Common Chinese herbal prescriptions for spleen and lung qi deficiency include Liu Jun Zi Tang and Ginseng Ling Bai Zhu San. Spleen and lung qi deficiency is a type of traditional Chinese medicine, often manifested as loss of appetite, loose stools (loose stools are not shaped), abdominal distension, low qi and laziness (lack of strength, do not want to talk), shortness of breath and weakness, cough and phlegm, etc., and the treatment should be complementary to the spleen and lungs. 1. Six Gentlemen Soup: the composition of the drug is Chen Pi, Pinellia, Poria, Licorice, Ginseng, Atractylodes Macrocephalae, which has the effect of strengthening the spleen, benefiting the lungs, drying dampness and resolving phlegm (removing phlegm in the body with the drug of drying dampness). 2. Ginseng and Atractylodes Macrocephalae: the composition of the drug is lotus seed, Semen Coicis, Semen Coicis, Platycodonopsis, Lentinus edodes, Poria, Ginseng, Atractylodes Macrocephalae, Chinese yam, and Glycyrrhiza glabra, which is effective in strengthening the spleen, benefiting the lungs, and stopping diarrhea by seeping out dampness. There are a large number of Chinese herbal prescriptions for treating spleen and lung qi deficiency, and the above are only two of the commonly used ones. If symptoms of spleen and lung qi deficiency occur, it is recommended to consult a doctor in time and be treated by a Chinese medicine practitioner after diagnosis.