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. 2023 Jan-Feb;14(1):100474.
doi: 10.1016/j.jaim.2021.06.014. Epub 2021 Nov 24.

Medicalisation and Ayurveda: the need for pluralism and balance in global health systems

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Medicalisation and Ayurveda: the need for pluralism and balance in global health systems

John Dh Porter et al. J Ayurveda Integr Med. 2023 Jan-Feb.

Abstract

The current global economic and biomedical perspectives contribute content, strategy, and values to global health systems, like objectification and competition, which encourage the medicalisation of the system. Medicalisation overlooks our interdependence with other beings, the environment and biosphere. In contrast, ancient health traditions like Ayurveda, derived from Asian cultures, provide knowledge of the human being's composition of five basic states of nature that need to remain in constant equilibrium to ensure health (Svasthya). Asian health traditions encourage values like vulnerability and respect to facilitate an inherent relationship with the internal and external environment. The recent pandemic has revealed the fragile vulnerability in this nexus and the consequences to human health and well-being when that equilibrium is disturbed. Serious deliberations and discussions are needed between the modern economic and the Asian frameworks for healthcare which result in two different approaches to health and to health systems. This debate may encourage the creation of a philosophy and structure for a new global pluralistic health system more aligned to nature. These deliberations need to encourage the discussion of Svasthya (health), Soukhya (sustainable happiness), and the inner and outer ecological landscapes experienced by human beings that can be understood through mindful self-awareness. Global health systems need to evolve in the direction of a different, pluralistic philosophy of health that encourages a 'population's self-reliance in health' through an intimate and integrated connection with nature.

Keywords: Ayurveda; Global health; Health Policy and Systems Research; Medical pluralism; Medicalisation; Population self-reliance.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of interest Prof. John Porter, Dr. Unnikrishnan Payyappallimana, and Prof. Darshan Shankar are on the Editorial Board of the Journal, but they were not involved in the peer review process and editorial decisions related to this paper.

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