So village elentary schools have a severe shortage of textbooks, teaching materials, and teachers, which is obviously detrintal to the developnt of elentary education. However, by rging several village schools into the town, this problem can be greatly resolved.
This is also closely related to the layout of East African villages, which are generally clustered around a town, with several closely adjacent villages forming a star-like pattern. Conversely, if the villages are too far away, promoting the concentration of educational resources becos more harmful than beneficial, as no one would feel at ease with their children walking several miles to attend school.
Of course, if due to special reasons it is impossible to concentrate, the qualification to run schools can be retained. This mainly depends on the specific local circumstances, to be handled at a local level and reported accordingly.
Ernst continued: "Healthcare is a weak point in East Africa, or rather modern dicine is. On this point, we in East Africa need to vigorously promote traditional Chinese dicine clinics in rural areas and localize the Chinese dicine industry in East Africa."
The advantage of traditional Chinese dicine is precisely this: many herbal dicines can be grown in the fields, thus gaining a price advantage.
While modern pharmaceuticals are more effective, East Africa is a latecor in the modern dical field, and these drugs entail great uncertainty and are not easy to analyze.
Modern pharmaceutical patents are monopolized by developed pharmaceutical and chemical companies in Europe and Arica. East Africa cannot, like pirating a "machine," dismantle these modern chemical drugs for analysis and research, as even minor deviations can lead to disasters.
Therefore, modern dicine can only be slowly explored, with no shortcuts to speak of. The only shortcut is to vigorously train relevant personnel to achieve self-research capabilities as soon as possible.
Of course, saying so is sowhat absolute, as East Africa naturally has its channels to hasten the unrestrained growth of East Africa’s "modern dicine."
This is "human experints," after all, East Africa has twenty million Black people, who are rare "materials." However, this belongs to the dark side of East African society, so it is not elaborated on much.
And the abundance of clinical trial opportunities ans that East Africa’s developnt speed in the dical field is not slow. It’s like the previous generation’s Indian dical industry; especially its pharmaceutical field was outstanding because India had a lot of "materials," making it a natural large-scale drug testing ground.
Of course, the speed of developnt in East African modern dicine, no matter how fast, cannot compare with the imdiacy of East African traditional Chinese dicine. And now Chinese dicine holds advantages in terms of cost and talent cultivation, which is also why East Africa is vigorously promoting the popularization of Chinese dicine.
Under the guidance of the East African Traditional Chinese dicine Association, the cultivation of Chinese dicine talents in East Africa is now institutionalized, abandoning the apprenticeship system. Concurrently, it has corrected and rectified many prescriptions’ deficiencies and errors through "native" participation, and given Africa’s climate and geographical differences from the Far East, many new plant-based dicines have been added to Chinese dicine in East Africa.
In fact, Chinese dicine in East Africa has completely deviated now. Many Chinese dicine hospitals and schools even have equipped microscopes and petri dishes and have embarked on a completely different path from the traditional Chinese dicine of the current Far East Empire.
Due to "material" reasons, East African Chinese dicine has rapidly advanced in human anatomy, with more detailed human studies overthrowing many traditional cognitions and superstitions.
In the field of drug research and developnt, East African Chinese dicine has made rapid progress. Of course, this is related to the now weak "patent" awareness of various countries in the Far East. Thus, East Africa, through various ans such as "stealing, buying, and borrowing," vigorously cracks traditional prescriptions and reagents, then patents them.
This is not targeted only at the Far East Empire but also includes countries like Japan, Korea, and Vietnam, all of which have suffered. Beyond the East Asian cultural sphere, India and the Arab regions are also targets for East Africa.
These "backward" regions in the eyes of Europe and Arica have dical systems that the West naturally looks down on or even discriminates against. East Africa is evidently not in this category, welcoming all cors.
In such an environnt, East African Chinese dicine integrates the strengths of various schools, supported by modern dical technology and thods. It’s difficult not to develop robustly. The boundary between East African Chinese dicine and modern dicine is now not very distinct either.
After all, the capabilities of modern dicine are also mine; those I do not possess, I have alternatives for. Under such circumstances, except for so unique drug usage habits and slightly different treatnt thods, it’s nearly impossible to tell them apart.
The achievents of East African Chinese dicine are naturally borrowed by East African modern dicine. Therefore, the two systems now show a trend of integration. If not deliberately stopped, East Africa may form a modern Chinese dicine system with East African characteristics in the future.
So, East Africa today is both a "dical weak nation" and a "dical strong nation." It depends on how one compares it. Compared to Europe and Arica’s dicine, East Africa’s dicine has incorporated dical achievents from East Asia and other regions, while compared to traditional Chinese dicine, East Africa also boasts attributes of European and Arican dicine.
In this way, East African dicine naturally heads down an extrely "unique" path, although in Ernst’s view, this is a good thing.
Because, in reality, the regional dical systems bear mutual prejudices—for example, European religious and fundantalist dicine will definitely internally conflict and clash with modern dicine. The traditional dicine of the Far East does not recognize European and Arican dicine, which see all other dical systems as "heretical" and "sorcery."
East Africa, however, has broken such "arrogance and prejudice," enabling various schools to communicate and compete with each other, creating a situation akin to a "contend of a hundred schools of thought" in the dical world.
With a hundred flowers blooming, Ernst believes it can naturally speed up the developnt of East African dicine, which he is delighted to see. After all, it ultimately cos down to whose treatnt is most effective, and the final results are all ultimately East Africa’s.
Of course, while East Africa is strong in dicine in so ways, it is also very weak in others. For example, in the cutting-edge field of Western modern dicine, East Africa is undoubtedly lagging, especially in so chemical high-performance drugs.
It’s the sa with traditional Chinese dicine, where many traditional Chinese dicine practices "guard their treasures behind closed doors," and the practitioners who immigrate to East Africa aren’t among the "top-notch" in the Far East.
However, precisely because of this, East African traditional Chinese dicine practitioners are able to break free of conservative ideas and develop vigorously under Ernst’s tacit approval. If they lack ambition, even Ernst wouldn’t be able to support them.
Currently, in the East African dical system, Chinese dicine clearly holds an advantage, but over ti, it has also changed beyond recognition.
If future East African Chinese dicine groups visit the Far East, they might be scolded as "heretical," compounded by the fact that East Africa indeed "took and borrowed" quite a lot, which is sowhat ungracious.
Of course, East African Chinese dicine is not mature yet, and lacks the opportunity to present itself to the International Community. After all, neither Eastern nor Western societies would recognize "East African dicine" that appears confused and disjointed.
Moreover, cultivating dical talents in East Africa requires a lot of ti. To produce a cohort of experienced "masters" certainly takes a decade or so. Currently, there are too few young professionals able to take on big responsibilities.
As for the present "dical titans" of East Africa, their level is actually comparable to so so-called "masters" in the modern history of the Far East Empire. Their skill level may not be very high, but as pioneers and trailblazers, many could make a na in East African dical history, as the earlier they begin, the greater the chance to beco foundational figures in various disciplines of East African dicine.
They rely select the essence and discard the dross from Eastern, Western, and global dicine, not entirely engaging in "self-innovation."
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