

DEHRADUN:
A National Portal for Pharmacovigilance in Indian systems of medicine will be launched within a month to aid the effort of the Ayush Ministry to curb the proliferation of misleading advertisements, said Dr Kousthubha Upadhyaya, Adviser (Ayurveda) to the Ayush Ministry here today.
The portal, tentatively named Trinetra, will facilitate quicker reporting of misleading advertisements by stakeholders in Ayush (Ayurveda, Yoga & Unani, Siddha and Homeopathy), he said while speaking at a session on “Pharmacovigilance and Good Manufacturing Practices” on the concluding day of the 10th World Ayurveda Congress.
Despite efforts to deter the practice in recent years, he said misleading advertisements continue to be reported almost on a daily basis. “The consumer is supreme, his health is supreme and no ad should adversely affect his health,” he said.
Pharmacovigilance refers to the practice of monitoring and preventing adverse effects of drugs.
Participants were given a preview of the portal by Dr M Kannan, Research Officer at the Central Council for Research in Siddha who led its developer team. Dr Kannan said the portal was designed with the aim of improving consumer safety.
Other panellists also stressed the need to curb misleading advertisements, saying they could tarnish the reputation of traditional Indian systems of medicine and negate ongoing efforts to promote Ayush globally.
They lamented that advertisements offering Ayurveda magic cures and medicines or treatments without side effects were regularly seen when even ancient ayurveda texts highlight possibility of adverse reactions.
Prof Rabi Narayan Acharya, Deputy Director General of Health Service (Ayush), said India was the first country in the world to bring misleading advertisements within the parameters of pharmacovigilance.
Prof Acharya, who was associated with the pharmacoviglance programme(PVP) since its inception in India in 2008, said it was initially vehemently resisted by Ayurveda practitioners and industry leaders. Many even feared that it would tarnish Ayurveda’s “side-effect free” reputation – a premise not supported by the ancient texts.
He said the PVP framework has since been strengthened with the setting up of a National Pharmacovigilance Centre as well as 99 peripheral centres across the country.
The panellists included Dr A Raghu, Deputy Director General Health Services (AYUSH); Dr Mohammad Khalid, ADC (Unani) in the Delhi Government’s Directorate of Ayush; Dr Gaurav Sharma and Prof Sudipta Kumar Rath from the Jaipur-based National Institute of Ayurveda; and Dr Soorya Narayan from The Himalaya Company.
more recommended stories
Naga Sadhu’s Recognized in France for Health Initiative Conducted at Maha Kumbh 2025MUMBAI:The revered Naga Sadhus have brought.
Fatty Liver No Longer Just a Lifestyle Disease: Experts Raise AlarmKOCHI:In a joint initiative by Amrita.
Complex Hernia Case Treated Successfully with Minimally Invasive SurgeryKOCHI:A 52-year-old male patient, who had.
DKMS Foundation India Honours Stem Cell DonorsKOCHI:Ahead of World Blood Cancer Day,.
Dangerously Low Oxygen Levels Normalized Through Complex SurgeryTHIRUVANANTHAPURAM:A complex surgery was successfully performed.
KSUM-backed Startup VitalView AI Flagged Chances of Nipah Incidence in KeralaKOCHI:Public health intelligence startup VitalView AI,.
Asthma Remains Underdiagnosed in 7 out of 10 Severe CasesKOZHIKODE:Marked by the GINA (the Global.
Aster Guardians Global Nursing Award Unveils Top 10 Finalists for 2025KOCHI:The Aster Guardians Global Nursing Award.
GenomeIndia Offers Long-term Benefit of Creating Healthy Posterity: ScientistTHIRUVANANTHAPURAM:Country’s pioneering scientific project GenomeIndia will.
Researchers at RGCB Discover New Methods to Overcome Bacterial Resistance to AntibioticsTHIRUVANANTHAPURAM: Researchers at the BRIC-Rajiv Gandhi.