TCM gives African students a healthy ambition
By Melanie Peters (China Daily) Updated:2017-08-07
Students do their practicals at Jiangsu Provincial Hospital of Integrated Chinese and Western Medicine in Nanjing, which has close to 1,000 beds and treats 700,000 outpatients a year.
According to the World Education News and Reviews, more than 700,000 students presently study TCM in China, of those 5,510 are foreigners.
Since 2012, following the first China-Africa International Cooperation and Development Forum on Traditional Chinese Medicine and Pharmacy in Cape Town, South Africa, there has been greater collaboration between Chinese and African practitioners.
More students from Africa are also coming to China to learn traditional Chinese medicine as an alternative to Western medicine.
According to the organizers of the forum, there are more than 1,000 students from Africa who have studied traditional Chinese medicine in China and some of them have been conferred master's degrees.
China's global integration has led to its universities opening their doors to an increasing number of international students.
According to some estimates, students from Africa account for more than 1 in 10 students studying abroad. Previously their universities of choice were in the United Kingdom, France and the United States.
However, in recent years that has changed as Sino-African ties have strengthened.
According to China's Ministry of Education, the growth rate of international students has seen a striking 35 percent annual increase on average. Between 2005 and 2015, the department reported that the number of African students in China rose from 2,757 to about 50,000.
Statistics show China's pharmaceutical exports to South Africa, Morocco, Benin and Nigeria are rising.
South Africa already has a traditional Chinese medicine market that is comparatively well-developed.
In 2000, the South African government went through the legislative process to recognize supplementary medicine, including acupuncture. In August 2002, the government required that all herbal products be registered before entering the South African market.
At the forum Ibrahim Mahmoud, president of the South African Traditional Chinese Medicine and Acupuncture Association, said that traditional Chinese medicine had a promising future in the country. He believed that through joint efforts with the Chinese TCM practitioners, more Africans would understand, recognize and accept Chinese medicine.
The author is an online editor of South African newspaper Weekend Argus.