Ayurveda in the New Millennium: Emerging Roles and Future Challenges attempts to survey the progress made in this field and to formulate a course of action to take Ayurveda to the new millennium. It also identifies the many stumbling blocks that need to be removed, if Ayurveda is to cater to the needs of a wider audience.
Ayurveda or "the sacred knowledge of longevity" has been practiced in India and many Asian countries since time immemorial. Interest in Ayurveda started growing all over the world in the late 1970s, following the Alma Ata Declaration adopted by the W.H.O. in 1978. Ayurveda in the New Millennium: Emerging Roles and Future Challenges attempts to survey the progress made in this field and to formulate a course of action to take Ayurveda through the new millennium. It also identifies the many stumbling blocks that need to be removed if Ayurveda is to cater to the needs of a wider audience.
Features:
Newer insights into the history of Ayurveda
Regulatory aspects of the manufacture of ayurvedic medicines
Industrial production of traditional ayurvedic medicines
Quality control
The scientific rationale of single herb therapy
Biological effects of ayurvedic formulations
Optimization of ancient wisdom and newer knowledge
Conservation of threatened herbs
Nutraceuticals and cosmeceuticals from Ayurveda
Critical view of Ayurveda in the West
Direction for the Ayurveda renaissance
Ayurveda in the New Millennium: Emerging Roles and Future Challenges describes the strength of Ayurveda and how to usher in the Ayurveda renaissance. This book will be of interest to proponents of Ayurveda and all branches of traditional and alternative medicine. Experts from the fields of medicine, pharmacology, new drug discovery and food technology will also find it useful.
"This book covers scientific aspects of Ayurvedic medicine from past to present and beyond. The material is dense, and each chapter begins with a table of contents for ease of reference. The author and contributors include a trove of past research and information making the case for the quality of this book. It is not merely a rehashing of previous work, but a connector between past work and what is possible in the future"
- Alane G Lucht, D.C., Northwestern Health Sciences University