It is often said that the biggest problem in healthcare is not the science, but the commerce of it. Commerce is more than the activity of buying and selling; it is the control of social dealings between people. What social contracts do we assume in society? Should healthcare be free? Who will pay for the time and energy of giving care? Should caregivers be volunteers? Who will pay for the medicines that take time and energy, as well as substances, preparation and dispensing? How do we valuate a life and who should get how much care?
The ancient texts of ayurveda advise to first serve the commerce decisions and needs of the bhupa-ir, or ruler of the land. This ruler of the land -- today called king -- was not the one who ruled by brute force, but rather the one who had learned the ways of the land, its waters, its weather, the crafts of the people, the cultures, and the languages. The one with the allegiance to peacefully maintain and serve the land and keep the people healthy became the master of the land, appointed bhupair. Social dealings that sustained the resources and the health of the people were prioritized. Projects or trade that raped the land of its richness of soil, seed, trees, and crafts were not permitted by the bhupair because they created imbalance, both in the land and in the strength of the people. Giving people the good life, filled with health and the ability to learn, work and live happily was the priority.
For thousands of years, Indian societies and native American societies maintained this code of conduct. The invaders who arrived often preferred the peaceful king and remained as members. But then a new trend developed. Conquerers came to abuse power, to undo the peace on one land and take from it in order to establish their own dominion. The underlying insecurity of a person makes him want to topple another. Instead of vasudhaiva kutumbakam (the world is one family), the working principle became divide and conquer. The attitude filtered to the local levels of power, prioritizing control and greed rather than harmony and sharing. This colonial mentality has persisted for 2000 years, tearing at the fabric of peaceful society.
In modern day healthcare, the business of medicine is promoted actively in most countries. On one side, the government states its concern for the health of the people. On the other hand, most governance bodies wait for commercial ventures in which they can profit from the delivery of health services, products, care.
Like American disparities in health, India today is also known for its huge population and disparities in health. The rich are sick with chronic diseases due to unhealthy lifestyle, with cash flow spent on choices blindly guided by clever advertising. The poor are sick with deficiency diseases, deficiency of knowledge, deficiency of nutrients, deficiency of proper resources for learning and sustaining health.
For example, in Bengal, known for its rich heritage of ayurvedic parampara (traditional lineages of learning), the healthcare system has been challenged for 200 years by the systematic deprivation of knowledge to the people. While the land is naturally filled with medicinal plants, the best way to get people dependent on commercial avenues of health-seeking behavior is to deprive them of the knowledge of resources freely around them. Since the time Sanskrt was forbidden and ayurveda was outlawed in favor of English medicine, the health providers struggled to preserve intelligent ancient traditions.
Today, doctors of ayush (ayurveda, yoga, unani, siddha, homeopathy) in Bengal struggle to get their patients to use medicinal plants for diseases once they are diagnosed by modern medicine. Patients are reluctant to state their preferences and they are taught by the media that real medicine is pharmaceutical medicine, due to conventional medicine rules and due to the bias of journalists.
Several realities stand as obstacles due to the hegemony of medical institutions and the mainstream media, who are largely owned by the pharmaceutical block. Ayush doctors hired by the Indian government as medical officers for the public are assigned to work in state-funded health centers. As only the wealthy can afford private hospitals, by default most state health centers are visited by the poor, often non-literate and often gullible. Ayush doctors see patients, but after the basic medical information intake and some lifestyle counseling, the conventional doctors comes and takes over, giving the modern medical prescription. Natural medicines that help to solve the anti-microbial resistance (AMR) crisis are thrown out in favor of the same antibiotics that are over-prescribed and abusing the ecosystem.
Frustrated that they cannot practice their own medical system and write prescriptions according to their training, ayush officers are shunted into the roles of a junior medical student. They do not get the confidence of using their own medical competence, even if the clinic pharmacy has the medicines. They cannot prescribe them due to bullying of conventional doctors.
Forced to work as junior medical personnel, doing all the work then handing the chart over to an allopathic doctor for the final signature, payment, and therapeutic prescription has cost ayush doctors their self-esteem. It furthers a system in which ayurveda is suppressed.
But ultimately, the patient suffers. Just as women who want natural deliveries when they are in labor are forced into c-sections, so patients who want lesser side-effects and nature-based herbal formulations are forced to take conventional medical prescriptions. Patients do have a right to state the care they want, but they must be articulate, intelligent and informed. Most are not.
The solution for promoting medicines effective for patients is a reform by the masses, demanding greater education on other medical systems and demanding all medicinal options, not only mainstream medical options. Only when the patients demand freedom and education to rightfully choose their own system of health will ayurveda truly thrive.
week 102. TheSouthAsianTimes
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Dr. Bhaswati Bhattacharya is a Fulbright Specialist 2018‐2023 in Public Health, a family physician in the Department of Medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York, NY, and holds doctorates in pharmacology and Ayurveda. She teaches ayurvedic nutrition on global platforms and cleans her channels regularly with sesame oil, mustard oil, and ghee.
Her bestselling book Everyday Ayurveda is published by Penguin Random House.
To order an autographed copy, write to bhaswati@post.harvard.edu.
To learn more, visit www.drbhaswati.com
Wonderful article. You have correctly summed up the current sad situation. It is unfortunate that Ayurved is not recognized for the wealth of knowledge that it has and the great good that it can do, for individuals and for society