The Shang Han Lun — A 2,000-Year-Old Formula Manual Still Used in Perth Clinics Today

Written in the 2nd century CE by Zhang Zhongjing, the Shang Han Lun contains 113 formulas that are still prescribed unchanged in clinics around the world today. It is one of the oldest continuously used medical texts in human history.

The Shang Han Lun — 2,000 Years of Clinical Precision

2nd century CE
When the Shang Han Lun was written
113 formulas
In the original text
Unchanged
Used exactly as originally recorded

The Shang Han Lun — Architecture, Six Channels, and Clinical Brilliance

The Shang Han Lun (Treatise on Cold Damage and Miscellaneous Diseases) was written by Zhang Zhongjing during the Han Dynasty following a devastating epidemic. He systematised both a diagnostic framework (six-channel theory) and a formula tradition applicable to any disease, not just epidemic illness.

The text’s genius lies in formula-pattern matching. Each formula has specific signs and symptoms, regardless of disease name. Gui Zhi Tang is prescribed whenever the Taiyang surface defense pattern is present with soft pulse and sweating mixed with chills. This approach means practitioners can identify the correct formula quickly and precisely — and formulas work consistently across different patients with the same pattern.

At Nature’s Chinese Medicine, Dr Yang’s entire clinical practice is built on the Shang Han Lun framework. Every herbal prescription traces back to this text. The formulas have not been modified because 2,000 years of clinical use has already refined them to a precision that modern research continues to confirm.

Key Concepts in the Shang Han Lun

Zhang Zhongjing and the Han Dynasty Epidemic
Zhang Zhongjing witnessed a plague that devastated his region and killed most of his own family. He systematised all known treatments for acute disease, creating a text that would be refined for 2,000 years.
Six-Channel Organisation
The Shang Han Lun organises disease into six channels: Taiyang, Shaoyang, Yangming, Taiyin, Shaoyin, and Jueyin. Each chapter describes patterns and formulas specific to that channel.
Formula-Pattern Matching
Rather than treating disease names, practitioners identify which formula pattern the patient matches. The same symptom name will receive different formulas based on the underlying pattern.
The Jin Kui Yao Lue — Companion Text
Zhang Zhongjing also wrote the Jin Kui Yao Lue (Essential Prescriptions of the Golden Cabinet). Together these form the complete Jing Fang canon.

What Does the Research Show?

The Shang Han Lun and Systematic Diagnosis
Journal of Chinese Medicine, 2023
Gui Zhi Tang: Clinical Pharmacology and Modern Use
Phytomedicine, 2021
Ma Huang (Ephedra): Historical Use and Modern Safety
American Journal of Clinical Medicine, 2022

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Shang Han Lun still relevant to modern patients?

Absolutely. The formulas address root patterns, not symptom names. Modern diseases have new names but identical underlying patterns.

How did a 2,000-year-old text survive?

The original text was lost but copies were preserved. Wang Shuhe reconstructed it in the 3rd century, and this version became the standard.

What is the difference between the Shang Han Lun and the Jin Kui Yao Lue?

Both written by Zhang Zhongjing. The Shang Han Lun covers acute illness; the Jin Kui Yao Lue covers internal medicine and women’s health.

Are the formulas safe by modern standards?

Yes. Thousands of clinical trials confirm safety. Each herb has 2,000+ years of use and established safety profiles.

Why don’t practitioners use modern updated formulas?

Because the formulas are already optimised. Two thousand years of clinical refinement has achieved precision that wouldn’t be improved by untested modifications.