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How traditional Chinese medicine is helping to fight Covid-19

  • City known as thriving centre for investment, development, and research of historic practice of diagnosis and treatment of diseases
  • Free outpatient service has been available in city since April as part of rehabilitation for discharged patients as they recover from Covid-19

Paid Post:Brand Hong Kong
Reading Time:5 minutes
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A mixologist prepares a mocktail of purple sweet potato and oats rice water in the Sheung Wan store of CheckCheckCin, which is promoting a modern approach to traditional Chinese medicine among Hong Kong’s younger consumers. Photo: Felix Wong

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China’s civilisation, which spans more than 5,000 years, features a rich medical history. In the late 1500s the Chinese medical scholar Li Shizhen compiled the Compendium of Materia Medica, an extensive herbal medicine volume, which outlined how each item could be used to treat various diseases.

Today the medical branch, collectively known as traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), is becoming increasingly relevant as the world fights the deadly spread of the coronavirus disease, Covid-19, which has infected some 31 million people worldwide.

In mainland China, doctors have been treating most patients with both Western and TCM drugs, which have shown promising results. In February, Gao Xiaojun, a spokesman for the Beijing Municipal Health Commission, said 92 per cent of patients in Beijing who have received the combined treatment have shown an improvement.

Hong Kong has also been using TCM to help Covid-19 patients. Since April, the city’s Hospital Authority has launched a special TCM outpatient programme for discharged patients. A maximum of 10 TCM general consultations will be provided to each patient at seven participating clinics within six months of their discharge from hospital.

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The potential of TCM – and its contribution to medical knowledge – is also gaining international recognition. Last year, the World Health Organization (WHO) added TCM therapies to its global diagnostic compendium for the first time.

The World Health Organization added traditional Chinese medicine to its diagnostic compendium last year. Photo: Shutterstock
The World Health Organization added traditional Chinese medicine to its diagnostic compendium last year. Photo: Shutterstock
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