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Category Archives: Alternative Medicine
How To Become An Alternative Medicine Provider | Good Herald – Good Herald
Posted: June 3, 2017 at 12:27 pm
Healing through alternative medicine is a broad subject, traditionally referred to as practices and applications not usually taught by conventional or western medical schools as treatment for illnesses. Alternative medicine is typically not covered by health insurance, although acupuncture, massage, and chiropractic have recently gotten the go ahead. For those of you interested in becoming alternative medicine providers, the practice is divided into seven major categories: Bioelectricmagnetic applications-which include magnet therapy, diet, nutrition, and lifestyle changes (homeopathic practices), herbal medicine, manual healing, ( Chinese medicine, massage, acupuncture) and biological treatments.
Alternative medicine is meant to treat the body holistically-body, mind, and spirit, and is highly based on preventative practices. That is, Alt. med. is geared toward preventing rather than simply treating symptoms of ailments. Actually, only about 30% of the world uses what we call western or modern medicine. The other 70% use holistic or alternative medicine and Americans are just now catching up. The good news is that American doctors are beginning to see the benefits of alternative forms of therapy and more of them are beginning to add some form of alternative medicine to their practice. Mainstream doctors are beginning to refer patients for massage therapy, surgeons are referring to chiropractors. The result is that the terms mainstream and alternative are beginning to blur.
Alternative medicine is being used along with other alternative therapies or traditional therapies (called complimentary) and reflects a shift in attitude. It seems people are much more accepting of alternative medicine if it is used in conjunction with conventional methods of treatment rather than as an alternative or instead of. Professional alternative medicine practitioners are trained by accredited schools and practice in established locations-no back alley medicine here-you must meet all the entry requirements of the holistic medicine schools and maintain excellent skills to become accredited. Each health care system has its own accreditation, and includes Traditional Oriental Medicine, acupuncture, homeopathy, naturopathy, anthroposophy, and ayurvedic (Indian) medicine.
Each system has its own theory of illness (although if you study them separately you will see that they are very much the same indeed, which is another feather in alternative medicines cap-to have the same principles work on either end of the world), an educational plan to teach theory and practice, a support system and a legal and ethical committee to answer to. All have the need to restore balance as a common denominator. Homeopath medicine is used world wide, and involves natural animal, plant, and mineral substances. Practitioners of homeopath medicine usually are also accredited acupuncturists and are regulated by the food and drug administration. They treat acute and chronic diseases and into preventative therapies and promoting good health in order to prevent sickness. Homeopathy very much is able to combine modern medicine with natural and herbal care. Native American alternative medicine involves much sweating and expelling of toxins which cause imbalance and disease. This is achieved by the use of herbs and teas, and a lot of heat. Ceremonial dances and chants add to the mystical properties of the healing.
Or maybe youre interested in working in the bioelectromagnetic field of alternative medicine. Working with magnets is growing in popularity as people are beginning to discover the benefits of wearing magnetic insoles in their shoes and sleeping on magnetically charged mattress pads. The magnets increase blood flow and bring about circulatory health which lessens back pain and headaches. Chances are youve decided to enter the world of alternative medicine because youve had a good experience with it. Your current health provider can help you research the area of your choice and give you advice as to how to proceed.
Emanuele Allenti offers valuable tips and help about alternative medicine at best alternative medicine and alternative medicine tips websites.
Photo By LoggaWiggler from Pixabay
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The True Meaning of Alternative Medicine | Good Herald – Good Herald
Posted: at 12:27 pm
Many people who are suffering from disease or pain have thought about trying the alternative medicine route. Before you try alternative medicine, you may want to learn a bit about it. There are a lot of different types of alternative medicine and they all may not be right for you.
Alternative medicine is a type of therapeutic practice that is not considered to be a part of traditional or conventional medical treatment. People use alternative medicine instead of using traditional medical treatment. This is often because they feel it is a natural way to get better.
There are many types of alternative medicine. Some are covered by medical insurance, but most are not. Some forms of alternative medicine that may be covered are chiropractic and osteopathic therapy. These forms of alternative medicine are widely used.
There are other forms of alternative medicine that are not as widely used, but are becoming more popular by the minute. These are: massage therapy, therapeutic touch, folk medicine, herbal medicine, special diets, homeopathy, music therapy, aromatherapy, naturopathy, faith healing, and new age healing. There are also some non-western forms of alternative medicine such as: Chinese medicine, gi gong, reiki, and ayarveda.
There are some less commonly practiced forms of alternative medicine as well. One is called biofield therapy. This is a form of alternative medicine that works with your so called energy fields to heal you. Another is bioelectrical magnetic therapy. This alternative medicine uses pulse and magnetic fields to heal you.
Alternative medicine is quite popular for people who are terminally ill. Many AIDS and cancer patients prefer it. An example of this is a cancer patient who uses alternative medicine instead of receiving traditional chemotherapy or radiation therapy. People also use alternative medicine to heal ailments such as back pain or migraines. Instead of traditional painkillers, the patients would use aromatherapy, sound therapy or herbal therapy. Alternative medicine is even used on animals. Have you ever seen the movie The Horse Whisperer? That was about a form of alternative medicine used on an animal. Acupuncture, herbal therapy, and others have also been used on animals.
The last thing you should know is that there is no scientific evidence that alternative medicine is effective. There have been no scientific studies to prove if they are safe or if they work for the diseases or ailments they are used for. Before using an alternative medicine, talk to your doctor, make sure your doctor feels it is safe and will not harm you.
There are many different kinds of alternative medicines to choose from. Now that you understand it a bit better, you can decide if it is right for you. For more information talk to your doctor or research it online. With careful research, you may find one that is right for you.
Jay Moncliff is the founder of http://www.medsonlinecenter.info a blog focusing on the Medicine, resources and articles. For more info on medicines visit: Medicine
Photo By Gadini from Pixabay
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China to collaborate with FG on alternative medicine – P.M. News
Posted: June 1, 2017 at 10:37 pm
Ogbonnaya Onu, Minister of Science and Technology
Mrs Jian Yu, the Executive Director, Green Centre Academy (GCA), on Thursday said the academy was ready to partner with the Federal Government to boost alternative medicine application in Nigeria.
GCA is a training arm of Green Centre for Alternative Medicine (GCAMP) affiliated with Tianjin and Bejing Universities in China, which entered into collaboration with Federal Ministry of Science and Technology to advance natural medicine in Nigeria.
Yu said this on Thursday in Abuja when she led a team of Chinese investors to pay a courtesy visit to the Minister of Science and Technology, Dr Ogbonnaya Onu.
She said that the academy was ready to enhance the production of trained and qualified personnel in natural medicine production and practice.
She said this would revamp the natural medicine industry through offering retraining and upgrading courses periodically.
The training which is practically oriented covers basic medical sciences and core natural medicine disciplines.
It is to empower practitioners with abilities to cope with modern day health challenges through utilisation of natural medicine principles.
The academy has facilitated about 20 Nigerian natural medicine practitioners to short time study in Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, China for training, she said.
READ: SON warns against substandard chemical products
Yu said that the training was also to bring Chinese traditional/ natural medicine practice to the world acceptable standard.
She said that GCA with Nigerian Natural Development Agency (NNMDA), an agency under the ministry, had organised trainings for practitioners across geopolitical zones of Nigeria in herbal medicine research and development.
She said there was an ongoingtwo years diploma programme in herbal medicine production and alternative medicine practice as a result of collaboration with NNMDA and KAASTU International University of Sir-Lanka
According to her, the benefit of the training to Nigeria is that each student will graduate with a researched and developed herbal formula prepared and ready for NAFDAC listing.
Responding, Onu commended the academy for the effort to improve the Nigerian herbal medicine practitioners.
The minister vowed that the government would give any assistance needed to ensure GCA achieved its aim in Nigeria.
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China to collaborate with FG on alternative medicine - P.M. News
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Swiss study highlights horse owners’ desire for complementary and alternative therapies – Horsetalk
Posted: at 10:37 pm
Horse owners in Switzerland commonly turn to practitioners of complementary and alternative medicine when horses have orthopaedic problems, the findings of a study suggest.
The study focused on 357 registered Swiss Warmblood horses aged five and older who had been involved in an unrelated study on airway disease, during which owners had indicated their horse may have had an orthopaedic problem.
A total of 239 owners and caretakers of the horses were surveyed by telephone by a veterinarian, who identified a total of 222 orthopaedic problems in 170 of the animals.
Sixty-two horses were identified with a back problem, 96 horses with a lameness issue involving one or more limbs, and 12 had a combined back problem and lameness issue.
Complementary and alternative medicine was used commonly in this population, the researchers found. They were employed for 164 of the 222 problems (in 73.9% of cases) for both diagnosis and treatment. This treatment was rarely administered by a veterinarian in only 27 of the 222 cases, or 12%.
The use of complementary and alternative medicine was even higher if a back problem was suspected by the owner, in 68 of the 74 problems identified (91.9%).
However, the owners declared that a veterinary diagnosis had been established in 75.7% of all cases (for 168 of 222 orthopaedic problems), some of which had involved x-rays or scans.
The majority of the owners initially consulted a veterinarian, Catharina Lange and her colleagues from the University of Bern reported in the journal Veterinary Medicine and Science. If the problem did not resolve, they chose to consult a practitioner.
A complementary and alternative medicine practitioner was the first choice for initial consultation in only one-third of the cases, they reported, noting that this tendency was more pronounced in horses withsuspected back problems.
Osteopathy was the most frequently applied complementary discipline, in 52.9% of cases, followed by homoeopathy (22.2%), acupuncture (14.7%), chiropractic (11.6%), physiotherapy (11.1%), massage (8.0%), magnetic field therapy (5.3%), animal communication (1.3%), kinesiology (0.9%) and a natural healer (2.2%).
The results of this survey reflected the large demand for complementary and alternative medicine by horse owners, the researchers said.
A trained veterinarian administered complementary and alternative medicine treatments in only a small number of cases.
This, they suggested, underlined the need for an educational system for people with non-veterinary professional backgrounds that assured adequate qualifications regarding equine anatomy and pathology, and experience in handling horses. This was in addition to a thorough education in the complementary therapy they were employing.
The study team said it also showed the need for joint efforts to improve cooperation between the use of conventional medicine and complementary and alternative medicine and to develop new multidisciplinary approaches to equine orthopaedic problems.
As veterinarians, we need to increase our understanding of the potential merits and limits of each complementary and alternative medicine discipline and be able to critically assess their effects.
A complementary and alternative medicine practitioner was found to be the first choice in 66 cases (29.6%), and even more so in suspected back problem (48 of 74, or 64.9%) compared to cases with a lameness problem (18 of 149, or 12.1%).
There are about 80,000 Swiss Warmblood horses registered in Switzerland.
Lange, C. D., Axiak Flammer, S., Gerber, V., Kindt, D. and Koch, C. (2017), Complementary and alternative medicine for the management of orthopaedic problems in Swiss Warmblood horses. Vet Med Sci. doi:10.1002/vms3.64
The study, published under a Creative Commons License, can be read here.
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Presented by IV Solution: Treat Your Chronic Pain, Anxiety & Depression with Alternative Medicine – Michigan Avenue Magazine
Posted: at 10:37 pm
Its no secret that wellness is very much in right nowand with good reason. There are so many people struggling with things like anxiety, depression, chronic pain, and diseases who are ditching traditional treatments for alternative medicine that is safe and will make them feel better. Chicagos new IV Solution Ketamine Center (712 N. Dearborn St., 844-948-6337) is one place where locals can get their dose of alternative treatments. Here, we talk with chief medical officer Dr. Bal Nandra M.D. about all the pros and cons involved with opting for alternative treatments such as ketamine therapies and his advice for those who are still on the fence.
What are the pros of going the alternative medicine route with ketamine treatments?BAL NANDRA M.D.: Ketamine is effective in treating conditions that traditionally have had no silver bullet. For example, treatment-resistant or refractory depression can be very challenging to treat and many of these patients have not only failed multiple medication regimens and psychotherapy, but they may have even failed electroconvulsive shock therapy (ECT). But now, ketamine can be a shining light for these patients and give them a chance at a better life with a safe and very fast-acting medication. Ketamine may not be for everyone, but patients who are not finding the relief they desire should speak with their doctor about this treatment because it could be their silver bullet.
Are there any cons?BN: Like with any innovative treatment that is off-label, most insurance companies will not cover the treatments so patients have to pay out of pocket. Although currently some organizations are pushing for approval, these things take time. Additionally, with any new therapy, more clinical studies always need to be done. However, some of the studies behind ketamine and depression came out of the NIH.
Will ketamine treatments decrease or eliminate the need for medications or other treatments? If so, how long after?BN: Patients will vary in their need for their regular medications after ketamine. Many patients are able to get completely off their drugs; others can only reduce their doses. We always recommend that patients only discontinue or adjust their medications with the guidance of their treating physician.
Do you find that ketamine treatments work better at relieving some ailments more than others?BN: The studies done have largely focused on major depressive disorder where ketamine has been shown to be around 75% effective and this has been duplicated by multiple studies. There are very few medications available that are this effective in treating any illness of any kind. So ketamine has been a real game changer in depression and has been called by experts as the greatest advancement in mental health in over 50 years.
Whats your advice to someone whos still a little skeptical about trying ketamine treatments?BN: If you are skeptical about trying ketamine, you should first discuss this option with your treating physician. After that, we are available to do a free consultation to discuss the treatment in more depth and what you can expect. We always take a health screening before we see you so that our conversation can be focused on you specifically and how we can customize the protocol to best fit your needs. We can often also put you in touch with one of our former patients as a resource.
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Politics Stressing You Out? Alternative Medicine is Ready to Help (Again) – WNYC
Posted: May 28, 2017 at 7:40 am
Vanessa Donald, a 83-year old patient, is receiving acupuncture from Jomo Alakoye-Simmons in his Harlem clinic. (Mary Wang )
Politically-induced stress. That term and variations of it turn up a lot these days, especially in the treatment rooms of the city's acupuncturists and herbalists.
Vanessa Nisperos, a 38-year-old social worker from Brooklyn, said the presidential election triggered many symptoms of distress.
"I found myself having repetitive thoughts and this overwhelming sense of dread," Nisperos said. "It didnt even dawn on me that I was physically experiencing symptoms of shock and traumatic stress.
She sought treatment at Third Root, a holistic health care center in Flatbush, Brooklyn that caters to low income patients and those who feel excluded from mainstream health care.
Jomo Alakoye-Simmons, an acupuncturist at Third Root,said in the months since the elections, he's been seeing all kinds of patients report politically-induced stress, and some of their symptoms are severe.
There was a lot of fear brought up in the LGBTQ community," he said. "Suicide was a serious concern. And then you had folks who were just depressed, not eating anymore and experienced paranoia.
Long before the presidential election, alternative medicine has filled the gaps of mainstream health care for people who feel excluded from it. When Alakoye-Simmons isn't working in Brooklyn, the Harlem resident runsthe Harlem Village Community Acupuncture Healing Center. He said his own neighborhood has long had to rely on self-organized forms of health care.
I grew up in this community seeing the Koch years, the drug epidemic, and the massive neglect that has been going on for decades, he said.
His clinic treats many black patients from the neighborhood, including 83-year-old Virginia Donald. She gets acupuncture for her allergies and asthma, a disease that has takena bigger toll on black communities.
"When I was born, we didnt have a whole lot of doctors to treat black people," Donald said. "And when you did, they didnt care if you died or not."
When Donald started her acupuncture treatments 40 years ago, she visited a Harlem practice that was one of the many community health care centers shaped by the Black Panthers' health activism.
Sociologist Alondra Nelson said the Black Panthers, working together with other activist groups, including the Young Lords, set up community health care centers as a response to a long history of segregation in health institutions. According to Nelson, who authored "Body and Soul: The Black Panther Party and the Fight Against Medical Discrimination," these clinics covered the communities of color that mainstream health care didn't reach.
"This network of clinics was a retort to the state and the emergence of an unwieldy and unsuccessful HMO and private health insurance network," she said. "This didnt provide full access to poor people, and if it did, it often provided them with substandard care."
The Panthers visited China in the 1970s, where they were influenced by the Communist Partys model for health care. The state's program used traditional and cheap methods like acupuncture and tui na massage to treat its poor, rural population. The Panthers translated those principlesinto their own clinics, including the Lincoln Detox Center, which battled the addiction epidemic in the Bronx.
Julia Bennett, acupuncturist and co-owner of Third Root, was trained at Lincoln Detox. She said her practice was shaped by that experience.
"It was in an outpatient building right next to the projects," she described. "People addicted to substance would come in andsit in these wonderful lounge chairs.There were volunteers who would put the needles in, and the patients would just relax.
Though the Lincoln Detox Center shutteredin the late 1970s, Nelson said its history is still relevant today.
What the Panther example offers us is that people cant live without care," she said. "With their backs against the wall, they will draw their resources together to provide health care to local communities.
With the uncertain fate of Obamacare and the ongoingshift in national policies in general its clear some New Yorkers are feeling anxious enough to look beyond the medical establishment. For them, holistic health care isnt a luxury; it's a necessity.
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India, Germany to work together on alternative medicine – Medical Dialogues
Posted: at 7:40 am
New Delhi:India and Germany, which worked together on treating osteoarthritis with ayurveda, will collaborate further in the field of alternative medicine, the government said.
The Union Cabinet has approved a Joint Declaration of Intent (JDI) between Germany and India regarding cooperation in the sector of alternative medicine, an official statement said. The collaboration will also enhance employment, it said.
The Cabinet was also apprised of a pact, signed here in April this year, between India and Bangladesh on cooperation in the peaceful use of outer space.
While India has well-developed systems of traditional medicine which hold tremendous potential in the global health scenario, Germany has considerable interest in such a system of medicine, it said.
Noting that the AYUSH Ministry had taken many initiatives for promoting ayurveda in Germany, the statement referred to the collaborative research project between the Central Council for Research in Ayurvedic Sciences (CCRAS) and the Charite University in Berlin on osteoarthritis of the knee.
The results of the trial are encouraging and the clinical trial demonstrates significant improvement in patients. The study has been completed successfully and is under publication, the statement said.
Initiation of collaborative research, training and scientific capacity building in the field of alternative medicine under the JDI between the two countries would contribute to enhanced employment opportunities in the AYUSH sector, it said.
The financial resources necessary to conduct research, training courses and conferences will be met from the existing allocated budget and existing plan schemes of Ministry of AYUSH.
A delegation led by AYUSH Minister Shripad Yesso Naik had visited Germany in October last year to participate in the second European World Ayurveda Congress.
During the visit, Naik met German Parliamentary State Secretary Ingrid Fischbach and the two sides agreed to begin the process of drafting and negotiating a JDl in the field of AYUSH and natural medicine.
On the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between India and Bangladesh, the statement said it would lead to cooperation in areas such as space science, technology and applications including remote sensing of the earth.
The pact would also enable cooperation in satellite communication and satellite based navigation, planetary exploration, use of spacecraft and space systems and ground system and application of space technology.
The MoU would lead to a Joint Working Group, drawing members from the Department of Space and the Indian Space Research Organisation (DOS/ISRO), and the Bangladesh Telecom Regulatory Commission (BTRC), it said.
Source: PTI
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The harms of alternative medicine: what we see is just the tip of the iceberg – Spectator.co.uk
Posted: at 7:40 am
Many people seem to think that the value of a therapy is determined by its efficacy: a treatment that is highly efficacious must be better than one that is less efficacious. Others seem to believe that it is the safety of a therapy which matters most: a treatment that causes no or few side effects must be good, one that has many is bad.
Such notions might appear logical, but they are mistaken. Things are usually more complicated. Some treatments can cause extremely serious side effects but are still extremely valuable. An example would be chemotherapy; it often causes all sorts of awful problems but, if it saves cancer patients lives, it cannot be bad.
Other treatments might be virtually free of side effects, but they are nevertheless rubbish. Take crystal healing, for instance; it is hard to imagine that it causes any side effects but, as it also does not cure anything, it cannot possibly be a good therapy.
To determine the real value of a therapeutic intervention, we need to consider more than its efficacy alone and more than its safety alone. Obviously, we must look at the balance of the two factors.
When a new drug comes on the market, it has been tested thoroughly for efficacy; we therefore can be fairly sure that it works. But initially we know relatively little about its safety; in particular, we know little about possible rare side effects. Such knowledge requires data not just from the few hundred patients who took the drug when it was tested in efficacy trials, but we need data from a few hundred thousand patients.
To generate this information, drugs are monitored for side effects while they are used in routine practice. Should this post-marketing surveillance throw up any serious problems, the drug might be withdrawn from the market.
But this only applies to conventional medicine. In alternative medicine things are different, sometimes dramatically different. As the value of any therapy is determined by its risk/benefit balance, we would ideally want to know the efficacy and the safety of alternative therapies too. Yet we often dont know enough about either.
Alternative therapies have not been tested for efficacy before they come on the market; they usually were in use long before we had the idea of licensing and regulating drugs. Consequently, we have little or only incomplete knowledge about their efficacy.
On the safety side of the equation, things are even worse. There is no post-marketing surveillance of alternative therapies, and all we know about their risks comes from the occasional case report published in the medical literature. This means that under-reporting of harms is huge, and our data are just the tip of the iceberg.
It follows that any attempt at evaluating a risk/benefit balance of alternative therapies is highly problematic. We usually know too little about both determinants to even begin a reasonable estimation. All we can do in this situation is rely on rough estimates.
If any given therapy generates no benefit because it is not efficacious, we can be sure that its risk/benefit quotient can never be positive. Dividing any finite number for risk, however small, by zero gives an infinitely large figure. We can furthermore assume that, for any therapy that is only marginally efficacious and thus generates only a small benefit, even a very small risk would result in an unfavourable risk/benefit balance.
Finally, we can say that an alternative therapy that is known to cause serious harm, the benefit would need to be substantial for its risk/benefit balance to come out favourable.
And what about those alternative therapies for which we have not enough information to attempt even such rudimentary analyses? Alternative practitioners and their followers tend to think that we must give them the benefit of the doubt. This is a dangerously misguided view.
In the interest of our patients, we ought to consider any intervention to be inefficacious until we have good evidence to the contrary. Similarly, any therapy must be considered unsafe until the time we have sound data showing it is not unduly harmful. Giving alternative therapies the benefit of the doubt is therefore not an option.
Such talk is alarmist, claim fans of alternative medicine. After debating with them ad nauseam, I now have this challenge for them: show me your list of alternative therapies that demonstrably are associated with a favourable risk/benefit balance. Considering that there are more than 400 different alternative therapies and that most of them are used for a wide range of conditions, such a list could potentially be very long indeed.
But I will be modest: if you can list more than a dozen alternative therapies for specific conditions, I promise to never write about the risk/benefit balance of alternative medicine again.
Edzard Ernst, emeritus professor at the University of Exeter, is the author of Homeopathy: The Undiluted Facts and the awardee of the John Maddox Prize 2015 for standing up for science. He blogs at edzardernst.com.
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Cabinet approves JDI between Germany, India on cooperation of alternative medicine – Daily News & Analysis
Posted: at 7:40 am
The Union Cabinet on Wednesday has approved the Joint Declaration of Intent (JDI) between Germany and India regarding cooperation in the sector of alternative medicine.
The signing of the JDl will enhance bilateral cooperation between the two countries in the areas of traditional and alternative medicine.
Initiation of collaborative research, training and scientific capacity building in the field of alternative medicine under the JDI between the two countries would contribute to the enhanced employment opportunities in the AYUSH sector.
There are no additional financial implications involved. The financial resources necessary to conduct research, training courses, conferences and meetings will be met from the existing allocated budget and existing plan schemes of Ministry of AYUSH.
India is blessed with well-developed systems of traditional medicine which hold tremendous potential in the global health scenario.
Germany has considerable interest in Traditional Systems of Medicine.
The Ministry of AYUSH as a part of its mandate to propagate Indian systems of Medicine globally has taken effective steps by entering into MoU with China, Malaysia, Trinidad & Tobago Hungary, Bangladesh, Nepal, Mauritius, Mongolia and Myanmar.
The Ministry has taken many initiatives for promotion of Ayurveda in Germany with the recommendation and cooperation of the Indian Embassy in Berlin.
One of the major initiatives is the collaborative research Project between the Central Council for Research in Ayurvedic Sciences (CCRAS) and Charite University, Berlin on Osteoarthritis of the knee.
The results of the trial are encouraging and the clinical trial demonstrates significant improvement in patients. The study has been completed successfully and is under publication.
A delegation led by Shripad Yesso Naik, Minister of State, (Independent Charge), Ministry of AYUSH had visited Germany from October 15 to 19 2016 to participate in the 2nd European World Ayurveda Congress (EWAC) and have interactions with the authorities in Germany.
The Congress was supported by the Ministry of AYUSH.
During the visit a bilateral meeting was held between Hon'ble MoS(IC), AYUSH with the Parliamentary State Secretary Ingrid Fischbach during which both sides had unanimously agreed to begin the process of drafting and negotiating a JDl in the field of AYUSH and Natural medicine.
It is expected that the JDI would give a boost to India-Germany ties and enhance cooperation between the two countries.
(This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)
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Germany and India to cooperate in alternative medicine – BSI bureau (press release)
Posted: May 26, 2017 at 4:02 am
The signing of the JDl will enhance bilateral cooperation between the two countries in the areas of traditional/alternative medicine
The Union Cabinet chaired by the Prime Minister Narendra Modi has approved the Joint Declaration of Intent (JDI) between Germany and India regarding cooperation in the sector of alternative medicine.
The signing of the JDl will enhance bilateral cooperation between the two countries in the areas of traditional/alternative medicine. Initiation of collaborative research, training and scientific capacity building in the field of alternative medicine under the JDI between the two countries would contribute to the enhanced employment opportunities in the AYUSH sector.
There are no additional financial implications involved. The financial resources necessary to conduct research, training courses, conferences / meetings will be met from the existing allocated budget and existing plan schemes of Ministry of AYUSH.
India is blessed with well-developed systems of traditional medicine which hold tremendous potential in the global health scenario. Germany has considerable interest in Traditional Systems of Medicine. The Ministry of AYUSH as a part of its mandate to propagate Indian systems of Medicine globally has taken effective steps by entering into MoU with China, Malaysia, Trinidad & Tobago Hungary, Bangladesh, Nepal, Mauritius, Mongolia and Myanmar.
The Ministry has taken many initiatives for promotion of Ayurveda in Germany with the recommendation and cooperation of the Indian Embassy in Berlin. One of the major initiatives is the collaborative research Project between the Central Council for Research in Ayurvedic Sciences (CCRAS) and Charite University, Berlin on Osteoarthritis of the knee. The results of the trial are encouraging and the clinical trial demonstrates significant improvement in patients. The study has been completed successfully and is under publication.
A delegation led by Shripad Yesso Naik, Minister of State, (Independent Charge), Ministry of AYUSH had visited Germany from 15-19 October 2016 to participate in the 2nd European World Ayurveda Congress (EWAC) and have interactions with the authorities in Germany. The Congress was supported by the Ministry of AYUSH.
During the visit a bilateral meeting was held between MoS (IC), AYUSH with the Parliamentary State Secretary Ms. Ingrid Fischbach during which both sides had unanimously agreed to begin the process of drafting and negotiating a JDl in the field of AYUSH and Natural medicine. It is expected that the JDI would give a boost to India-Germany ties and enhance cooperation between the two countries.
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Germany and India to cooperate in alternative medicine - BSI bureau (press release)
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