*
Corresponding author: Maria I. Dalamagka
Copyright © 2024 Author(s) retain the copyright of this article. This article is published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Liscense 4.0.
Integrating traditional medicine into a modern health care system
Maria I. Dalamagka
*
Department of Anaesthesia, General Hospital of Larisa, Greece.
International Journal of Science and Research Archive, 2024, 12(01), 2372–2375
Publication history: Received on 28 April 2024; revised on 07 June 2024; accepted on 10 June 2024
Article DOI: https://doi.org/10.30574/ijsra.2024.12.1.1046
Abstract
Traditional Medicine collectively referred to as complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) when commonly used
outside their traditional context, alongside other medical systems, including Western biomedicine.The World Health
Organization officially promoted traditional medicine in developing countries in 1978, there have been increasing
interests among developing countries in integrating traditional medicine into a national health care system. Integrating
traditional medicine into a modern health care system, moreover, can benefit industrialized nations as well. The
contributions of Traditional and Modern Scientific Medicines to health care delivery have attracted a great deal
attention in most communities worldwide. Traditional Chinese medicine, Ayurveda, Kampo, traditional Korean
medicine, and Unani have been practiced in some areas of the world and have blossomed into orderly-regulated systems
of medicine. More than 80% of the world’s population in over 170 of WHO’s 194 Member States currently use some
form of traditional medicine, such as herbal medicine, yoga, Ayurveda, acupuncture and acupressure, and indigenous
therapies.To generate awareness about traditional medicine, since the 1980s, a number of publications on self-health
care have been developed to inform people about the benefits and uses of traditional medicine. Some of the areas of
focused research include studies on the development of anticancer drugs, cardiovascular diseases such as
arteriosclerosis and angina pectoris, respiratory diseases such as bronchial asthma, obesity, diabetes and other
metabolic disorders, and basic studies on acupuncture therapeutic mechanisms for various bone and joint and spinal
disorders, and on different kinds of composition of the human body. To ensure the safety, standardization, efficacy and
quality of traditional medicines, the practitioners must follow the same stringent standards and regulations for
production and use of traditional medicines as are followed for allopathic medicines. This study aims to summarize the
advancements made in understanding the efficacy, effectiveness of Traditional Medicine. Traditional and local
knowledge systems need to be protected, preserved, and studied as different ways to approach modern healthcare,
science, and technology at large. Significant challenges exist in integrating the differing perspectives. Traditional
knowledge is derived from years of history and experience and is preserved through long, complex narrations lacking
the traditionally rigorous scientific scrutiny required by modern medicine. Modern scientists are prone to quickly
dismiss its merit, considering it to be irrelevant as a result. For many, traditional medicine is the first port of call, and
practitioners of traditional medicine have played an important role in treating chronic illnesses. These traditional
medicines and practices have been preserved, organized and modernized during the past several decades, and have
been fully integrated into the national health-care delivery systems from the central to the most peripheral
administrative levels.
Keywords: TM; CAM; Health; Herbs; Acupuncture; Medicine
1. Introduction
In the case of China, Western medicine was introduced in the sixteenth century, but it did not undergo any development
until the nineteenth century. Before that, TCM was the dominant form of medical care in the country. Now TCM still
plays an important role in China, and it is constantly being developed. TCM is based on 5000 years of medical practice