As a doctor who originally studied Western medicine and has worked in a Chinese hospital over the years, I have some rough experiences of my own, which I feel like I can’t spit out, so I’ll say it today. Originally, I was repulsed by Chinese medicine, and I always felt that it was easy and effective to treat this disease with Western medicine, so why do I have to take Chinese medicine, which is troublesome and tastes bitter, but also increases the cost. But gradually, through the study and practice of TCM over the years, I have changed my opinion and now I appreciate the efficacy of TCM more and more. For example, polycystic ovary syndrome, which is common among menstrual disorders, can be improved for a short time with Western hormone sequential therapy or birth control pills, but what about after stopping them? Menstruation remains the same. If we consider combining traditional Chinese medicine with Western medicine in our treatment, we may be able to achieve a long-lasting effect, which will achieve the effect of treating both the symptoms and the root cause. There are many other chronic diseases in the world such as diabetes and hypertension that Chinese medicine, like Western medicine, cannot cure, so why should we keep Chinese medicine? This is a question that I have been thinking about for a long time, but now I have figured it out a little bit. It is true that we can lower blood sugar and blood pressure through Western medicine, but can our patients fundamentally avoid brain and heart attacks because of the drop in blood sugar and blood pressure? The answer is no. It is true that TCM treatment alone can hardly lower blood glucose and blood pressure, but when combined with TCM on the basis of Western medicine treatment, the overall condition of the patient does improve significantly, and these changes are not reflected in laboratory indicators such as blood glucose and blood pressure, but in all aspects of the patient as a human being surviving in society. I think if there is a clinical study to look at the difference in the incidence and mortality rates of cerebral and cardiac infarction in patients with diabetes treated with Western medicine alone and Western medicine intermittently combined with Chinese medicine after 10 or even 20 years, then the efficacy of Chinese medicine can be made known to the world!