Chinese Patent Medicines
A practical reference guide to common Chinese over-the-counter herbal remedies for cold, fever, and respiratory conditions — for foreign visitors who may encounter these at Chinese pharmacies.
Common Cold: Adults
999 Ganmao Ling Keli
Lianhua Qingwen Jiaonang
Ganmao Qingre Keli
Jinhua Qinggan Keli
Banlangen Keli
Yinqiao Jiedu Pian
Xiaochaihu Keli
Shuanghuanglian Koufuye
Pudilan Xiaoyan Pian
Huoxiang Zhengqi Shui
Nin Jiom Pei Pa Koa
Qingkailing Jiaonang
Common Cold: Children
Xiao'er Chaigui Tuire Keli
Xiao'er Chiqiao Qingre Keli
Xiao'er Ganmao Keli
Shuanghuanglian Koufuye (Pediatric)
Xiao'er Resuqing Koufuye
Xiao'er Jiebiao Keli
Xiao'er Feike Keli
Xiao'er Yanbian Keli — 999
Xiao'er Yanbian Keli — Tongrentang
Understanding TCM Cold Types
In Traditional Chinese Medicine, colds are categorized into two main types. Choosing the correct medicine depends on identifying which type you have — they require different treatments.
❄️ Wind-Cold (风寒 Fēnghán)
- Chills more than fever
- No sweating or very little
- Clear, watery runny nose
- Body aches and stiffness
- No or mild sore throat
- Thin white tongue coating
- Often triggered by cold/wind exposure
🔥 Wind-Heat (风热 Fēngrè)
- Fever more than chills
- Sweating present
- Yellow or thick nasal discharge
- Significant sore throat
- Thirst and dry mouth
- Yellow tongue coating
- Often seasonal, springtime
Quick Symptom Lookup
Find your dominant symptom and pick the recommended adult OTC medicine.
| Primary Symptom | Chinese | Recommended Medicine | Form | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fever + Sore Throat | 发热 + 咽痛 | Lianhua Qingwen / Yinqiao Jiedu Pian | Capsule / Tablet | Wind-heat type; heat dominant |
| Fever + Body Aches | 发热 + 身痛 | Jinhua Qinggan Keli / 999 Ganmao Ling | Granules | Broad cold formula |
| Sore Throat Only | 仅咽痛 | Banlangen Keli / Pudilan Xiaoyan Pian | Granules / Tablet | Very safe; good as preventive |
| Cough + Phlegm | 咳嗽 + 痰 | Nin Jiom Pei Pa Koa / Shuanghuanglian | Syrup / Liquid | Honey syrup for dry cough; liquid for wet |
| Runny Nose + Headache | 流鼻涕 + 头痛 | Ganmao Qingre Keli / Xiaochaihu Keli | Granules | Wind-cold type; chills dominant |
| Summer Cold + Stomach | 暑热感冒 + 胃 | Huoxiang Zhengqi Shui | Liquid vials | Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea with cold |
| High Fever + Viral | 高热病毒感染 | Qingkailing Jiaonang | Capsule | Stronger formula; consult pharmacist |
| Child: Fever + Sore Throat | 儿童发热咽痛 | Xiao'er Yanbian Keli (999 or Tongrentang) | Granules | Ask pharmacist for correct dosage |
| Child: General Cold | 儿童普通感冒 | Xiao'er Chaigui Tuire Keli | Granules | Most commonly prescribed for children |
At the Pharmacy in China
Find a Pharmacy
Open Amap (高德地图) or Baidu Maps and search 药店 (yàodiàn). Major chains: 大参林 (Dà Cānlín), 老百姓大药房 (Lǎobǎixìng), 海王星辰 (Hǎiwángxīngchén). All stock OTC patent medicines.
Look for OTC Label
OTC medicines have a green or red oval OTC sticker on the box. Green = non-prescription (safer). Red OTC = still non-prescription but requires more care. No prescription needed for any medicine in this guide.
Translate the Box
Use Baidu Translate camera mode to photograph the dosage instructions (用法用量) on the back of the box. This gives you the correct dose for adults vs children, and frequency of intake.
Ask the Pharmacist
Chinese pharmacies have a licensed pharmacist on duty. Show them your symptoms — they will recommend the right medicine. Say: 我感冒了 (Wǒ gǎnmào le) = "I have a cold." They will guide you.
Payment
Pharmacies universally accept Alipay and WeChat Pay QR. Most also accept cash. Prices are very affordable — most OTC medicines cost ¥10–50 per box.
When to See a Doctor
If fever exceeds 39.5°C for more than 2 days, or if symptoms worsen after 3 days of OTC treatment, visit a hospital. Go to 发热门诊 (Fārè Ménzhěn) = Fever Clinic.