Hu Wanlin, who claimed to be an "omnipotent doctor" but dehydrated a man to death, was sentenced yesterday to 15 years in prison for illegally practising medicine, the state-run Global Times said.
Hu, 65, began his so-called healing activities while serving a life sentence for killing a businessman, but was stopped in 1996 after 13 of his patients died, according to reports.
He was freed, but jailed again in 2000 for illegally practising medicine after three more patient deaths, including the then mayor of Luohe city in Henan.
"A 22-year-old college student Yun Xuyang, a devotee of traditional Chinese medicine, died after taking a substance provided by Hu" at the event, the official news agency Xinhua reported.
Hu theorised that all diseases are caused by water, and patients needed to be dehydrated with a "magic medicine" using powerful salts, the Global Times said.
He found the student's official autopsy result at yesterday's trial hard to swallow, the newspaper reported, claiming that he frequently consumes 1.5 kilograms of the salt and liquid mixture without any ill-effects.
China also has a long history of traditional medicine, much of it with no orthodox scientific evidence backing it up, which has been blamed for driving illegal trade in endangered species.
In 2010, the health ministry said a diet therapist who sold more than three million books and DVDs claiming that a combination of mung beans and eggplant could cure almost all diseases had faked his qualifications.
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