Kuwait Times

WHO launches traditiona­l medicine hub in India

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The World Health Organizati­on launched its Global Centre for Traditiona­l Medicine at a site in India on Tuesday, aimed at unlocking its potential by blending ancient practices with modern science. The GCTM knowledge hub is intended to create a body of reliable evidence and data on traditiona­l medicine practices and products to help inform standards and the cost-effective use of methods that go outside convention­al medicine. “Harnessing the potential of traditiona­l medicine would be a gamechange­r for health when founded on evidence, innovation and sustainabi­lity,” the WHO said, noting that traditiona­l medicine formed part of the growing health and wellness industries.

The hub will be temporaril­y housed at the Institute Teaching and Research in Ayurveda in Jamnagar on Indiaʼs west coast until the new 35-acre (14-hectare) site in the city is completed in 2024. WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s joined Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the Gujarati city to lay the foundation stone. Around 80 percent of the worldʼs population is thought to use traditiona­l medicine, such as herbal mixtures, acupunctur­e, yoga, ayurvedic medicine and indigenous therapies.

Medicine of first resort

“For many millions of people around the world, traditiona­l medicine is the first port of call to treat many diseases,” Tedros told the ceremony. “The WHO GCTM that we are launching will help to harness the power of science to strengthen the evidence base for traditiona­l medicine,” he said, to optimize its use for health and wellbeing around the world. The UN health agency defines traditiona­l medicine as the knowledge, skills and practices that indigenous and different cultures have used over time to maintain health and prevent, diagnose and treat physical and mental illness.

India has put $250 million into the project, with Modi saying traditiona­l medicine encompasse­s a holistic science of life and would gain global importance in the coming 30 years. “Our traditiona­l medicine is a repository of hundreds of years of accumulate­d knowledge,” he said. “Going forward, we must use technology to create a global database, repository of traditiona­l medicine practices,” to help future generation­s. “They should also make internatio­nal standards so that peopleʼs trust in these traditiona­l medicines goes up.”

The hub will focus on four strategic areas: evidence and learning; data and analytics; sustainabi­lity and equity; and innovation and technology. It is hoped that a solid evidence base will help countries regulate quality and safety. Of the WHOʼs 194 member states, 170 acknowledg­ed their use of traditiona­l and complement­ary medicine since 2018, but only 124 reported having laws or regulation­s for the use of herbal medicines-while only half had a national policy on such methods and medicines. The WHO said that traditiona­l medicine was increasing­ly prominent in modern science, with 40 percent of approved pharmaceut­ical products currently in use deriving from natural substances.—AFP

 ?? ?? Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi (second right) present a certificat­e of achievemen­t next to Director-General of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s (right) embrace during the Global Ayush Investment and Innovation Summit in Gandhinaga­r yesterday. — AFP
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi (second right) present a certificat­e of achievemen­t next to Director-General of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s (right) embrace during the Global Ayush Investment and Innovation Summit in Gandhinaga­r yesterday. — AFP

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