Qian Jin, also known as Hefang, is one of the classic works of traditional Chinese medicine in ancient China. It is known as the earliest clinical encyclopedia in China, with a total of 30 volumes. It is a comprehensive clinical medical work. Written by Sun Simiao in the Tang Dynasty, written in the third year of Yonghui (652). This book is a collection of experience in diagnosis and treatment before the Tang Dynasty, which has a great influence on later physicians.
Sun Simiao attached great importance to folk medical experience, accumulated interviews and completed "A Thousand Daughters' Prescription". After the establishment of the Tang Dynasty, Sun Simiao cooperated with the government to complete the world's first national pharmacopoeia, Tang Xin Materia Medica.
Brief Introduction of Qian Jin Fang
It is a remnant of the ancient manuscript "For Urgent Use". There is a preface to Prescription at the beginning of the volume, followed by: Preliminary Training of Great Doctors, Chapter II of Great Doctors, Chapter III of Treatment Brief Cases, Chapter IV of Consultation, Chapter V of Prescription, Chapter VI of Medication, Chapter VII of Combination and Chapter VIII of Bait, all of which are Money Entering Fang Yao.
At the end of the volume, there is an article written by Matsumoto Sachi Hihiko, a Japanese, explaining that this book is "original, but not made by later generations" and it is also gratifying to draw quaint words. Alas, the first book is only one book. "This book is one of the important editions of collating Qian Jin Fang Yao, which has important literature value.