In the early years of the People’s Republic of China, a medical debate with global consequences was settled — at least officially. The new government under Mao Zedong moved to standardize and institutionalize a set of healing practices that had existed in fragmented, competing forms for centuries. The result was what the world now calls traditional Chinese medicine, or TCM — a systematized framework that would spread far beyond China’s borders and reshape conversations about health, healing, and the limits of modern biomedicine.
What the record shows
- Traditional Chinese medicine: The Chinese government in the 1950s sponsored the integration of Chinese and Western medicine, legalized previously banned practices, and promoted a standardized form of healing drawn from centuries of competing traditions, folk beliefs, herbal knowledge, and cosmological theory.
- TCM standardization: What emerged was not a simple revival of ancient practice but a largely 20th-century construction — selected elements of philosophy and practice organized into a coherent system, with precepts standardized and attempts made to align them with modern concepts of anatomy and pathology.
- Mao Zedong’s role: Historians note that Mao spearheaded TCM’s institutionalization primarily for political and economic reasons — traditional healers were numerous, inexpensive, and popular — even as, according to biographical accounts, he did not personally believe in TCM’s effectiveness.
Centuries of healing, not one tradition
Long before the 1949 C.E. formalization, medicine in China was never a single thing. Scholars describe 2,000 years of “medical system in turmoil” — a landscape of competing schools, regional practices, Taoist and Confucian philosophy, herbal traditions, and literate theory. Therapeutic activity traces back to the Shang dynasty (14th–11th centuries B.C.E.), where oracle bone inscriptions record illnesses affecting royal courts.
The foundational text most associated with classical Chinese medicine, the Yellow Emperor’s Inner Canon, was compiled during the Han dynasty around the first century B.C.E. It brought cosmological doctrines of yin–yang and the five phases to systematic expression, and rejected earlier reliance on spirits and magic in favor of reasoning about the body’s internal dynamics.
By the 16th century C.E., the Compendium of Materia Medica documented nearly 1,900 drugs — up from a few dozen recorded a millennium earlier. By the late 20th century, published records of Chinese materia medica had reached 12,800 substances. That growth reflects not a static tradition but a living, contested, evolving body of knowledge that practitioners across many generations argued over and revised.
Why 1949 C.E. matters globally
The political decision to institutionalize TCM had consequences no one fully anticipated. After U.S.–China relations reopened in 1972 C.E., Western audiences encountered acupuncture, herbal remedies, and concepts like qi and meridians for the first time at scale. Curiosity grew rapidly. Practitioners set up clinics across Europe, North America, and Australia. Academic institutions began studying TCM practices, and the U.S. National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health eventually funded research into acupuncture and herbal compounds.
Some of that research has been productive. Artemisinin, derived from the herb Artemisia annua used in Chinese medicine for centuries, became the basis for modern malaria treatments — a discovery that earned Chinese scientist Tu Youyou the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. The formalization of TCM helped create the institutional conditions that made such research possible.
Medical anthropologists have observed that traditional Chinese, Greco-Arabic, and Indian medicine all shared something structurally similar: they organized the body, nature, and society within a single coherent system of correspondences — heat and cold, wet and dry, the seasons, the compass, the human life cycle. These frameworks, whatever their limitations, provided ways of observing, naming, and thinking about illness that served populations for millennia.
Lasting impact
The 1949 C.E. institutionalization of traditional Chinese medicine set off a chain of consequences that continue today. TCM is now widely practiced across East and Southeast Asia, and tens of millions of people in the West use acupuncture, herbal supplements, or other TCM-derived treatments. The World Health Organization has formally recognized traditional medicine systems in its global health frameworks, including the WHO Traditional Medicine Strategy 2019–2025.
The formalization also created a global research conversation about where evidence-based medicine and traditional knowledge systems can usefully meet — and where they cannot. That conversation, uncomfortable as it sometimes is, has produced genuine discoveries and exposed genuine limitations in equal measure.
Blindspots and limits
The scientific record on TCM is contested and, in significant respects, unflattering. The majority of TCM treatments lack robust clinical evidence of effectiveness, and some ingredients — including certain animal and plant compounds — are known to be toxic or carcinogenic. Historians note that the standardized system Mao promoted was partly a political invention, and that TCM’s global spread has been entangled with illegal wildlife trafficking: demand for ingredients like rhino horn and pangolin scales has accelerated the decline of endangered species, a crisis conservation organizations are actively working to address. The story of TCM’s institutionalization is real and significant — and it is also more complicated than any simple narrative of ancient wisdom preserved or modern science validated.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Traditional Chinese medicine
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Alzheimer’s risk cut in half by drug in landmark prevention trial
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- The Good News for Humankind archive on global health
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