Ayurvedic research, wellness and consumer rights

The growing interest in using Ayurvedic medicine as a gentler, safer option to using modern medicine drugs with attendant side effects continues to be thwarted because claims about effectiveness and safety are not backed with evidence and clinical data. The focus of Ayurveda practice and research sh...

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Main Author: Shailaja Chandra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016-03-01
Series:Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0975947616300742
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author Shailaja Chandra
author_facet Shailaja Chandra
author_sort Shailaja Chandra
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description The growing interest in using Ayurvedic medicine as a gentler, safer option to using modern medicine drugs with attendant side effects continues to be thwarted because claims about effectiveness and safety are not backed with evidence and clinical data. The focus of Ayurveda practice and research should be on building bridges to this knowledge for public benefit. The consumer is being denied basic knowledge, access to product information as well as the benefit of a common prescription written by a single treating physician because of three factors – Ayurvedic OTC medicine is generally sold with names and labels which cannot be understood by the consumer despite being easily available without prescription; the treating modern medicine doctor is being prevented from writing the name of a herbal product even when he is individually convinced about its usefulness (in given circumstances) and the absence of biomedical research using objective parameters proving the effectiveness of the drugs. Contemporary Ayurveda needs to be packaged to reach the modern consumer in a way that he gets the benefit of access to treatment options that assist healing within the ambit of the law. These obstacles have to be removed. Patient- based effectiveness studies using retrospective case material as well as research using interdisciplinary approaches are needed for public benefit. This has to be facilitated.
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spelling doaj.art-fa05014504b04dfaacbbba0a0ab965422022-12-22T02:55:25ZengElsevierJournal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine0975-94762016-03-017161010.1016/j.jaim.2016.05.002Ayurvedic research, wellness and consumer rightsShailaja ChandraThe growing interest in using Ayurvedic medicine as a gentler, safer option to using modern medicine drugs with attendant side effects continues to be thwarted because claims about effectiveness and safety are not backed with evidence and clinical data. The focus of Ayurveda practice and research should be on building bridges to this knowledge for public benefit. The consumer is being denied basic knowledge, access to product information as well as the benefit of a common prescription written by a single treating physician because of three factors – Ayurvedic OTC medicine is generally sold with names and labels which cannot be understood by the consumer despite being easily available without prescription; the treating modern medicine doctor is being prevented from writing the name of a herbal product even when he is individually convinced about its usefulness (in given circumstances) and the absence of biomedical research using objective parameters proving the effectiveness of the drugs. Contemporary Ayurveda needs to be packaged to reach the modern consumer in a way that he gets the benefit of access to treatment options that assist healing within the ambit of the law. These obstacles have to be removed. Patient- based effectiveness studies using retrospective case material as well as research using interdisciplinary approaches are needed for public benefit. This has to be facilitated.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0975947616300742
spellingShingle Shailaja Chandra
Ayurvedic research, wellness and consumer rights
Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine
title Ayurvedic research, wellness and consumer rights
title_full Ayurvedic research, wellness and consumer rights
title_fullStr Ayurvedic research, wellness and consumer rights
title_full_unstemmed Ayurvedic research, wellness and consumer rights
title_short Ayurvedic research, wellness and consumer rights
title_sort ayurvedic research wellness and consumer rights
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0975947616300742
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