India is a privileged country with cultural and spiritual Âdiversity, empowered with multiple alternatives and Âoptimisations for each need. In healthcare too, India is blessed with Âtraditional and natural systems of medicine. However, modern medicine, powered by science, has progressed much ahead of these systems. The seemingly mystic procedures in Ayurveda and other Indian systems remain less understood and studied, resulting in their suboptimal utilisation. A few factors hamper the task of Âintegrating them in a rational, transparent manner that would benefit society and do Âjustice to their hidden richness. One is the unregulated ease with which they mix modern pharmacopoeia and methods into their practice and adopt the modern title of 바카라˜doctor바카라™ to Âdenote Âthemselves바카라”losing the purity and uniqueness of these Âsystems. This is enabled by a bunch of other factors. The lack of control and regulation of Ayurvedic and other Indian Âpharmacopoeial formulary; the scarcity of much-revered herbal plants (often kept 바카라˜forbidden바카라™ and promoted as secret medicine for selfish interests by the treasured figure of the vaidya); the self-centred, monopolistic corporates that make exaggerated and tall claims; the jack-of-all-trades approach adopted by some traditional physicians and pharma manufacturers바카라”all this has kept India from developing its systems in a way where they could be truly Âcustomised to Âcommunity needs. Indian medicine becoming not a choice committed to healthcare but a chance for people to use is a travesty.