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Proposal to license Ayurveda Practitioners in the US

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An Indian American ayurveda practitioner has proposed that ayurveda

practitioners should get licences to practice this ancient system of

Indian health care in the US.

 

Lakshmi C. Mishra, director of the Ayurvedic Health Care Center in

Rockville, Maryland, has proposed to Maryland's Board of Physicians

to introduce an official licensing programme, according to the Indus

Business Journal (IBJ).

 

The ayurveda system of medicine is based on the theory of balance

between the body, the soul and the mind. Though it is believed that

this system is as old as humanity, it was recorded down in texts

between 4000 BC and 6000 BC.

 

Mishra wants Maryland to introduce a training system similar to the

one that he had undergone in India.

 

He has proposed that the system should include four and a half years

of education followed by a year of internship in a hospital. This is

similar to the programme followed by the 200-odd ayurveda medical

colleges in India.

 

"The home of ayurveda is India, and that's where it developed for the

last thousands of years. So I'm taking that as the model," he told

IBJ.

 

As of now, there is no law in the US which requires practitioners of

ayurveda to have a licence.

Explaining that ayurvedic medicine considers the patient more

important than the disease, he said that those who practice this

system without proper training might end up making wrong diagnoses

and prescribing wrong treatments, making the patient sicker and

delaying correct treatment.

 

Mishra has also expressed concern over the prescription of ayurvedic

drugs by people who are not formally trained. Ayurvedic drugs use

animal, mineral and vegetable-based products.

 

Pointing out that a chiropractor in the US needs to have at least

3,000 hours of training before starting to practise and even a

masseur needs 500 hours, he said there was no such law for ayurveda.

The Indian programme includes 2,900 hours of education and 700 hours

of lab work.

 

There are around 20-odd ayurveda training institutes in the US, most

of which offer short-term courses.

 

Karen Wuff, a member of the Maryland Board of Physicians, was quoted

in the report as saying that the board was aware of the issue of

licensing ayurveda practitioners.

 

However, this was a new area and legislation could take years.

 

Mishra is planning to contact the Department of Health and Mental

Hygiene in Maryland and the Maryland Insurance Administration over

this issue. The American Association of Physicians of Indian Origin

(AAPI) is backing him.

http://www.medindia.net/news/view_news_main.asp?x=‘93

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