Old Tibet had no Tibetan studies in the modern sense. But
today, great progress has been made in Tibetan studies in
Tibet, and Tibetology has been universally acknowledged
as a newly developed discipline worldwide, being highly
valued in international academic circles. It covers most
of the basic subjects in the social and natural sciences,
including political science, economics, history, literature
and art, religion, philosophy, spoken and written language,
geography, education, archeology, folk customs, Tibetan
medicine and pharmacology, astronomy, the calendar, ecological
protection, sustainable economic development, and agriculture
and animal husbandry, breaking the narrow bounds of the
"Five Major and Five Minor Treatises of Buddhist Doctrine"
of traditional Tibetan culture. Thus Tibetology has become
a grand system of comprehensive studies of Tibetan society.
According to statistics, there are over 50 institutions
of Tibetan studies and more than 1,000 experts and scholars
in this field in China at present.
Tibetan studies in Tibet started after the peaceful liberation
of the region in 1951. A number of special organizations
on Tibetan studies have been established in Tibet since
the 1970s, represented by the Tibet Academy of Social Sciences.
In the past few years, the Academy has made a breakthrough
in Tibetan studies by completing a sequence of important
monographs, including A General History of Tibet (Tibetan
and Chinese editions), A Political History of Tibet by Xagaba
(Annotated), A Communications History of Ancient and Modern
Tibet (Chinese edition), The Inference Theory in Tibetan
Philosophy (Tibetan edition), A Dictionary of Tibetan Philosophy
(Tibetan edition), and Index of the Catalogues of Tibetan
Studies Documents. Tibetan Studies has become one of the
100 leading Chinese periodicals on the social sciences.
Especially in recent years, unprecedented development has
been made in social sciences research in Tibet, a great
number of experts and scholars with outstanding accomplishments
have emerged, and many scientific research achievements
have filled important academic gaps in various fields of
Tibetan studies, making important contributions to collating,
exploring and saving the precious Tibetan historical and
cultural heritage, promoting and carrying forward the fine
aspects of traditional Tibetan culture, and enriching the
treasure-house of traditional Chinese culture.
Great achievements have also been made in the collection
and collation of Chinese documents and historical materials
relating to Tibetan studies. A total of over 200 works in
more than five million copies have been compiled and published,
producing a great impact both at home and abroad, and providing
rich evidence and reliable historical materials for research
in Tibetology, the history of Han-Tibetan relations, and
the history of the relations between the central and Tibetan
local authorities. Extensive academic exchanges and cooperation
have been carried out between Tibetologists in China and
foreign countries, with China receiving more than 200 foreign
experts and scholars, and often sending experts and scholars
to other countries to give lectures and carry out cooperative
research.
Tibetan medicine and pharmacology, with distinctive Tibetan
characteristics, occupies an important position in traditional
Tibetan culture, and forms a unique part of the treasure-house
of Chinese medicine and pharmacology. However, there were
only two medical organs in Tibet before 1959-the "Mantsikhang"
(Institute of Tibetan Medicine and Astrology) and the "Chakpori
Zhopanling" ( Medicine King Hill Institute for Saving
All Living Beings) in Lhasa, the conditions at which were
very simple and crude. They had a combined floor space of
only 500 square meters for the outpatient clinics and a
total staff of fewer than 50. They handled 30-50 outpatients
a day, and mainly served the nobles, feudal lords and upper-strata
lamas.
The state has allocated over 800 million yuan to promote
the development of Tibetan medicine and pharmacology since
Tibet carried out the Democratic Reform over 40 years ago,
giving a great boost to this sector. At present, there are
a total of 14 Tibetan medical institutions in Tibet, and
over 60 county-level hospitals have established Tibetan
medicine sections. In 1959, the working personnel involved
in Tibetan medicine in Tibet numbered only 434, while in
1999 the number had increased to 1,071, including 61 chief
physicians and associate chief physicians, 166 attending
physicians and 844 resident physicians and doctors. The
"Mantsikhang" and "Chakpori Zhopanling"
have been amalgamated to become the Tibet Autonomous Regional
Hospital of Tibetan Medicine, with a floor space of over
100,000 square meters and a staff of 438, of whom 290 are
health technicians. The hospital has 250 beds and provides
free medical care for the broad masses of the Tibetan people,
receiving 230,000 outpatients annually. The hospital has
set up outpatient and inpatient departments, a pharmaceuticals
factory, and research institutes of Tibetan medicine, astronomy
and the calendar. It has a department of medicine, surgical
department, department of gynecology and obstetrics, tumor
department, gastrointestinal department and department of
pediatrics to cater to outpatients. In addition, it has
set up more than 20 special outpatient departments, such
as the department for disease prevention and health protection,
oral hygiene department, ophthalmological department and
department of external Tibetan therapeutic medicine, and
some modern medical and technical departments such as the
departments of radiation, ultrasonic wave examination, electrocardioscopy
and gastroscopy.
The hospital has adopted the method of combining Western
and Tibetan medicine to treat diseases, thereby enriching
and developing Tibetan medical therapies and theories.
Due attention has been paid to scientific research and
education concerning Tibetan medicine. Tibetan medical institutions
at all levels are actively carrying out scientific research
on Tibetan medicine, and have collected and collated nearly
100 related documents and monographs. New achievements have
been made in studies relating to the history of Tibetan
medicine, medical documents, pharmacological theories, medical
ethics, the inheritance of the teachings of the masters,
and Tibetan materia medica. Thirty-two monographs have been
published, including the Four Medical Classics (Tibetan-Chinese
bilingual edition), Blue Glaze, A Complete Collection of
Wall Charts of the Four Medical Classics, Diagnostics of
Tibetan Medicine, Newly Compiled Tibetan Medicaments and
Biographies of Famous Tibetan Doctors. The College of Tibetan
Medicine has trained 615 qualified personnel of various
levels and categories since it was established 10 years
ago. The production of Tibetan medicine has been put on
a standardized, normalized and scientific administration
track. The Tibetan Pharmaceuticals Factory of the Tibet
Autonomous Region, one of a dozen similar factories in Tibet,
has two production lines, turning out over 110 varieties
of products and boasting an annual output value of 46.1
million yuan.
Tibetan medicine is now taking its place in the world,
arousing the attention of international medical circles.
Many foreign experts and scholars come to Tibet every year
to study Tibetan medicine. Tibetan medicine and pharmacology
has also been introduced to the United States, Britain and
Germany, and some countries have sent students to Tibet
to study Tibetan medicine.
With the development and progress of the times, the old
science of Tibetan medicine and pharmacology is now full
of vigor and vitality, playing an important role in improving
the health conditions of the Tibetan people and bringing
benefits to mankind as a whole.