India’s struggle to integrate traditional medicine into modern healthcare

In August 2023 India hosted the World Health Organization’s first ever Traditional Medicine Global Summit. Thirteen countries, including Brazil, Cuba, India, and Mexico, disclosed that they had a plan for integrating traditional, complementary, and integrative medicine (TCIM) systems1 into their national health service delivery.Back in 2005, 45 of WHO’s 194 member states had national policies on TCIM2; in 2023 this was around 100.3 TCIM treatments are part of WHO’s essential medicine list and essential health service packages. They are covered by national health insurance schemes in several countries, including many US states and Canadian provinces, where naturopathic doctors4 can make diagnoses, order tests, use medical technology, write prescription drugs, and perform minor surgeries.A major reason for this trend is patchy health coverage due to a shortage of health workers. In India 71% of the population live in rural areas, but only 36% of its health workforce is located there. In…
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