Traditional Chinese medicine, as our traditional medicine, has a unique theoretical system that has made a great contribution to the reproduction of the Chinese nation and is increasingly recognized and respected by the international community. Also due to this unique theory, there is a considerable distance from modern culture, which is exactly the reason why it is not accepted by many people. Therefore, we inevitably encounter some ridiculous things happening in our regular work. Some patients who have been seen by some individual doctors come to the hospital and ask for a check-up, saying that they should test their kidney function to see if they have kidney deficiency, and some of the responsibility for this lies with the individual doctors, who do not explain clearly and appropriately from a modern medical point of view, and should make it clear that the kidney spoken of in Chinese medicine is not exactly equivalent to the modern anatomical kidney, and of course some western doctors in large hospitals are likely to make this type of mistake, to some extent misrepresentation of Chinese medicine. There is also a phenomenon that should be blamed on the Chinese medicine practitioner who has the habit of jianghu, there are such “Chinese medicine practitioners” in real life in order to show off their “excellent medical skills” often guess the patient’s situation, without the patient speaking, and sometimes the patient tells their own situation, the “doctor” immediately stopped. The “doctor” immediately stopped, to show that relying on the pulse can be fully grasped. As for the efficacy I guess it is not what they consider. As a result, some patients come to the hospital and do not describe their condition. When the doctor asks, the patient’s friend will say: small hospital doctors can still rely on the pulse to diagnose the disease, but the doctor in the big hospital will not. This is not only wrong for the patient, but also harmful for the TCM doctor. In Chinese medicine, there is a saying that “the evidence is taken from the pulse”, which is not the same as not asking about the condition. This is a serious departure from the four diagnoses of looking, smelling, asking, and cutting, and is a distortion of Chinese medicine. In addition, some individual clinics prescribe both traditional Chinese medicine and Western medicine. The simple combination of Chinese and Western medicine often brings confusion to the patients as well. For example, some patients will say that they have seen a doctor about a sore throat, and the doctor said that “fire” is not an inflammatory condition. Here I sincerely hope that once some doctors speak with both Chinese and Western medicine, they should pay attention to the correspondence, so as not to make the patients confused. The result will be to create trouble for the doctor himself if this continues for a long time.