
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the head of the World Health Organization, referenced the establishment of the Global Traditional Medicine Center in India and the first international conference on conventional medicine held there on Monday. He highlighted how the function that the UN health agency is doing to promote access to drugs and various health products went on through the time 2023.
Ghebreyesus stated in his comment as he presented his statement to the 77th World Health Assembly in Geneva that” we also established the Global Traditional Medicine Centre in India and hosted the second global conference on conventional medicine.
The UN Health Organization and the Indian government had signed an agreement to identify the WHO Global Center for Traditional Medicine in March 2022.
The UN health agency had stated in a media release at the time that this worldwide information center for traditional medication, which is supported by an expense of$ 250 million from India, aims to harness the potential of conventional medicine from all over the globe using modern science and technology to improve the health of people and the planet.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi had said the agreement between the Ministry of Ayush and WHO to establish the Global Centre for Traditional Medicine ( GCTM) world’s first at Jamnagar, Gujarat, is a commendable initiative.
In Jamnagar in April 2022, he laid the foundation of WHO-GCTM.
Modi had stated that the WHO-GCTM is recognition of India’s commitment and ability in this area when he spoke at the time. ” India’s traditional healthcare method is not limited just to care. It is a holistic lifestyle knowledge. India regards this agreement as a great duty to advance humanity as a whole.
WHO had convened the Traditional Medicine Global Summit in August last year in Gandhinagar, Gujarat. The conference was i- hosted by India, which held the G20 president in 2023. It was held alongside the G20 Health Ministerial meet.
The mountain explored the role of classic, complement, and integrated healthcare in addressing pressing health problems and driving improvement in global wellbeing and sustainable growth.
Ghebreyesus had arrived in Gujarat to take part in the world conference on standard medicine, and he received a comfortable welcome.
Ghebreyesus had praised India for its “rich story” of conventional medicine like Ayurveda and yoga and stressed the necessity of integrating this ancient medical knowledge into the national health systems of nations.
” India has a rich record of conventional medicine, including yoga, which has been proven to relieve problems.” The key goal of this mountain will be the integration of conventional medicines into national health systems, and help advance scientific knowledge-based traditional medicine’s development, the WHO main had stated.
In his target to the World Health Assembly Monday, Ghebreyesus said 2023 was a time of some challenges, but also of some achievements. He claimed that the WHO’s work supporting exposure to drugs and various health products in 2023 was a successful one.
” We prequalified 120 medicines, vaccines, diagnostics and different products last year for HIV, dengue, triple- resistant TB, Ebola, polio and Covid- 19, as well as the first lengthy- acting insulin analogues”, he said.
He noted that one of the biggest problems caused by the Covid- 19 crisis was to regular immunization programs in many countries, resulting in stalling protection and outbreaks of measles, pertussis, influenza, yellowish fever and more.
” We launched” The Big Catch Up” with UNICEF and Gavi in April last year to help nations stop outbreaks and restore immunization programs at least to pre-pandemic levels,” he said.
In May last year, the WHO chief had declared an end to both Covid- 19 and mpox as global health emergencies. We urge all nations to maintain and expand the surveillance, detection, and response capabilities they established during the pandemic. These funds must not be a waste.