doctor | Wang Huai-yin |
Wang Huai-yin (circa 925–997 AD) was a native of Suiyang, Songzhou (now south of Shangqiu, Henan Province). Initially a Taoist priest residing at the Jianlong Temple in the capital city of Kaifeng, he was skilled in medicine. At the beginning of the Taiping Xingguo era, he was ordered to return to secular life and was appointed as the Imperial Medicinal Attendant, later rising to the position of Imperial Medical Officer. He served in the capital until his death. After Emperor Taizong of Song ascended the throne, he ordered Wang Huai-yin and three others to compile over a thousand famous prescriptions, which they edited and categorized. Each section was prefaced with relevant discussions from the Zhubing Yuanhou Lun by the Sui Dynasty Imperial Physician Chao Yuan-fang, followed by the prescriptions. This work, completed in the third year of the Chunhua era (992 AD), comprised 100 volumes. Emperor Taizong personally wrote the preface, and the book was titled Taiping Shenghui Fang, containing 1,670 categories and 16,834 prescriptions.
Wang Huai-yin and his colleagues "searched for the subtle, sought the marvelous, deleted the redundant, and explored the essential," compiling the Taiping Shenghui Fang. The book emphasized that doctors must differentiate between yin-yang, deficiency and excess, cold and heat, and exterior and interior when treating diseases, ensuring that prescriptions are tailored to the symptoms and medicines are applied accordingly. It also discussed the relationships between etiology, pathology, symptoms, and medicinal formulas. Wang and his team adopted a classification system based on zang-fu organs and various medical conditions, presenting theories first and then prescriptions. Under each category, they first cited the theories from the Zhubing Yuanhou Lun as a general introduction, followed by a collection of prescriptions. This approach reflected a comprehensive system of pattern identification and treatment, integrating theory, method, prescription, and medicine, and held significant clinical value.
Wang and his colleagues' compilation of the Taiping Shenghui Fang summarized the relevant contents of various medical texts from the Tang and Song periods and the medical experiences of the general population. It served as both a collection of proven prescriptions and a comprehensive medical masterpiece. Rich in content and unified in theoretical perspective, it holds significant value for both literature research and clinical practice in Chinese medicine.