Internationally, laryngeal-voice medicine is a separate medical discipline covering diagnosis of laryngeal diseases, surgical intervention, medical medication, laryngeal function examination, laryngeal function evaluation, and speech rehabilitation. In developed countries, every regional level hospital has a laryngeal-voice center where doctors, nurses, and speech therapists provide the above medical services to patients under the leadership of a laryngeal-voice specialist. In terms of disease spectrum, laryngeal voice medicine covers: 1. epithelial benign/malignant lesions of the laryngeal vocal cords: laryngeal papilloma, precancerous lesions such as leukoplakia and atypical hyperplasia, laryngeal carcinoma of the vocal cord type, vascular lesions of the vocal cords, etc.; 2. mesenteric lesions of the vocal cords: vocal cord polyps, nodules, cysts, scarring, vocal cord grooves, etc.; 3. neuropathic lesions of the laryngeal muscles: vocal cord paralysis (spontaneous, medical origin), various neurological dysfunctions occurring disorders, etc. 4, pharyngeal endocrine diseases: pharyngeal acid reflux, acute and chronic pharyngitis, laryngitis, etc.; 5, voice speech therapy and artistic voice; 6, swallowing disorders. Laryngo-voice medicine originated from traditional laryngology and has developed. Her guiding principle is to restore and/or preserve laryngeal function to the maximum extent possible based on complete removal of lesions. The laryngeal functions include: respiratory function, voice (vocal) function, swallowing function, anti-misopharyngeal function, and so on. Among them, voice function is the most common damage of laryngeal disorders and the most urgent claim of most patients. In modern society, the voice has become a tool of labor for a large number of people, and any profession that requires communication and expression depends on voice function. For a large part of the population, the impairment of voice function is the same as the impairment of labor force, or even the loss of labor force and social function. Therefore, the preservation of voice function has become the focus of the discipline’s work. The transition from considering only the preservation of life to the preservation of laryngeal function; the transition from open destructive surgery to endoscopic micro-minimally invasive surgery and micro-laser surgery not only reflects the care for people and respect for life, but also is an inevitable requirement of the economic shift to the tertiary industry. However, for many years, due to the limitations of economic conditions and the lagging influence of disciplines, laryngeal voice medicine in China is still at a relatively backward stage. Most practitioners do not specialize in laryngeal voice specialties, do not have in-depth knowledge of the physiopathology of the larynx, and their practice ideas still remain only at the stage of removing lesions. This results in patients’ functional needs not being helped to be solved, and even medical damage is given again in the process of therapeutic intervention. Fortunately, many practitioners in China have seen this problem. In the past 7 or 8 years, through international exchanges, support from leaders, and based on the older generation of experts first, laryngeal voice medicine in China has gradually taken shape, with a few national hospitals in Beijing, Shanghai, and other areas where a few laryngeal voice centers have begun to form. In Fujian Province, Fujian Provincial Hospital has invested 3 million dollars this year to build the most advanced laryngeal voice medical center in Fujian Province, which is the leading center in China, including: international standard stroboscopic dynamic laryngoscope system, international standard professional grade computerized voice function analysis system and sound insulation room, outpatient electronic laryngoscope examination and treatment system, outpatient electronic laryngoscope laser treatment system, suspension laryngoscope microsurgery system, laryngeal KTP laser surgery system, holmium laryngeal laser surgery system and laryngeal CO2 laser surgery system. The center not only has a medical staff that is in line with international standards, but also maintains clinical and scientific cooperation and exchanges with the Center for Laryngeal Surgery and Voice Rehabilitation at the University of Wisconsin Medical School and Harvard University Massachusetts General Hospital in the United States. We believe that the center can better serve patients with laryngeal voice diseases and do our part to promote the development of laryngeal voice medicine in China and the province.