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Revisiting the Charaka Samhita
The Statesman Siliguri
|July 30, 2025
In keeping with its policy of promoting India's own knowledge systems, the Government of India has of late proposed integrating MBBS, the standard degree for physicians trained in modern medicine and surgery, with BAMS (Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery) which is rooted in ancient Indian medical traditions.
Although the idea is offered as a push towards 'holistic' medicine, anxieties prevail in many quarters regarding the implementation of such a scheme.
Many in the academic fraternity as well as common people feel that ayurveda, the ancient medical tradition of India, cannot match the allopathic branch of modern medicine and surgery, with respect to technological progress, advanced research and complexities of modern ailments.
But why do modern physicians have reservations about ayurveda? According to some scholars, this branch of ancient medical science has not undergone timely revisions and what is taught at ayurvedic colleges is an incongruous mix of truths and untruths. Moreover, the discipline has remained intellectually stagnant because of a continued reliance on outdated texts and traditional beliefs. It is indeed a sad decline for a branch of knowledge that was part of the great glory of ancient India.
The 3000-5000-year-old traditional system of healthcare of the Indian sub-continent is truly India's precious yet neglected treasure box. Dating back to the Vedic period, this ancient medical science is widely accepted as a holistic system with a philosophy that gives importance to the physical, mental, spiritual, social and environmental factors related to health and medicine. It accepts the panchabhuta-based (the five basic elements Prithvi, Jala, Agni, Vayu and Akasa that is, earth, water, fire, wind and space) nature of all natural objects, including the human body.
Today ayurveda and other traditional systems of healthcare are steadily gaining ground across the world, given the prohibitive cost of modern allopathic treatment and its side-effects. Unfortunately, in India, where ayurveda originated, there is a colossal indifference to this centuries-old medical treatment system.
This story is from the July 30, 2025 edition of The Statesman Siliguri.
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