PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Global trends in the integration of traditional and modern medicine: challenges and opportunities

2026-03-12
(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.

 

Full text:

https://www.xiahepublishing.com/2835-6357/FIM-2025-00040

 

The study was recently published in the Future Integrative Medicine.

Future Integrative Medicine (FIM) is the official scientific journal of the Capital Medical University. It is a prominent new journal that promotes future innovation in medicine.It publishes both basic and clinical research, including but not limited to randomized controlled trials, intervention studies, cohort studies, observational studies, qualitative and mixed method studies, animal studies, and systematic reviews.

 

Follow us on X: @xiahepublishing

Follow us on LinkedIn:  Xia & He Publishing Inc.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Medicinal plants with anti-entamoeba histolytica activity: phytochemistry, efficacy, and clinical potential

2026-03-12
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) ...

What a releaf: Tomatoes, carrots and lettuce store pharmaceutical byproducts in their leaves

2026-03-12
In areas where freshwater is scarce, farmers often turn to treated wastewater to irrigate crops. And many regulators and consumers worry about exposing food to compounds routinely found in wastewater, including many psychoactive medications that treat mental disorders.   But new research from Johns Hopkins University has found that certain crops—tomatoes, carrots, and lettuce—store those chemicals in their leaves. This may be good news for tomato and carrot lovers who eat the fruit and roots of those vegetables, respectively.  The research, published today in Environmental Science ...

Evaluating the effects of hypnotics for insomnia in obstructive sleep apnea

2026-03-12
OSA is a common sleep disorder characterized by oxygen desaturation due to repeated airway collapse during sleep. This leads to oxygen desaturation or awakening from sleep. It is often linked to metabolic problems, cardiovascular disease, and a lower quality of life. OSA and insomnia symptoms often co-occur, a condition known as comorbid insomnia and sleep apnea or COMISA. This can complicate usual treatments like continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy, which is often recommended for moderate to ...

A new reagent makes living brains transparent for deeper, non-invasive imaging

2026-03-12
Fukuoka, Japan—Making a living brain transparent and watching its neurons fire without disturbing their function—sounds like science fiction, doesn't it? Yet the solution may already exist within our own bodies. In a paper published in Nature Methods on March 12, a research team led by Kyushu University introduces a new reagent called SeeDB-Live. It uses albumin—a common protein in blood serum—to clear tissue while preserving cellular function. The technique allows scientists to see deeper, brighter structures in both brain slices in a dish and living mice, reaching neural activity that was previously out of sight. “This ...

Smaller insects more likely to escape fish mouths

2026-03-12
A Kobe University study shows that small aquatic beetles survive catfish attacks by resisting ingestion inside the catfish’s mouth and being spat out alive. This research contributes to a deeper understanding of size-dependent predator-prey relationships in aquatic insects and fish. Once prey is captured by a predator, it’s easy for us to think of it as a death sentence. But in certain predator-prey relationships, the fight is far from over. For example, Kobe University ecologist SUGIURA Shinji revealed in a previous study that a small aquatic beetle, Regimbartia attenuata, can survive frog predation by escaping alive through the frog’s vent. He explains, “Whether ...

Failed experiment by Cambridge scientists leads to surprise drug development breakthrough

2026-03-12
Scientists at the University of Cambridge have developed a new way to alter complex drug molecules using light rather than toxic chemicals – a discovery that could accelerate and improve how medicines are designed and made.  Published today (Thursday 12 March) in Nature Synthesis, the study introduces what the team calls an “anti-Friedel–Crafts” reaction. A classic Friedel–Crafts reaction uses strong chemicals or metal catalysts under harsh experimental conditions. This means the reaction can only happen in the early stages of drug manufacturing, and is followed by many additional chemical steps to produce ...

Salad packs a healthy punch to meet a growing Vitamin B12 need

2026-03-12
A pioneering research-industry partnership has used advances in indoor farming technology to grow pea shoots fortified with Vitamin B12, opening an exciting route to market for farmers and addressing a major public health need. The partnership between the John Innes Centre and the Quadram Institute, based at the Norwich Research Park, the University of Bristol, and indoor farm specialists LettUs Grow, harnessed the latest aeroponic techniques to successfully deliver the recommended daily allowance (RDA) of Vitamin B12 within a 15-gram portion of pea shoots. The fortified salad crop not only exceeded expectations by delivering in excess of the RDA of Vitamin B12 in a single serving ...

Capsule technology opens new window into individual cells

2026-03-12
Researchers have developed a capsule-based method that makes it possible to analyse the same cell through multiple experimental steps. The technology overcomes a long-standing limitation in cell research and could open new ways to study disease mechanisms at the single-cell level. In a study published in the scientific journal Science, Visiting Professor Linas Mazutis at Umeå University and his research team present a new technology for analysing individual cells. The method addresses a long-standing technical challenge in cell research: until now, scientists have usually ...

We are not alone: Our Sun escaped together with stellar “twins” from galaxy center

2026-03-12
Tokyo, Japan – Researchers have uncovered evidence for our Sun joining a mass migration of similar “twins” leaving the core regions of our galaxy, 4 to 6 billion years ago. The team created and studied an unprecedentedly accurate catalogue of stars and their properties using data from the European Space Agency’s Gaia satellite. Their discovery sheds light on the evolution of our galaxy, particularly the development of the rotating bar-like structure at its center.   While archaeology on Earth studies the human past, galactic archaeology traces the vast journey of stars and galaxies. For example, scientists know that our Sun was born around ...

Scientists find new way of measuring activity of cell editors that fuel cancer

2026-03-12
Cancer is caused by faulty genes, but what also shapes a cancer cell’s behaviour is how a gene’s instructions are trimmed and rearranged before they are turned into the proteins that keep a cell alive. A study published today in Nature Communications reveals a new way of measuring that editing process, known as splicing, directly. It is the first time scientists have been able to get a clear view of how tumours systematically rewire their genetic instructions to aid growth and survival, and it ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

$3.4 million grant to improve weight-management programs

Higher burnout rates among physicians who treat sickle cell disease

Wetlands in Brazil’s Cerrado are carbon-storage powerhouses

Brain diseases: certain neurons are especially susceptible to ALS and FTD

Father’s tobacco use may raise children’s diabetes risk

Structured exercise programs may help combat “chemo brain” according to new study in JNCCN

The ‘croak’ conundrum: Parasites complicate love signals in frogs

Global trends in the integration of traditional and modern medicine: challenges and opportunities

Medicinal plants with anti-entamoeba histolytica activity: phytochemistry, efficacy, and clinical potential

What a releaf: Tomatoes, carrots and lettuce store pharmaceutical byproducts in their leaves

Evaluating the effects of hypnotics for insomnia in obstructive sleep apnea

A new reagent makes living brains transparent for deeper, non-invasive imaging

Smaller insects more likely to escape fish mouths

Failed experiment by Cambridge scientists leads to surprise drug development breakthrough

Salad packs a healthy punch to meet a growing Vitamin B12 need

Capsule technology opens new window into individual cells

We are not alone: Our Sun escaped together with stellar “twins” from galaxy center

Scientists find new way of measuring activity of cell editors that fuel cancer

Teens using AI meal plans could be eating too few calories — equivalent to skipping a meal

Inconsistent labeling and high doses found in delta-8 THC products: JSAD study

Bringing diabetes treatment into focus

Iowa-led research team names, describes new crocodile that hunted iconic Lucy’s species

One-third of Americans making financial trade-offs to pay for healthcare

Researchers clarify how ketogenic diets treat epilepsy, guiding future therapy development

PsyMetRiC – a new tool to predict physical health risks in young people with psychosis

Island birds reveal surprising link between immunity and gut bacteria

Research presented at international urology conference in London shows how far prostate cancer screening has come

Further evidence of developmental risks linked to epilepsy drugs in pregnancy

Cosmetic procedures need tighter regulation to reduce harm, argue experts

How chaos theory could turn every NHS scan into its own fortress

[Press-News.org] Global trends in the integration of traditional and modern medicine: challenges and opportunities