Mixopathy Study of Facts and Myth, in Fact, It's the Poor Who Suffer Not the Elites
Keywords:
Ayurveda, Mixopathy, SurgeryAbstract
The government has issued a notification allowing post-graduate practitioners in some streams of Ayurveda to be trained to do surgical procedures, such as operations, a move that has been criticized by the fashionable medical community. The Central Council of Indian Medicine (CCIM), a statutory organization under the AYUSH Ministry charged with managing Indian medicine, issued a gazette on November 20. A government notification issued on November 19 stated that particular surgical operations that an Ayurveda postgraduate medico must be "practically taught to know, as well as independently do". One more claim is that it’s not that Ayurveda practitioners are not trained in surgeries, or don’t perform them. Besides, they also claim several Ayurvedic procedures almost exactly match those of recent medicine about how or where to form a cut or incision, and the way to perform the operation. Aside from that, they also claim that medical-legal issues, surgical ethics, and consent are additionally a part of the course, aside from teaching Sushruta’s surgical principles, and surgery may be a highly skilled-based field. If this policy is Ayurvedics performing general surgical procedures, then the skill to urge is compromised and can cause tons of complications. But in fact, if well-renowned people all comply with treating themselves and having their surgeries done by Ayurvedic surgeons, then sure, I might happily agree. In fact, it is the poor that suffer, not the elites.