"Jiebai Wan, Jiebai Wan." In the Zhongyou drugstore
in Lanzhou, capital of northwest China’s Gansu Province, two foreign customers
are talking to the shop assistant with hand gestures, trying to buy medicine.
Jiebai Wan is a Tibetan medicine, used to stop diarrhea and it was made
by the famous Tibetan Buddhist temple Labrang Lamasery inthe province’s Gannan
Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture.
Tibetan medicine is a kind of unique medical
system which combines the medical and health experience of Tibetan people with
the quintessence of traditional Chinese medicine and Indian and Arabic medicine,
said Yang Hongquan, head of the hospital attachedto the Gansu Tibetan medicine
research institute.
Yang said Tibetan medicine, as part of the Tibetan
culture, wasstrictly restrained to be developed or studied in the lamaseries for
quite a long time.
Though the medicine was popular in western China,
people could only have access to it in the lamasery.
Yet today, the
medicine is produced with modern equipment. A large number of Tibetan medicine
factories have been established in Gansu, Qinghai and Tibet.
The
small, white pill now appears in drugstores worldwide and has become an
important part of China‘s medical products, said Zhou Shouke, head of the health
bureau in Gannan Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture.
People can buy Tibetan
medicine almost everywhere in China. Many hospitals use Tibetan medical methods
to cure patients, said the official.
At the same time, education and
studies on Tibetan medicine have become popular since the 1980s in many schools
and colleges in the western part of China.
More people learn and
experience this unique medical system. Research institutes on Tibetan medicine
have been built in more than 30 countries in Europe and America.
"The
wide spread of Tibetan medicine is a good reflection of the opening up of
Tibetan culture," the official said.
Hangzhou Jiaoyu Science and Technology Co.LTD.
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