Why Chinese pour TCM medicine dregs on roads, hope others will walk, drive over it
Analysis Summary
- Propaganda Score
- 0% (confidence: 80%)
- Summary
- The article describes a folk legend about Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) practitioners pouring leftover herbs onto roads to prevent illness, attributing the practice to a historical figure, Sun Simiao, from the Tang dynasty. It frames the behavior as a cultural tradition rather than a medical practice.
Fact-Check Results
“Chinese pour leftover TCM medicine onto roads, hoping others will walk, drive over it”
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INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE
— No evidence in archive to confirm or refute claims about TCM leftovers being poured on roads
“While walking along China’s roads, it is not uncommon to see leftover herbs scattered on the surface”
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INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE
— No evidence in archive to verify prevalence of leftover herbs on Chinese roads
“This is not some random dumping problem, it is in fact Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) leftovers deliberately poured out by the people who cooked them”
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INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE
— No evidence in archive to confirm deliberate disposal practices of TCM leftovers
“Superstition has it that by pouring the TCM leftovers on public roads, other people can walk and drive over them, thereby helping keep illness at bay”
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INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE
— No evidence in archive to verify beliefs about TCM leftovers and illness prevention
“There is a folk legend that the habit originated in the Tang dynasty (618–907)”
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UNVERIFIABLE
— No evidence in archive to confirm or deny historical origins of the practice
“Sun Simiao, who was hailed as China’s King of Medicine, lived away from the court and was keen on treating ordinary people”
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INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE
— No evidence in archive to verify Sun Simiao's title or historical accounts
“He was said to have passed by a village one time and saw an elderly man pouring leftover TCM ingredients he had cooked outside his door”
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INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE
— No evidence in archive to verify Sun Simiao's alleged observation of TCM leftovers
“The man told Sun that he had consumed more than 10 doses of medicine, but his condition had not improved”
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INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE
— No evidence in archive to verify the man's statement about medication consumption