(Press-News.org) Traditional medicine (TM), defined by the WHO as the knowledge and practices based on indigenous theories, is used by over 80% of the global population, particularly in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Modern medicine (MM), grounded in the biomedical model, excels in acute care but often lacks holistic perspectives. Importantly, many modern drugs—such as artemisinin and aspirin—originate from traditional knowledge. Integrating TM and MM aims to combine the strengths of both systems to deliver holistic, patient-centered care. This review explores global integration models, identifies challenges, and proposes strategies for an inclusive healthcare future.
Global Trends in Integration
Asia:
Asia leads in state-driven integration. India's AYUSH system is formally integrated into national healthcare, with over 750,000 practitioners and services co-located in thousands of public facilities. China maintains parallel TCM and biomedicine systems, though integration remains underutilized. South Korea's dual system operates under national insurance, ensuring broad access. Japan integrates Kampo medicine within its health insurance. Thailand and Bhutan have institutionalized traditional practices into public healthcare.
Africa:
Up to 80% of Africa's population relies on TM. Countries like South Africa, Ghana, and Nigeria have established regulatory frameworks and research institutions. WHO African Region member states have increased TM policies from 8 in 2000 to 40 in 2020. Collaborative research and training programs are expanding, though regulatory enforcement remains inconsistent.
Europe:
Integration is diverse. Germany has high CAM use (40% of adults). Switzerland includes complementary medicine in basic health insurance. The UK's Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine offers various therapies. Challenges include regulatory discrepancies and debates over scientific validation.
North America:
In the U.S., CAM use has steadily increased, with 47.9% of adults using at least one therapy in 2019. Out-of-pocket spending reached $30.2 billion in 2012. Academic centers like Harvard's Osher Center lead research and clinical integration. Canada integrates Indigenous traditional healing into medical education.
Latin America and the Caribbean:
Over 400 million people use traditional medicine, with annual spending estimated at $3 billion. Cuba and Brazil lead in formal integration through national programs supporting acupuncture, homeopathy, and phytotherapy within public health systems.
Middle East:
CAM use is widespread (45.9–85.9%). Countries like Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and Iran are exploring integrative oncology and medical education reforms. Regional initiatives promote multidisciplinary supportive care models.
Oceania:
In Australia and New Zealand, integration focuses on Indigenous healing practices (Aboriginal bush medicine and Rongoā Māori). National health plans recognize traditional practices, and up to 70% of the population uses CAM.
Challenges in Integration
Key challenges include: epistemological differences (holistic vs. reductionist), methodological incompatibilities with RCTs, lack of standardization and quality control, herb-drug interactions and weak pharmacovigilance, regulatory and policy barriers, intellectual property rights and biopiracy, sociocultural acceptance gaps, systemic biases and marginalization of TM, educational gaps and professional resistance, insufficient financial investment, and translational gaps from evidence to practice.
A Strategic Roadmap
Effective integration requires:
Global leadership: WHO's Global Centre for Traditional Medicine (GCTM) in India bridges ancient wisdom and modern science.
Increased research funding with interdisciplinary review panels respecting diverse epistemologies.
Education reform integrating TM into both TM and conventional medical curricula.
Methodological pluralism: pragmatic trials, n-of-1 studies, and real-world evidence alongside RCTs.
Regulatory harmonization for licensing, safety, and quality control.
Intellectual property protection through sui generis systems and benefit-sharing.
Community engagement respecting cultural contexts.
Clinical integration into guidelines, electronic health records, and multidisciplinary care.
Open science and implementation research to translate evidence into practice.
Conclusions
Integrating TM and MM offers immense promise for holistic, inclusive healthcare. However, overcoming epistemological, methodological, regulatory, educational, and cultural challenges requires a coordinated global strategy. With institutional support from bodies like the WHO GCTM, rigorous research, and ethical partnerships, integration can transform global health governance, respecting both traditional wisdom and modern science to improve outcomes for diverse populations.
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Background and objectives
Amoebiasis, or amoebic dysentery, is a gastrointestinal disorder caused by the parasite Entamoeba histolytica. The disease is endemic in parts of Africa, Asia, North and South America, leading to several deaths annually. Reported adverse effects associated with the current first-line treatment for amoebiasis, coupled with the evolution of resistance to it, call for the need to search for plant-based alternatives. This study systematically reviews medicinal plants with activity against Entamoeba histolytica.
Methods
The PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) ...
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