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		<title>Public wants both Ayurveda and modern medicine: How Technology can facilitate this?</title>
		<link>https://innohealthmagazine.com/2022/in-focus/public-wants-both-ayurveda-and-modern-medicine-how-technology-can-facilitate-this/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Jun 2022 10:06:50 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>The controversy There have often been Ayurveda and modern systems of medicine. Recently this debate kicked off after controversial remarks of&#160;Baba Ramdev ridiculing modern medicine as ‘stupid’ and questioning its...</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.com/2022/in-focus/public-wants-both-ayurveda-and-modern-medicine-how-technology-can-facilitate-this/">Public wants both Ayurveda and modern medicine: How Technology can facilitate this?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.com">InnoHEALTH magazine</a>.</p>
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<h2 class="wp-block-heading" style="font-size:22px"><strong>The controversy</strong></h2>



<p>There have often been Ayurveda and modern systems of medicine. Recently this debate kicked off after controversial remarks of&nbsp;Baba Ramdev ridiculing modern medicine as ‘stupid’ and questioning its ineffectiveness as many doctors lost their lives to it. These remarks during the pandemic were dangerous as it undermined the faith of the public in the proven scientific interventions which saved many lives during unprecedented times of misery and death. Modern medicine’s contribution to improve health and longevity cannot be denied. An average Indian’s life is around 70 years today compared to around 32 years at the time of independence. The substantial decline in infant, child and maternal mortality, eradication of smallpox, yaws and polio and elimination of neonatal and maternal tetanus to name a few achievements of modern medicine.</p>



<h2 class="Body" style="text-align: justify; text-justify: inter-ideograph; color: #a5a5a5; font-size: 22px; line-height: 1.7;"><strong><em>The current debate tends to further polarise – either you are with Ayurveda or allopathy—there is no room for the majority of people who think that both methods are beneficial to the public. </em></strong></h2>



<p>The Health Ministry promptly expressed its disapproval over Ramdev’s remarks, issuing a letter to the Yoga Guru to retract his statements. Ramdev complied with it and withdrew his statement. But he continues to ask questions on effectiveness of allopathy in treating various diseases in his Yoga training sessions and other platforms. The current debate tends to further polarise – either you are with Ayurveda or allopathy—there is no room for the majority of people who think that both methods are beneficial to the public. In India, the public has a deep rooted, millennia-old belief in Ayurveda. It is reflected in sociocultural traditional health practices seen in almost every household in India. Though modern medicine has saved millions of lives, it can certainly be further enriched with evidence-based Ayurvedic philosophy, practices, and treatments. It is a marvelous achievement of modern science to have developed effective vaccines to prevent COVID-19.</p>



<p></p>



<p>India’s western-influenced education system, inherited from Lord Macauley, labels all traditional wisdom including Ayurveda as unscientific and inferior. This mindset needs to change to scientifically evaluate practices and treatment in Ayurveda and other traditional systems of medicine and accept these to maximise the benefit to the common man.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" style="font-size:22px"><strong><strong>Strengthening evidence-based practice of Ayurveda and Allopathy</strong></strong></h2>



<p>Doctors who follow science believe that modern medical practice is evidence-based and continuously evolving as we learn from research and other sources including traditional systems. Ayurveda (Charak Samhita) also has a system of verification and is different from modern medicine and it looks for proof (pramana) which includes Aaprtopdesha (expert opinion), pratyaksham (observation), anumaan (inference) and yukti (reason and experimentation).&nbsp; In modern medicine the power of evidence from these ‘pramana’ in considered low as compared to evidence that emerges from randomized controlled double-blind trials, meta-analysis, and systematic reviews. The Ayurvedic system of pramana (proof) can be strengthened with modern medicine’s approach of strengthening evidence using these recent methods to improve its credibility, acceptance and trust.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-image size-large is-style-default"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" width="1024" height="538" src="https://innohealthmagazine.comwp-content/uploads/2022/06/Public-wants-both-Ayurveda-and-modern-medicine-How-Technology-can-facilitate-this-1-1024x538.png" alt="Public wants both Ayurveda and modern medicine How Technology can facilitate this" class="wp-image-14502" srcset="https://innohealthmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/Public-wants-both-Ayurveda-and-modern-medicine-How-Technology-can-facilitate-this-1-1024x538.png 1024w, https://innohealthmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/Public-wants-both-Ayurveda-and-modern-medicine-How-Technology-can-facilitate-this-1-300x158.png 300w, https://innohealthmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/Public-wants-both-Ayurveda-and-modern-medicine-How-Technology-can-facilitate-this-1-768x403.png 768w, https://innohealthmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/Public-wants-both-Ayurveda-and-modern-medicine-How-Technology-can-facilitate-this-1.png 1200w" sizes="(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px" /></figure>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" style="font-size:22px"><strong><strong><strong>People want both Ayurveda and Allopathy to treat their health problems:</strong></strong></strong></h2>



<p>The Ayurvedic philosophy and beliefs are widely accepted not only in India but are gaining more acceptance even in the western world. A study across 18 states in India (NHSRC, 2010) showed that 73% of people used home remedies, mostly influenced by Ayurveda, for treatment of their most recent sickness episode.&nbsp; For common ailments such as cough, cold, diarrhoea, minor cuts, burns, insect bites etc, 50-98% used home remedies, mostly Ayurvedic practices. The reasons ascribed by the people for this include; previous experience in family and community as it worked; strong belief that it heals; easy to use; inexpensive; easy availability etc. The public has deep-rooted faith in Ayurveda. They often use these together. Local health traditions and customs, influenced by Ayurveda for thousands of years, have become part of home remedies and become an important way of life in both health and sickness.</p>



<p>Both Ayurveda and Allopathy may not be perfect systems by themselves but together offer a better chance to prevent and alleviate suffering and misery of people from diseases. To build credibility, we need to avoid premature claims of effectiveness of various treatments. These premature claims were seen both by Ayurveda and modern medicine during COVID pandemic. The claims of effectiveness of interventions such as hydroxychloroquine in prevention and plasma therapy in treatment of COVID were dropped when evidence suggested that these do not work. Ayurvedic practitioners at times are adamant that ayurvedic treatments and practices are never harmful. There is a need to be open, honest and transparent to build credibility of a system. NHSRC (2010) study also found high utilization of AYUSH services in states such as Tamil Nadu and Kerala refuting the argument that people resort to them because of inaccessible or unaffordable modern health services. The study found that 70% of the allopathic doctors in the government system felt that AYUSH systems are not redundant and can be strengthened. They emphasized the need for research and documentation in AYUSH.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" style="font-size:22px"><strong><strong><strong><strong>Need for a better understanding of Ayurveda and Allopathy</strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>



<p>Ayurveda is a comprehensive system of medicine that evolved in India which uses a range of treatments, including panchakarma (‘five actions’), yoga, massage, acupuncture, and herbal medicine, to encourage health and wellbeing. Ayurveda&nbsp;makes use of natural herbs, extracts, plants, and some metals and claims that ‘all&nbsp;Ayurvedic&nbsp;remedies are close to nature and do no harm’. Though modern medicine practitioners have seen serious side effects of some ayurvedic medicines such as those treatments containing lead and other heavy metals.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" style="font-size:22px"><strong><strong><strong><strong>Need for a better understanding of Ayurveda and Allopathy</strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>



<p class="has-black-color has-text-color">Contrary to the common belief especially among Ayurveda practitioners, Allopathy not only works to treat symptoms and illness but also has effective interventions, such as vaccines, to prevent diseases. Pharmaceutical drugs play a major role in&nbsp;allopathy. The modern medicine, as it is practiced today, is very different from Allopathy which had its origins in Greece about 2,400 years ago, when it included purgatives, catharsis, bloodletting etc. Most of these practices have been discarded, as modern medicine&nbsp;looks for evidence on effectiveness of interventions based on research. There is always a profound discussion on proving which intervention is better and a biased conclusion may be counterproductive and undermine public trust.&nbsp;Pharmaceutical drugs play a major role in allopathy. Drugs are developed either to alleviate the symptoms of the diseases directly or alter the way the body responds to it. Drugs do generally cure diseases but sometimes their side effects affect the patient adversely.</p>



<h2 class="Body" style="text-align: justify; text-justify: inter-ideograph; color: #a5a5a5; font-size: 22px; line-height: 1.7;"><strong><em>AI is helping modern medicine practitioners in many ways. The evidence-based AYUSH interventions for common health conditions can be integrated into these.</em></strong></h2>



<figure class="wp-block-table is-style-stripes has-medium-font-size" style="font-style:normal;font-weight:700"><table class="has-black-color has-text-color has-background has-fixed-layout" style="background-color:#e5d8f0"><tbody><tr><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left"><strong>Approach</strong></td><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left">Addresses the root cause as understood in Ayurveda</td><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left">compounds, medical devices and surgical interventions Achieves cure and prevention through antibiotics, address physiological processes and vaccines.</td></tr><tr><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left"><strong>Treatment</strong></td><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left">Facilitates natural healing process which may take more time</td><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left">Quicker relief in acute and life-threatening ailments and control of disease and symptoms</td></tr><tr><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left"><strong>Side Effects</strong></td><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left">Claim no side effects. However, side effects of preparations such as heavy metals used are well known when these patients go for treatment in modern medicine</td><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left"><br>The side effects of each medicine and intervention and their frequency are documented. Hence side effects are well known.</td></tr><tr><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left"><strong>Evidence for medicines and treatments</strong></td><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left">Anecdotal evidence. The process may lead to inefficiency and irreversible side effects which are not acknowledged</td><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left">Each intervention is tested during the elaborate trials in animals and humans and even when in use in the market. Only when benefits outweigh side effects are these medicines approved.</td></tr><tr><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left"><strong>Cost</strong></td><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left">Inexpensive</td><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left">Expensive and the cost of treatment is going up over time.</td></tr><tr><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left"><strong>Malpractices</strong></td><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left">Less common</td><td class="has-text-align-left" data-align="left">Pharmaceutical companies and corporate hospitals often ‘blamed’ for putting commercial interest above patient’s interest</td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<p>As India is still grappling with the resurgent coronavirus outbreak and persistent increase in non-communicable diseases, both the Ayurveda and Allopathy practitioners need to realise that both treatments coexist, without the need to discredit the other. Ayurveda and Allopathy have unique characteristics that distinguish one from the other. It, however, does not mean that there should be a debate over the supremacy of one treatment over the other. Each of them has proven beneficial in treating patients, and therefore they both deserve to serve humanity in their own way. The debate, if at all, should be on how best to integrate the two systems to benefit the public.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" style="font-size:22px"><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>Ayurvedic and Allopathy as complementary systems</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>



<p>Modern medicine is the perfect tool in cases of serious illnesses. Ayurveda looks at keeping people healthy and correcting the imbalance which is the cause of diseases. For non-communicable diseases Ayurveda with Yoga and meditation can effectively improve life style and Allopathic provide medications such as metformin to a weary pancreas, in diabetes, to release more insulin or give insulin and for high blood pressure give medicines which bring it down and prevent damage it causes to heart, brain, kidneys and eyes. Thus complementing each other to improve outcome and improve quality of life.</p>



<p>Under the National Health Mission, the government has collaborated with AYUSH and modern medicine practitioners in the government health facilities. The government also encourages cross referral of cases from Ayurveda and other AYUSH systems to modern medicine and vice versa to benefit the public.There is collaborative research being done in institutions such as AIIMS Delhi and new AIIMS. <em>Kshar Sutra</em>, an Ayurvedic treatment for piles emerged as an effective and easy treatment that could be tried before resorting to surgery.</p>



<p>Many new AIIMS have herbal gardens in the campus to grow herbal ayurvedic medicines and promote research and complementary approaches to treat patients. Ayurveda promotion should be based on science and not politics. Political will is needed but too much politicization becomes counterproductive</p>



<h2 class="Body" style="text-align: justify; text-justify: inter-ideograph; color: #a5a5a5; font-size: 22px; line-height: 1.7;"><strong><em>Both Ayurvedic physicians and MBBS doctors take oaths (Charak Shapath and Hippocratic oath) to act in the best interest of the patients.</em></strong></h2>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" style="font-size:22px"><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>Technology to promote Ayurveda and modern medicine for public benefit</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>



<p>The government plans to roll out a ‘One Nation, One Health System’ policy by 2030, to integrate modern and traditional systems of medicine like allopathy, homoeopathy and Ayurveda in medical practice, education and research. Technology can be an effective vehicle for this integration for the population to get the maximum benefits from various systems of medicine. The government has taken many initiatives to bring technology to improve healthcare in both AYUSH and the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. However, there are hardly any initiatives to use technology to integrate various systems of medicine. The technology can help in accelerating the integration in various systems of medicine and its smooth operationalization to move towards ‘One Nation, One Health System’ policy. Given below are some suggestions:</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list"><li><strong>Health and Wellbeing:</strong> Yoga and meditation have proven their utility to improve health and wellbeing of the people. The current government has helped the UN to have International Yoga Day on 21st June to promote yoga across the world. Yoga can be integrated with other initiatives of modern medicine to address current epidemic of life style related noncommunicable diseases such as high blood pressure, diabetes, cancer, cerebrovascular diseases such as stroke, mental health problems. Improved health and wellbeing will also reduce probability of infectious diseases and mortality.</li><li><strong>Integrated AI based treatment protocols:</strong> AI is helping modern medicine practitioners in many ways. The evidence-based AYUSH interventions for common health conditions can be integrated into these. The AI experts need to work with joint medical teams drawn from the relevant systems of medicine.</li><li><strong>Online Orientation of the current medical and Ayurveda practitioners and medical students of all systems of medicine</strong> to understand basics of other systems of medicine in prevention and treatment of common conditions during their basic and speciality trainings. This will help them understand the philosophy and approaches of other systems of medicine in the best interest of the patient.</li><li><strong>Integrate the current technology initiatives</strong> including technology incubators and Health Technology Assessment (HTA) to improve quality and access to health care are being run parallel in Ayurveda and modern medicine. There is a need to engage practitioners of other systems of medicine for better integration from the initial stages of application of technology in healthcare.</li><li><strong>Digitization of all medicines</strong> from all systems of medicine at one platform. It should include all medicines from drug trial stage to use that will bring transparency, standardization, drug control, quality control, decision support and continuity of care.</li><li><strong>Uniform standards of drug trial</strong>: The drug trial registries of both AYUSH and MoHFW should be brought together and be available to the general public on one digital platform. This will build trust among practitioners and the general public that indigenous medicines are subject to the same standards.</li><li><strong>Standardization and Quality Control of Ayurvedic drugs </strong>as per modern medicine standards. This will strengthen scientific validation of ayurvedic medicines and increase the trust of the public and practitioners of modern medicine.</li><li><strong>Use modern scientific technological approaches</strong> in Ayurveda such as nanotechnology, molecular docking, molecular dynamics etc to strengthen the efficacy of Ayurvedic medicines.</li></ul>



<p>The current debate is unnecessary, short sighted, discriminatory, counterproductive and self-protective. It must change how the two systems can work together for the larger benefit of the society. Both Ayurvedic physicians and MBBS doctors take oaths (<em>Charak Shapath</em> and Hippocratic oath) to act in the best interest of the patients. The best interest of the patients can be served only if they use the best available treatment irrespective of the system it comes from. The general public will benefit more if the two systems work closely together. The debate should shift to how to bring the two systems together to accelerate improvement in health of the people. Technology is being used in a big way to improve quality and access to health in both traditional and modern medicine. Both the Ministry of AYUSH and Ministry of Health and Family Welfare are spearheading the use of technology. There is a strong need to use technology to integrate the various systems to maximize health benefits to the public and accelerate the government’s policy of ‘One Country, One System’ by 2030.</p>



<p style="color: #a13621;"><em><strong>Composed by: &#8220;Dr Sanjiv Kumar is a public health physician with 45 years of experience across more than 30 countries in South Asia,Africa, Central Asia and Central eastern Europe. He was Dean and later Director, International Institute of Health Management Research. New Delhi. He was also Executive Director at National Health Systems Resource Centre, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, India. He led development of many policy and strategic documents to improve health in India including Guidelines for treatment of conditions of public health significance and National Health Policy 2017 and was a member of the core group to prepare National Health Research Policy, 2021. He has contributed to 125 scientific literature, books and chapters and has also been conferred with many accolades including UNICEF awards for his professional contribution. Presently he is the Founder Chairperson and Managing Trustee, Three Domain Health Leadership Foundation and develops and conducts training in leadership.
&#8220;</strong></em></p>



<p style="color: #a13621;"><em><strong>&#8220;Prof Neeta Kumar did MD in Pathology from the AIIMS, New Delhi and worked in progressively responsible positions at national and international at AIIMS and MAMC. She was Visiting Professor at University Hospital of Geneva and Aga Khan University Hospital, Nairobi. She was a consultant to WHO HQ in many areas especially in cancer control. Currently she is working as Professor and Head, General Pathology, Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi. She has special interest in medical education and research. She is Course Co- director for the various training workshops for since 2013. She was also chairperson of the internal research review committee at Jamia. She is a prolific scientific writer and has published more than 150 scientific papers, contributed chapters in WHO publications.&#8221;</strong></em></p>



<p style="color: #a13621;"><em><strong>&#8220;Dr Debleena Bhattacharya is presently Assistant Professor in Marwadi University (MU), Rajkot, Gujarat. Prior to joining MU, she has worked as Project coordinator for BIRAC-SRISTI PMU, a joint venture of Govt. of India and NGO located in Gujarat. She received her doctoral degree from IIT Dhanbad and her area of interest is wastewater treatment, environmental biotechnology, and molecular genomics. She has authored a book published by CRC Press, U.S.A alongwith scientific papers &amp; book chapters.&#8221;</strong></em></p>



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		<title>World’s First AI powered Ayurveda Protocol</title>
		<link>https://innohealthmagazine.com/2018/well-being/artificial-intelligence-ayurveda-protocol/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Dec 2018 08:24:41 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>World’s First Artificial Intelligence powered Ayurveda Protocols launched in India; prospects of its linkage of AYUSH grid brighten up</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.com/2018/well-being/artificial-intelligence-ayurveda-protocol/">World’s First AI powered Ayurveda Protocol</a> appeared first on <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.com">InnoHEALTH magazine</a>.</p>
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	<p><strong>World’s First AI-powered Ayurveda Protocol launched in India; prospects of its linkage of <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.cominnohealth-conference/universal-health-coverage/">AYUSH</a> grid brighten up</strong></p>
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	<p style="text-align: justify !important;">Boarding a wobbly roadways bus, a dhoti-kurta clad young man, with protuberant vermillion dash on forehead, used to head for mythological twin city of Mathura and Vrindavan in Uttar Pradesh, clutching tightly his voluminous bag, stuffed with <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.comwell-being/mother-of-all-healings/">Ayurvedic medicines</a> in tiny folded paper pouches for distribution to patients at ISKON center every weekend in early nineties.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">But, recently, sporting a brick colored shirt and creamy Nehru jacket and matching black tight trousers, Ayurveda medicines practitioner Dr. Partap Chauhan unveiled world’s first <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.comtrends/ai-engraving-footprints-on-healthcare-transcontinental-canvas/">Artificial Intelligence (AI)</a> powered protocols modeled on the basis of a mind-boggling database of patients and their successful cure.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">Moved by the protocols’ apparent efficacy, India’s <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.comnewscope/ayushman-bharat/">AYUSH</a> Secretary, Dr. Vaidya Rajesh Kotecha, has minced no words for exploration of a possibility to have a link of the protocols with the Ministry’s recently floated grid for the popularization of India’s traditional medicines at international fora.</p>
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	<p style="text-align: justify !important;">The world over, he said, moves are underway to reduce the cost of quality treatment. Recently, Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway, and JP Morgan have announced a company with an Indian American Dr. Atul Gawande as its CEO to work out healthcare of US employees. It might be typical of disrupting the healthcare industry whale cost, a conundrum is raging madly. The new company will be headquartered in Boston and will operate as an independent entity that is free from profit-making incentives and constraints.</p>
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	<p style="text-align: justify !important;">Dr. Gawande is a globally-renowned surgeon, writer, and <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.cominnohealth-conference/public-health-biotech/">public health</a> innovator. He practices general and endocrine surgery at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and is a Professor at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Harvard Medical School.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">“I’m thrilled to be named CEO of this healthcare initiative,” said Dr. Gawande, “I have devoted my public health career to building scalable solutions for better healthcare delivery that are saving lives, reducing suffering, and eliminating wasteful spending both in the US and across the world”. This work will take time but must be done. The system is broken, and better is possible.”</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">He is the Founding Executive Director of the health systems innovation center, Ariadne Labs. He also is a staff writer for the New Yorker magazine, has written four New York Times bestsellers: Complications, Better, The Checklist Manifesto, and Being Mortal, and has received numerous awards for his contributions to science and healthcare.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">“Medicine has triumphed in modern times, transforming the dangers of childbirth, injury, and disease from harrowing to manageable. But when it comes to the inescapable realities of aging and death, what medicine can do often runs counter to what it should”. Says Dr. Gawande in his book “Being Mortal”.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">Dr. Kotecha envisions Indian traditional medicines’ colossal potential in ensuring cheap and best treatment and country’s values, coupled with such medicines, have answers of all these emerging challenges. He spoke briefly about the “Being Mortal” book and the newly formed company.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">The <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.comnewscope/ayushman-bharat/">AYUSH</a> Secretary was of the view that Indian traditional medicines should be included in ICD -11 as Chinese medicines have entered the classification already. The International Classification of Diseases (ICD) is the international &#8220;standard diagnostic tool for epidemiology, <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.comissues/kanpur-zoo-adopts-innovative-methods-for-animal-health-management/">health management</a>, and clinical purposes.&#8221; Its full official name is International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems and is maintained by WHO.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">Amid these developments, the protocols have been framed. Dr. Partap Chauhan, Director Jiva <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.comwell-being/mother-of-all-healings/">Ayurveda</a>, narrated his arduous journey and said India’s traditional medicines efficacy was being recognized the world over, and his protocol would help according to it a scientific explanation on various parameters.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">He had started his journey from a small dispensary in a garage in Haryana in 1992, and now a globetrotter is interacting with world-famous universities for deeper scientific researches on country’s 5000 years old traditional medicines.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">The personalized treatment syndrome is catching up and researchers are underway on how to promote personalized treatment for more accuracy. He said the World’s first Diagnostic Protocols for Ayurveda would turn this ancient healing tradition into a data-and evidence-driven system of medicine and JIVA Health App.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">These protocols, meant to standardize the practice of Ayurveda, have taken four years to develop after analyzing the consultation records of more than two lakh patients; the protocols have been successfully run on 20,000 patients till now, with dramatic results. This system will create a wealth of data and evidence that will go on to validate Ayurveda as a legitimate science of treatment, boosting its acceptability worldwide. The JIVA health app will provide authentic and actionable <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.compersona/artificial-intelligence-coming-big-way-healthcare-sector/">health and wellness</a> information with content exclusively curated by Dr. Partap Chauhan.</p>
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	<p style="text-align: justify !important;">JIVA group President Rishi Pal Chauhan has said the JIVA’s unique protocols are like an operating system for Ayurveda practice that structures the practice of Ayurveda and creates the wealth of data. It is well known that unlike Allopathy, which is focused on symptoms and standardized drug choices, Ayurveda is fundamentally a personalized system of medicine.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">Even though thousands of years old, this traditional system of healing, conceptually, is a far more evolved science. For instance, personalized medicine (based on genomics) and the “systems view” of human health is only now beginning to come into fashion in allopathy, when Ayurveda has been built around these very concepts.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">The reason is that the scientific community asks for data and evidence – on what basis are the medicines given and how is their effect proven? This data and evidence Ayurveda does not have. The big question is: “How do you standardize a system of medicine that is fundamentally personalized, with patients being given different treatment based on the root cause, even if the symptoms are the same?”</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">This is the challenge of mapping intuitive Eastern systems of medicine over objective Western frameworks. <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.cominnovatiocuris/disha-act-for-healthcare-industry/">Data Analysis</a> of Consultation Records of two lakh patients four years ago, Jiva Ayurveda began a huge data analytics project, reviewing the consultation records of two lakh patients that its doctors had treated over the decades.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">After analysis, running into thousands of hours using <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.comtrends/ai-engraving-footprints-on-healthcare-transcontinental-canvas/">artificial intelligence</a>, machine learning, and computer modeling, the Jiva analysts concluded that while the Ayurveda treatment cannot be standardized for every patient, Ayurveda practice can surely be standardized. In other words, the way Ayurveda practitioners diagnose patients can be standardized by laying down definite protocols. This methodology currently exists only in the mind of the Ayurveda practitioner and each arrives at the diagnosis in his own way. The result of this is that no consistent data can be generated, and the methodology cannot be validated. And so began at JIVA the painstaking process of writing diagnostic protocols around the practice of Ayurveda by scanning the consultation records of lakhs of patients.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">India’s first-ever Protocols for Ayurveda: the protocols that have been created over the last four years by Jiva. These protocols, and the decision support system built over them, help Ayurveda practitioners anywhere in the world arrive at the correct diagnosis in a data-driven way. The system also categorizes the diseases in terms of severity, which has a direct bearing on prognosis. As the consultation protocol flows, based on patient answers, the system starts assigning weights to different diagnostic possibilities and makes calculations to arrive at an authoritative diagnosis. It helps avoid judgmental errors and the cost of the wrong diagnosis. It also suggests diagnostic clues that the doctor may have missed which may lead to a possible different line of treatment.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify !important;">Narrating all these, Dr. Chauhan says these protocols to standardize the practice of Ayurveda, the first-ever to be attempted in India, signal a revolutionary shift. They are akin to Ayurveda’s operating system that is accessible to everybody. This system will create a wealth of data and evidence that will eventually go on to validate Ayurveda as a legitimate science of treatment, boosting its acceptability worldwide. The protocols have been run successfully on 20,000 patients so far, with dramatic results. Three international universities are collaborating with JIVA to validate this data.</p>
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<p>The post <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.com/2018/well-being/artificial-intelligence-ayurveda-protocol/">World’s First AI powered Ayurveda Protocol</a> appeared first on <a href="https://innohealthmagazine.com">InnoHEALTH magazine</a>.</p>
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