Wáng Shūhé 王叔和 (personal name 熙 Xī, fl. late 3rd c.), Western-Jìn imperial physician (Tàiyī lìng 太醫令) and the editor through whom Zhāng Jī’s Shānghán zábìng lùn 傷寒雜病論 reached posterity. A native of Gāopíng 高平 (Shāndōng), Wáng Shūhé is credited with two foundational acts of medical editorship: (a) the recovery and re-edition of Zhāng Jī’s Shānghán zábìng lùn, splitting it into the Shānghán lùn 傷寒論 (cold-damage; the upper third) and what would later become the Jīnguì yùhán yàoluè 金匱玉函要略 (miscellaneous diseases and women’s medicine; the lower two-thirds, lost in independent transmission and rediscovered by Wáng Zhū in the Northern Sòng); and (b) the composition of the Mài jīng 脈經 (in ten juan), the first systematic Chinese pulse-diagnosis treatise, which co-ordinates the pulse-types of the Sùwèn, the Língshū, and the Hàn clinical tradition into a single integrated diagnostic system. He is therefore the indispensable conduit between Hàn-period clinical medicine and the medieval medical canon. His brief notice in the Sānguó zhì’s “Huá Tuó zhuàn” 華佗傳 (Péi Sōngzhī’s commentary) is the earliest historical witness to him.