Zhu Wencong immediately became interested, as white people learning Traditional Chinese Medicine was a phenomenon that only existed in later generations; although Traditional Chinese Medicine was deliberately smeared and denigrated by some people domestically, it was very popular around the world.
The most successful example was not the East but Japan, where they inherited Traditional Chinese Medicine and even enhanced and magnified its glory.
In Japan, Traditional Chinese Medicine was known as "kanpō medicine," Traditional Chinese Medicine drugs were called "kanpō drugs," simply referred to as "kanpō." Japan's 210 ancient formulas originated from the 269 formulas in the monumental works of Medical Sage Zhang Zhongjing, "Treatise on Febrile Diseases" and "Essential Prescriptions from the Golden Casket."
In later generations, many people liked to travel to Japan specifically to purchase Traditional Chinese Medicine drugs; it seemed laughable but was, in fact, quite tragic.