After the founding of People's Republic of China (PRC), Ren Yingqiu was valued and appointed by the government. 1950 served as deputy director of Jiangjin county medical workers association and was elected as the representative of the first people's congress of Jiangjin county. 1952 was also employed as the educational director of Chongqing Traditional Chinese Medicine School and the secretary-general of the Central Medical Association, and was elected as the representative of Chongqing Municipal People's Congress; 1957 transferred to Beijing College of Traditional Chinese Medicine to teach. He died in Beijing on June 1984+0 17 10/7. 1914 was born in Jiangjin county, Sichuan province on August 5th.
1931-1934 Research of Jiangjin Medical Research Association.
1936 ——1938 studied at Shanghai China medical college, and then graduated from Hunan college of traditional Chinese medicine.
1938 ——1942 Teachers and school doctors of Jiangjin girls' middle school.
1941-1949 served as the executive director of Jiangjin county Chinese medicine association.
1946 ——1949 served as the executive director of the National Federation of Chinese Medicine Societies.
1952 to 1954, as the teaching director of senior Chinese medicine class of Chongqing Municipal Health Bureau.
1954 ——1957 served as the educational director of Chongqing traditional Chinese medicine school.
1957 ——1984 successively served as director of literature editing research group, director of scientific research office, director of various theoretical teaching and research sections, director of medical history teaching and research section, and president of basic theory research institute of traditional Chinese medicine. Ren Yingqiu read a lot of ancient Chinese medicine books all his life, especially paid attention to the theoretical research of ancient Chinese medicine books, devoted himself to the exploration, collation and perfection of Chinese medicine theory all his life, and made outstanding achievements.
He has always insisted that Chinese medicine not only has rich clinical experience, but also has a fairly complete theoretical system. In view of the view that "TCM has no theory" and "TCM is unscientific" in society, he profoundly pointed out that TCM is a science that has been tested by hundreds of millions of people for thousands of years and has made great contributions to the prosperity of the Chinese nation. Practice has proved that "Taoism is more glorious for thousands of years", and TCM not only has its systematic theoretical system, but also contains profound holistic view, materialism and dialectics, which is a naturally formed theoretical system of TCM. This is the most precious part of Chinese medicine. 1978 published an article entitled "training high-level theoretical backbone of traditional Chinese medicine" in Guangming Daily, pointing out: "The urgent task at present is how to explore the theories in the treasure house of traditional Chinese medicine and sort them out and improve them." It is suggested that a high-level backbone team proficient in TCM theory should be cultivated first. The way is that both the students of the College of Traditional Chinese Medicine and the classes of western medicine studying Chinese medicine must carefully study several classic works of Chinese medicine. Only in this way can they explore the theory of traditional Chinese medicine and complete the arduous task of exploring and perfecting the theory of traditional Chinese medicine. Lay a solid foundation of traditional Chinese medicine. From 196 1 to 1964, more than 10 articles were published in journal of traditional chinese medicine and other medical journals, which systematically introduced Neijing, Difficult Classics, Treatise on Febrile Diseases, Synopsis of Golden Chamber, These contents were re-edited and renamed as "Seven Lectures on Learning Classic Chinese Medicine" and included in Ren Yingqiu's medical corpus.
Ren Yingqiu has always attached importance to the study and research of classic works of traditional Chinese medicine, and has made great achievements. Taking the study of Neijing as an example, he integrated the methods used by doctors in Tang Dynasty and later Bing Wang to study Neijing, which were divided into collation, annotation, classified research and thematic development, and highly summarized the previous research results, thus summing up the academic thought and theoretical system of Neijing, pointing out that the whole book of Neijing mainly included viscera, meridians, pathogenesis, disease syndrome, diagnosis and syndrome differentiation. The main contents of his theoretical system can be summarized as four aspects: viscera (including collaterals), pathogenesis, diagnosis methods (including four diagnoses) and treatment principles. The 10 topics he studied were written into a paper called Ten Lectures on Neijing, which was the crystallization of his decades of painstaking research on Neijing and became one of the main reference materials for modern research on Neijing. In order to facilitate the study of Neijing, in his later years, he organized and compiled the Index of Neijing Chapters and Sentences, which became the first large-scale reference book to study Neijing in the history of China.