Ayurveda
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- Cleveland Clinic - What Is Ayurveda and Does It Work?
- National Center for Biotechnology Information - PubMed Central - Ayurveda: Science of life, genetics, and epigenetics
- LiveScience - Ayurveda: Facts About Ayurvedic Medicine
- International Journal of Creative Research Thoughts - Natural Medicines Prescribed in the Vedas
- Healthline - 12 Powerful Ayurvedic Herbs and Spices with Health Benefits
- GovInfo - Ayurvedic Medicine: An Introduction
- WebMD - What is Ayurveda?
- Verywell Health - Ayurveda: The Facts
- Better Health Channel - Ayurveda
- IndiaNetzone - History of Ayurveda
- Also called:
- Ayurvedic medicine
- Key People:
- Sushruta
- Related Topics:
- India
- curry tree
- Yoga
- black cumin
- shilajit
Ayurveda, traditional system of Indianmedicine. Ayurvedic medicine is an example of a well-organized system of traditional health care, both preventive and curative, that is widely practiced in parts ofAsia. Ayurveda has a long tradition behind it, having originated inIndia perhaps as much as 3,000 years ago. Today it remains a favoured form of health care in large parts of the Eastern world, especially in India, where a large percentage of the population uses this system exclusively or combined with modern medicine.
The practice of Ayurveda
TheIndian Medical Council was set up in 1971 by the Indian government to establish maintenance of standards for undergraduate and postgraduate education. It establishes suitable qualifications in Indian medicine and recognizes various forms of traditional practice including Ayurveda, Unani, and Siddha. Projects have been undertaken tointegrate theindigenous Indian and Western forms of medicine. Most Ayurvedic practitioners work in rural areas, providing health care to at least 500 million people in India alone. They therefore represent a major force for primary health care, and their training and deployment are important to the government of India.
Like scientific medicine, Ayurveda has both preventive and curative aspects. The preventive component emphasizes the need for a strict code of personal and social hygiene, the details of which depend upon individual, climatic, and environmental needs. Bodily exercises, the use ofherbal preparations, andYoga form a part of theremedial measures. The curative aspects of Ayurveda involve the use of herbal medicines, external preparations,physiotherapy, and diet. It is a principle of Ayurveda that the preventive and therapeutic measures be adapted to the personal requirements of each patient.
History of Ayurveda
Ayurveda is attributed toDhanvantari, the physician to the gods in Hindu mythology, who received it fromBrahma. Its earliest concepts were set out in the portion of the Vedas known as theAtharvaveda (c. 2nd millenniumbce). The period of Vedic medicine lasted until about 800bce. The Vedas are rich in magical practices for thetreatment of diseases and in charms for the expulsion of the demons traditionally supposed to cause diseases. The chief conditions mentioned arefever (takman), cough,consumption,diarrhea, dropsy (generalizededema),abscesses, seizures,tumours, andskin diseases (includingleprosy). The herbs recommended for treatment are numerous.
The golden age of Indian medicine, from 800bce until about 1000ce, was marked especially by the production of the medicaltreatises known as theCaraka-samhita andSusruta-samhita, attributed respectively to Caraka, a physician, andSusruta, a surgeon. Estimates place theCaraka-samhita in its present form as dating from the 1st centuryce, although there were earlier versions. TheSusruta-samhita probably originated in the last centuriesbce and had become fixed in its present form by the 7th centuryce. Of somewhat lesser importance are the treatises attributed to Vagbhata. All later writings on Indian medicine were based on these works, which analyze thehuman body in terms of earth, water, fire, air, andether as well as the three bodily humours (vata,pitta, andkapha).
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica