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  2. Traditional Knowledge Digital Library - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_Knowledge...

    This experience prompted the Department of AYUSH, government of India to create a task force of experts in the areas of traditional medicine systems of India (i.e., Ayurveda, Unani, Siddha and Yoga), patent examiners, IT experts, scientists and technical officers, for the creation Traditional Knowledge Digital Library (TKDL). It was initiated ...

  3. Rasashastra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rasashastra

    The government of India has ordered that Ayurvedic products must specify their metallic content directly on the labels of the product; [19] however, M. S. Valiathan noted that "the absence of post-market surveillance and the paucity of test laboratory facilities [in India] make the quality control of Ayurvedic medicines exceedingly difficult at ...

  4. Ayurveda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayurveda

    Ayurveda is widely practiced in India and Nepal [3] where public institutions offer formal study in the form of a Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery (BAMS) degree. In certain parts of the world, the legal standing of practitioners is equivalent to that of conventional medicine. [3]

  5. Baidyanath Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baidyanath_Group

    Shree Baidyanath Ayurved Bhawan (Pvt) Limited was founded in 1917 by two brothers, Vaidya Pandit Ram Narayan Sharma and his brother Pandit Ram Dayal Joshi. Sharma and Pandit started a large scale production of Ayurvedic formulations from the centers: Kolkata (1921), Patna (1940), Jhansi (1941), Nagpur (1942) and Prayagraj (1958). [citation needed]

  6. Medical ethnobotany of India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_ethnobotany_of_India

    Herbal medicine in India is largely guided by folk medicine, both in codified cultural practices shared widely (Ayurveda, [5] Siddha, Unani), and highly localized practices unique to individual tribes or tribal groups . Between 3,000 [6] and 5,000 [7] species of medicinal plants grow in India with roughly 1,000 threatened with extinction. [7]

  7. BGR-34 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BGR-34

    BGR-34 (Blood Glucose Regulator-34) [1] is an Ayurvedic-derived product that is sold in India as an over-the-counter pill for the management of type 2 diabetes. It was developed in 2015 by two government-owned laboratories and launched commercially in 2016. It has been tested in only one, modest-sized, human trial. [2]

  8. Rasayana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rasayana

    In early ayurvedic medicine, rasāyana (Pali and Sanskrit: रसायन, "path of essence") is one of the eight areas of medicine in Sanskrit literature. [1] [2]The 11th-century Persian scholar Abū Rayhān Bīrūnī noted an Indian science named Rasāyana, focused on restoring health and rejuvenation through plant-derived medicines.

  9. Shodhana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shodhana

    In Rasa Shastra (the branch that deals with pharmaceutical processing of Ayurveda formulations), Shodhana is a process that is employed during the pharmaceutical processing either to detoxify, purify, or to potentiate the efficacy of the raw materials (of herbal, mineral, metal or animal origin). [1]