PIB Summaries 10 April 2026

  1. World Homoeopathy Day 2026


  • World Homoeopathy Day (April 10) commemorates Samuel Hahnemann, highlighting India’s policy push toward AYUSH-based holistic healthcare systems.
  • Theme Homoeopathy for Sustainable Health aligns with preventive healthcare, low-cost treatment, and SDG-3 (Good Health and Well-being) goals.

Relevance

GS II (Governance & Social Sector)

  • Public health system strengthening through integration of AYUSH (homoeopathy) with primary healthcare (PHCs/CHCs).
  • Affordable healthcare delivery aligns with Article 21 (Right to Health judicial interpretation) and welfare state obligations.
  • Institutional reforms via National Commission for Homoeopathy Act, 2020 replacing earlier regulatory framework.
  • Cooperative federalism in implementation of National AYUSH Mission (NAM) across states.

Practice Question

  • Integration of traditional medicine systems like Homoeopathy into Indias public health framework presents both opportunities and challenges.Critically examine. (250 words)
Concept of Homoeopathy
  • Based on principle like cures like, where substances causing symptoms are used in diluted form to treat similar symptoms.
  • Law of minimum dose emphasises ultra-dilution, stimulating self-healing mechanisms while reducing side effects.
  • Treatment is individualised, focusing on physical, mental, and emotional conditions, unlike disease-centric allopathy.
Historical evolution in India
  • Introduced in early 19th century (around 1810); gained acceptance after treatment of Maharaja Ranjit Singh (1839).
  • Institutional expansion included first hospital (1847, Tanjore) and growth in Bengal through Indian practitioners.
  • Post-independence reforms: Central Council of Homoeopathy (1973) and research council (1978) formalised education and regulation.
Regulatory and research architecture
  • National Commission for Homoeopathy regulates education, ethics, curriculum, and practitioner registration.
  • Central Council for Research in Homoeopathy conducts clinical research, drug standardisation, and epidemic studies through nationwide units.
  • Pharmacopoeia Commission for Indian Medicine & Homoeopathy ensures quality, safety, and standardisation of drugs.
Infrastructure & capacity
  • India has 3.45 lakh registered doctors, 8,593 dispensaries, 277 institutions, and 34 research centres.
  • Expansion of educational capacity reflects growing demand and regulatory strengthening in AYUSH sector.
Integration into public health
  • National AYUSH Mission (NAM) promotes co-location at PHCs and CHCs, improving accessibility and affordability.
  • Integration with NPCDCS supports chronic disease management using complementary therapeutic approaches.
Capacity building & research promotion
  • AYURSWASTHYA strengthens institutions and research excellence, while AYURGYAN focuses on training and skill enhancement.
  • Extra Mural Research Scheme provides up to ₹70 lakh funding, promoting scientific validation in epidemics and chronic diseases.
Drug quality & supply chain
  • AOGUSY scheme enhances manufacturing standards, WHO-GMP compliance, and regulatory quality control.
  • National Medicinal Plants Board (NMPB) supports 7,0007,500 medicinal plant species, ensuring sustainable raw material supply.
Preventive & holistic healthcare
  • Homoeopathy supports preventive, promotive, and chronic care, offering cost-effective and low-side-effect treatments.
  • IEC initiatives promote awareness, behavioural change, and community participation in preventive healthcare.
Epidemic preparedness
  • CCRH interventions used in dengue, chikungunya, encephalitis, and COVID-19 as prophylactic and adjunct therapies.
  • Example: Arsenicum album (COVID-19) used for ~5 lakh people across 136 centres, indicating large-scale public health application.
Global outreach
  • India promotes AYUSH through international cooperation, academic exchange, and research collaboration.
  • Strengthens India’s role as global hub for traditional medicine systems.
  • Scientific validation gap due to lack of large-scale, high-quality clinical trials meeting global biomedical standards.
  • Standardisation challenges in drug preparation, dosage, and practitioner-dependent treatment variability.
  • Integration gaps with modern medicine due to weak referral systems and coordination issues.
  • Global scepticism limits international acceptance and export potential of homoeopathic systems.
  • Weak monitoring mechanisms hinder evidence-based policymaking and outcome evaluation.
  • Promote large-scale clinical trials and interdisciplinary research to strengthen scientific credibility.
  • Ensure global-standard regulation and quality assurance in drug manufacturing and safety protocols.
  • Develop integrative healthcare models combining AYUSH and allopathy, especially for chronic diseases and primary care.
  • Use digital health tools and data analytics for monitoring outcomes and improving policy decisions.
  • Expand global collaboration and knowledge exchange, positioning India as leader in traditional medicine systems.
  • Founder: Samuel Hahnemann; key text: Organon of Medicine.
  • National Commission for Homoeopathy Act, 2020 replaced earlier regulatory body.
  • CCRH operates through 30+ institutes, focusing on research and epidemic response.
  • PCIM&H acts as central drug testing and standardisation body for AYUSH medicines.
  • National AYUSH Mission integrates traditional systems into public healthcare infrastructure.

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