Budget 2024 Boosts Ayush: New Institutes, Global Hub & Medical Tourism

The Union Budget introduces major initiatives to strengthen India's Ayush (traditional medicine) ecosystem. Key announcements include establishing three new All India Institutes of Ayurveda and upgrading the WHO Global Traditional Medicine Centre in Jamnagar. The budget integrates Ayush into five regional medical value tourism hubs and aims to skill 1.5 lakh caregivers with yoga and wellness competencies. These measures aim to boost education, research, exports, and position India as a global leader in evidence-based holistic healthcare.

Key Points: Budget 2024 Strengthens Ayush Ecosystem: Institutes, Tourism, Exports

  • 3 new All India Ayurveda Institutes
  • Upgrade WHO Global Centre in Jamnagar
  • Ayush in 5 Medical Value Tourism Hubs
  • Train 1.5 lakh Ayush-aligned caregivers
2 min read

Budget boosts India's evidence-based holistic healthcare ecosystem: Ayush Minister

Union Budget expands Ayush with new institutes, upgrades WHO centre, boosts medical tourism & exports, and trains 1.5 lakh caregivers.

"strengthening India's emergence as the world capital of evidence-based holistic healthcare - Ayush Minister Prataprao Jadhav"

New Delhi, Feb 2

The Union Budget announcements link health policy with rural livelihoods, export growth, youth employment and entrepreneurship - strengthening India's emergence as the world capital of evidence-based holistic healthcare, Ayush Minister Prataprao Jadhav said on Monday.

Hailing Budget announcements that significantly strengthen the Ayush ecosystem, he said the measures reflect the government's unwavering commitment to building a holistic, inclusive, and globally competitive healthcare system where Ayush stands as a vital pillar of integrative health.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced a series of landmark initiatives to expand education, research, quality assurance, global leadership, medical value tourism, and skilled workforce development in Ayush.

According to Jadhav, these measures reinforce India's aspiration to position traditional medicine as a key driver of preventive healthcare, economic growth, and global leadership in wellness.

There is a proposal to establish three new All India Institutes of Ayurveda (AIIAs) to expand high-quality undergraduate and postgraduate education, advanced research, and tertiary care services.

These institutions are expected to elevate academic standards and strengthen evidence-based integrative care across the country.

The Budget also proposes upgrading Ayush pharmacies and drug testing laboratories to meet higher certification standards.

According to the minister, this move will enhance product quality, consumer confidence, and export readiness while supporting farmers cultivating medicinal plants and MSMEs engaged in processing and manufacturing.

The WHO Global Traditional Medicine Centre at Jamnagar will be upgraded to deepen research collaboration, international training, and policy dialogue-positioning India as the global knowledge hub for traditional medicine.

Moreover, Ayush Centres will form part of five proposed Regional Medical Value Tourism Hubs, creating integrated healthcare destinations that combine advanced medical treatment with traditional therapies, wellness services, and rehabilitation support.

Notably, the inclusion of yoga and wellness competencies within NSQF-aligned caregiver training programmes - targeting 1.5 lakh caregivers in the coming year - further mainstreams Ayush-linked skills within the expanding care economy, strengthening preventive and geriatric care services.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good to see focus on rural livelihoods and MSMEs. Farmers growing medicinal plants will finally get better support and market linkage. Hope the implementation is as strong as the announcement. The medical value tourism hubs sound like a great economic opportunity.
D
David E
As someone interested in holistic wellness, I'm impressed. Upgrading the WHO centre in Jamnagar to a global knowledge hub is a smart move. India truly has the potential to lead the world in traditional medicine if backed by rigorous science.
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Anjali F
Training 1.5 lakh caregivers with yoga and wellness skills is a brilliant idea for our aging population. But I hope the budget also allocates enough for monitoring the quality of these Ayush pharmacies and labs. Standardization is key, otherwise it's just talk.
K
Karthik V
Finally! Our ancient systems getting the institutional push they deserve. Three new AIIAs will create more qualified practitioners. This, combined with export growth, can make 'Made in India' a brand in global wellness. Hope the courses are modern and research-oriented.
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Sarah B
The integrative care model is the future. Combining advanced treatment with traditional therapies in those medical hubs could be a game-changer for patients. It's about offering choices and holistic healing. Good forward-thinking policy.

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