• maculata@aussie.zone
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    6 months ago

    Usually they use some random herbs and animal body parts and call it “traditional medicine”.

          • maculata@aussie.zone
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            5 months ago

            I’ll call out any bullshit like that when I see it.

            I detest the Chinese government with a fury, and hate the way the wider culture has been left gutted by the revolution, but have only sympathy for real people of China and the others the CCP forces it’s foul hand onto.

            CTM I have no time for however and hate the way it has been used to abuse countless species of animals for nonsensical reasons.

              • maculata@aussie.zone
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                5 months ago

                Sorry that looks like bollocks. If they want to break down individual chemicals found in some plants used in CTM, into clinical trials then that’s fine.

                All I saw was jibber-jabber.

                Lack of plain speaking is a good sign that what someone is selling is hokum.

                • dgkf@lemmy.ml
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                  5 months ago

                  Which part sounds off to you? This looks like a very reasonable paper hoping to distill traditional medicine into viable research paths, and does it using a pretty interesting model of compounds and effects.

                  If all you see is jibber jabber, maybe you should just default to trusting the experts on this one? Like, it’s not in an obscure journal - it’s a highly regarded peer reviewed journal. The authors aren’t random, they’re researchers at some of the best universities in the world (Nanjing University ranks #7 on the Nature Index).

                  The abstract is about as plain-speaking as it gets in the world of cutting edge research. You can probably look up the handful of domain-specific terminology and have a good grasp at what the research is about.