Weibo social media accounts, with a notice at the top of its official page saying that due to “violation of relevant laws and regulation­s, this user is currently prohibited from posting”.

DXY’s official WeChat accounts, which typically publish multiple articles a day on medical topics, have not been updated since Monday.

The Weibo notice did not specify which regulation­s had been violated by DXY, which did not immediatel­y respond to AFP’s request for comment.

The Chinese government has increasing­ly promoted traditiona­l medicine at home and abroad in recent years, often with nationalis­tic undertones.

DXY’s coverage prompted criticism that it was targeting traditiona­l Chinese medicine (TCM) in order to promote Western pharmaceut­icals.

The decision to freeze DXY’s social media accounts was lauded by some Weibo users, who accused the company of working with “anti-China forces” and peddling false informatio­n.

“For this vicious thing eating the anti-Chinese capitalist­s’ dog food, the best days are in the past,” one Weibo user wrote.

But others lamented the loss of a valued source of misinforma­tion-free medical guidance and said they disagreed with the censorship.

“My mother used to be the kind of person who would make her kids eat chicken gallbladde­r for fevers,” one wrote, crediting DXY with giving her parent access to modern medical informatio­n.

“You have the right to (criticise) DXY on Weibo, but you don’t have the right to ban them,” the user wrote.

The United States and other countries have warned there is no evidence Lianhua Qingwen works to prevent or cure Covid19, even as it has increasing­ly been promoted by government authoritie­s in China and Hong Kong.

The US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) has said it has not approved Lianhua Qingwen and that coronaviru­srelated claims about it were “not supported by competent and reliable scientific evidence”.

Beijing issued its first white paper on TCM in 2016, laying out plans to build medicine centres and dispatch practition­ers to developing countries in Africa and Southeast Asia.

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