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Traditional Chinese medicine catching on in Switzerland

XINHUA

發布於 2023年12月29日20:48 • Wang Qibing

The 2023 World Traditional Chinese Medicine Day Free Consultation event is held in Budapest, Hungary, Oct. 28, 2023. (Xinhua/Chen Hao)

Around 20 years ago, TCM gained popularity in Swiss health resorts like Bad Ragaz and Baden, spreading gradually across Switzerland. Now, doctors often refer patients from hospitals and Western medicine clinics to TCM for complementary treatments.

GENEVA, Dec. 29 (Xinhua) -- "After taking acupuncture and massage therapies, I feel very comfortable and relaxed," Mogel said, with thumbs up after receiving treatment in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) at a clinic in Schaffhausen.

The TCM has become increasingly popular with people in Switzerland. In Schaffhausen, an old town in the country's northernmost canton with the same name, there are seven TCM clinics. Mogel got his treatment from one of them called "TCM-City."

Mogel is a frequent visitor to the TCM-City clinic due to his sports injuries. "I believe in natural therapies," he said. According to TCM practitioner Jia Kejie who runs the clinic, most of her patients are from Schaffhausen and the neighboring cantons of Zurich and Thurgau.

Hungarian athlete Anna Poltz (L) and her teammate learn about traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) health care tool at the FISU Games Village in Chengdu, southwest China's Sichuan Province, Aug. 2, 2023. (Xinhua/Tang Wenhao)

Twenty-odd years ago, TCM began to be popularized in the Swiss health resorts of Bad Ragaz and Baden, and then gradually spread throughout Switzerland. Nowadays many patients are referred by doctors in hospitals and other Western medicine clinics to TCM clinics for complementary treatments.

"While I was receiving acupuncture therapy, I fell asleep even though I was nervous at the beginning," said Miroslava, who has been suffering from physical and mental disorders for a long time.

Miroslava, who works in early childhood education, said that she had tried treatment elsewhere, but it did not work. "Finally, I accepted my friend's recommendation and decided to try this clinic."

In the clinic, Jia, together with her colleague Zhang Zhitai, communicate with patients in fluent German.

At 10 a.m. local time, the first patient finished his treatment, leaving the clinic. The next patient was on the way. In this cold and damp weather, many patients came here for the treatment of rheumatic diseases. Jia was scheduled to treat 14 patients that day.

Dr. Xu Lifei, a member of the 16th China medical team for Malta, conducts acupuncture for a patient at the Mediterranean Regional Center for Traditional Chinese Medicine (MRCTCM) in Paola, Malta, April 27, 2021. (Photo by Chen Wenxian/Xinhua)

"TCM practitioners in Switzerland regularly conduct business online or offline," said Jia who graduated from a traditional Chinese medicine university in China and has practiced TCM in Switzerland for more than 20 years.

Jia, also vice president of a local association involving TCM and Western medicine, estimates that her clinic in Schaffhausen has treated some 60,000 patients since its opening in 2002. About a total of 5,000 people came to the clinic and received TCM treatment.

"TCM is the natural medicine with a complete medical theoretical system," she said, adding that its unique properties are also the source of its vigorous development in Switzerland.

Jia's clinic establishes a medical file for each patient and keeps detailed records of each treatment. "In accordance with Swiss law, we keep all patient cases for at least ten years," she said.

Jia walked out of her house early in the morning that day, and at 6 p.m., the last patient of the day left the clinic. On her way home, Jia stopped over at a Christmas market for a glass of mulled wine. She was getting ready to treat her dozen-odd patients the next day. ■

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