Guest guest Posted January 9, 2009 Report Share Posted January 9, 2009 Dear Colleagues,Very interesting, come on and keep the discussion up, since we have Dr. Vijay moderating, keep him busy, and send him as soon as you can, because he made many travels, and he seems very fresh and energetic.Colleagues, Ayurveda and TCM have many commonalities. The focus of both the systems is on the patient rather than disease. But from my point, every system is running, the main thing is the quality and the quality, efficacy and safety of the drugs can not be waived at any cost. In very early history, ayurveda medicines were available and people had more profit from that, we should work hard towards its rationalization and quality improvement, since it is the critical determinant of safety and efficacy of botanical medicines.Both systems fundamentally aim to promote health and enhance the quality of life, with therapeutic strategies for treatment of specific diseases or symptoms in holistic fashion. Almost half of the botanical sources used as medicines have similarities; moreover, both systems have similar philosophies geared towards enabling classification of individuals, materials and diseases. TCM considers the human at the center of the universe as an antenna between celestial and earthly elements. Water, earth, metal, wood and fire are the five elements of the material world. The world is a single unit and its movement gives rise to yin and yang, the two main antithetic aspects. The actual meaning of the term yin and yang is ‘opposites’, such as the positive and the negative. However, Chinese believe that yin and yang is not absolute but relative. Consistent with the modern view of homeostasis, yin and yang are interchanged to meet the view that ‘yang declines and yin rises’ or ‘yang is raised to produce a decline of yin’. The four bodily humors (qi, blood, moisture and essence) and internal organ systems (zang fu) play an important role in balancing the yin and yang in human body. Proper formation, maintenance and circulation of these energies are essential for health. When the two energies fall out of harmony, disease develops. The physician takes into account this concept while treating patients. Drugs or herbs are used to correct this imbalance of yin–yang in the human body.Ayurveda considers that the universe is made up of combinations of the five elements (pancha mahabhutas). These are akasha (ether), vayu (air), teja (fire), aap (water) and prithvi (earth). The five elements can be seen to exist in the material universe at all scales of life and in both organic and inorganic things. In biological system, such as humans, elements are coded into three forces, which govern all life processes. These three forces (kapha, pitta and vata) are known as the three doshas or simply the tridosha. Each of the doshas is composed of one or two elements. Vata is composed of space and air, Pitta of fire, and kapha of water and earth. Vata dosha has the mobility and quickness of space and air; pitta dosha the metabolic qualities of fire; kapha dosha the stability and solidity of water and earth. The tridosha regulates every physiological and psychological process in the living organism. The interplay among them determines the qualities and conditions of the individual. A harmonious state of the three doshas creates balance and health; an imbalance, which might be an excess (vriddhi) or deficiency (kshaya), manifests as a sign or symptom of disease.In China and India formal training is an integral part of the national health program, which helps in ensuring quality standards in health care delivery. China became successful in integrating TCM in the national health care system. Science-based approaches were utilized and inculcated in the education of TCM with emphasis on research. Hospitals practicing TCM treat more than 200 million outpatients and almost 3 million inpatients annually. About 95% of general hospitals in China have traditional medicine departments.Government of India also has expressed support and encouragement for the TIM. A separate department for Indian Systems of Medicine and Homeopathy (ISM & H) now known as AYUSH (Ayurveda, Yoga, Unani, Siddha, Homoeopathy) was established in March 1995 to promote indigenous systems. Priorities include education, standardization of drugs, enhancement of availability of raw materials, research and development, information, communication and larger involvement in the national system for delivering health care. The Central Council of Indian Medicine oversees teaching and training institutes while Central Council for Research in Ayurveda and Siddha deals with interdisciplinary research. Some TIM products are being added into family welfare programs of the government under the World Bank project. These medicines are mainly for common diseases like anemia, edema during pregnancy, postpartum problems such as pain, uterine and abdominal complications, difficulties with lactation, nutritional deficiencies and childhood diarrhea. The government has also established 10 new drug testing laboratories for TIM and is upgrading existing laboratories to provide documented high quality evidence to licensing authorities for the safety and quality of herbal medicines. This replaces the earlier ad hoc system of testing that was considered unreliable. In 2002, the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research has launched a research program under New Millennium Indian Technology Leadership Initiative scheme in Ayurveda identifying three disease areas such as arthritis, diabetes and hepatic disorders, which afflict large numbers of the Indian population.Many additional concerns need to be addressed. The quality of education in many colleges needs to be improved. Under the pretext of integration, attempts to make hybrid curricula producing inadequately trained graduates remain unacceptable for either modern or traditional systems. A paucity of funds is noticeable; ISM & H gets only 2% of the total health budget of the nation. A corrective and promotive policy needs to be initiated for TIM to fully realize its potential and contribute more meaningfully to integrative health services. The industry has not been able to grow and develop optimally during the last few decades. Largely, the achieved growth is owing to industry's own initiatives, in-house research and development. A national organization, Ayurvedic Drugs Manufacturers' Association is taking a proactive role to improve quality and research that needs to be nurtured, stimulated and sustained by providing special funding or incentives. Preparation of formularies and pharmacopoeial standards have been attempted but a lot remains to be done. Numbers of Indian botanical sources and their medicinal uses as in case of turmeric have been patented by claiming innovations that are already in the public domain. Necessary measures to protect such intellectual property are important as the retrieval and contesting of patents is a very costly and time-consuming affair. For this purpose, the Government of India has established a Traditional Knowledge Digital Library on traditional medicinal plants, which will also lead to a Traditional Knowledge Resource Classification. Linking this to internationally accepted International Patent Classification system will mean building the bridge between the knowledge contained in an old Sanskrit text and a patent examiner. This may control the problem of mistakingly granting patents since the examiner will know the Indian rights to that knowledge. It could integrate widely scattered and distributed references on TIM in retrievable form and will be a major impetus to modern research in the developing world.source: http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=1297513#id403335Best Regards Mohammad BashaarFrom: Vijay <drvijaythawani@...>Subject: Safety & efficacy of Ayurvedic medicinesnetrum Date: Friday, January 9, 2009, 4:30 AM Hi, Thanks Bashaar for your enthusiastic opening to the discussion. As usual, you were the first when the moderator did not report for the duty on time. The NetRUM show goes on because of esteemed dedicated members like you and Ram who takeover in the times of need. Thanks on behalf of the management team. Vijay Thawani Moderator > > > From: Vijay <drvijaythawani@ ...> > > > Subject: Thanks Smita; Welcome Anand > > > netrumgroups (DOT) com > > > Date: Tuesday, January 6, 2009, 12:59 PM > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Hi, > > > Heartfelt thanks to Dr Smita Sontakke for her efficient conduct > > of the discussion on publication ethics. It was in deed enriching. > > Smita do return as moderator on NetRUM with another topic. > > > Coming up is discussion on "Safety and efficacy of Ayurvedic > > formulations" from 08 to 13 Jan which will be moderated by Dr Anand > > Chaudhary from Banaras (Varanasi). Welcome Anand as moderator and > > take over NetRUM WEF 07 Jan night. > > > Till the next discussion picks up, NetRUM is open for other posts. > > > Vijay > > > Groupie > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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