During the Tang Dynasty, the Han and Tibetan nationalities had close ties and frequent medical exchanges. On the basis of absorbing the experience of Han nationality and India, the Tibetan people have formed a Tibetan medical system with Tibetan characteristics. Around the 8th century A.D., Four Medical Codes (Tibetan name "Ju Xi") compiled by the famous Tibetan medical scientist Yu Duoyuan Dan Kampot was a classic work of Tibetan medicine, which laid the foundation for Tibetan medicine. Four medical codes have great influence at home and abroad. After being introduced into Mongolia, Mongolian people developed Mongolian medicine with their own experience. After the Tang Dynasty, Tibetan medicine continued to develop. /kloc-in the 7th century, a color wall chart covering all the contents of Tibetan medicine appeared, which was a great pioneering work in the medical history of China. Tibetan people have accumulated rich medical experience in long-term life practice, such as using ghee to stop bleeding and using green pear wine to treat trauma. Tibetans have the custom of celestial burial, often dissecting corpses, and have a deeper understanding of human physiology and anatomy than Han people. Most of the raw materials of Tibetan medicine come from the plateau area above 3000 meters above sea level, which has the characteristics of strong medicinal properties, purity and no pollution. It is a pure natural medicine, and there are many unique ways to make Tibetan medicine. After years of careful research, Tibetan medicine researchers have developed traditional Tibetan medicine by high-tech means and made it into modern dosage forms, and found a pharmaceutical method combining traditional processing with modern mechanical processing.
Tibetan medicine is not only medicine, but also a kind of culture, a medical system developed under the background of Tibetan culture, a regional culture with a unique position in world traditional medicine, and a traditional, experienced and integrated life science culture and survival culture. Our government has always attached importance to the protection and promotion of Tibetan culture, including Tibetan medicine, and formulated the policy of "excavating, sorting out, summarizing and improving" to actively develop Tibetan medicine.