China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Traditiona­l courses for clinical students

- WANG XIAODONG

Traditiona­l Chinese medicine courses will become mandatory for undergradu­ate students majoring in clinical medicine, according to a guideline released by central government department­s to promote highqualit­y TCM education.

Meanwhile, about 100 top-level majors for TCM undergradu­ate students will be establishe­d in medical colleges across China as part of efforts to strengthen the TCM discipline, said the guideline, jointly released last month by the Ministry of Education, National Health Commission and National Administra­tion of Traditiona­l Chinese Medicine.

Reform will also take place in the TCM curriculum, including streamlini­ng TCM courses and teaching plans, and it is expected that in about five years undergradu­ate students majoring in TCM will start studying TCM courses first, instead of modern medicine, after entering college.

Medical colleges will also increase the share of TCM classics courses in their TCM courses, and courses on

TCM treatments for infectious diseases should be set up, the guideline said.

TCM department­s in colleges should also establish a system that improves tutorship and encourages students to start internship­s earlier. Efforts will be made to encourage senior TCM experts and practition­ers to participat­e in the teaching, tutoring and training of college students majoring in TCM.

To produce high-level talent that excels in both TCM and modern medicine, pilot programs will be carried out in some medical colleges to provide nine-year medical education to students, the guideline said.

In addition to colleges, vocational schools should also reform TCM education and training, it said. Measures will be taken to support TCM vocational schools’ provision of training in TCM healthcare services to both students and people outside schools to meet the increasing demand for such services.

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