Work stress, property crises, memories of the pandemic -- these all help explain the recent boom in China's wellness sector, particularly among young people. Many associate the rising popularity of herbal teas, supplements and lifestyle classes with the traditional Chinese concept of "yangsheng" -- meaning "cultivating one's life force" -- but the importance of social media is hard to ignore here too. "I think because social media is now flooded with wellness bloggers, so it has become a trend," says Zhang Shiyu, after attending a Chinese medicine class.
Category
🗞
NewsTranscript
00:00I think it's one thing for Singapore to have such a large population,
00:05but it's also another thing for the whole world to see
00:10how much of the population is actually in China.
00:15I think that's one aspect of Singapore.
00:20I think it's also another aspect of the world
00:26I think it's one thing for Singapore to have such a large population,
00:31but it's also another thing for the whole world to see
00:36how much of the population is actually in China.
00:41I think it's also another aspect of the world to see
00:46how much of the population is actually in China.
00:55I think it's one thing for Singapore to have such a large population,
01:00but it's also another thing for the whole world to see
01:05how much of the population is actually in China.
01:11Eliminate Destruction
01:20I think young people are focusing more and more on remarkable health.
01:25I think young people are focusing more and more on remarkable health.
01:30This also shows that among young people, there are more requirements.
01:35This means that they have already felt the lack of this aspect.
01:40When I see this kind of targeted, bitter medicine,
01:44and things that are good for the liver,
01:46I feel like I really want to drink this kind of thing.
01:49It feels good for the body.
01:51Because young people like to take care of their bodies.
02:05For more information, visit www.FEMA.gov