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China to help combat AIDS virus with traditional Chinese medicine

The TCM push aligns with a recent effort by the government to make the practice a priority for both development and publicity.

China to help combat AIDS virus with traditional Chinese medicine Image courtesy: Australian Business Forum

New Delhi: Ancient medicinal practices have been believed to have powerful properties. The onset of the modern era witnessed traditional medicine take a backseat, but China has plans to change that.

China's ancient practice of administering traditional medicine is one of those. In order to increase the use of the ancient practice in the country's medical system, China plans to double the number of AIDS patients it treats with traditional Chinese medicine (TCM).

The promotion of TCM is part of a five-year plan from the State Council, China's cabinet, to tackle HIV/AIDS.

"The number of people living with AIDS who are treated with traditional Chinese medicine should be twice what it was in 2015," the State Council said on its website yesterday.

The plan outlined collaboration between traditional Chinese medicine departments and national health and family planning commissions "to find a therapeutic regimen which combines traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) and Western medicines".

The TCM push aligns with a recent effort by the government to make the practice a priority for both development and publicity.

TCM, dating back thousands of years, treats ailments using herbal mixtures and physical therapies such as acupuncture and cupping.

The science behind such remedies has long been questioned. Last month medical researchers disputed a study claiming that acupuncture could cure babies of colic.

In late December the Chinese legislature passed its first TCM law, which will allow practitioners to be licensed and make it easier for them to open clinics.

There are about 450,000 TCM practitioners across the country, according to the State Council Information Office.

The government sees the practice as a cost-saving alternative to modern healthcare.

The new initiative to tackle HIV/AIDS will aim to reduce "AIDS-related homosexual behavior" by at least 10 per cent and mother-to-children transmission rates to less than four per cent.

In a 2015 report China told the UN that it had 501,000 cases of HIV/AIDS as of the end of 2014.

(With PTI inputs)

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