Cultivation of medicinal plants for production of raw materials for industries can be taken up as an alternative land use system or mixed cropping system on existing farm and forestry lands. To promote cultivation of medicinal plants, Central Institute of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants (CIMAP) has developed a number of high yielding varieties, worked out agro-technologies and processing technologies for them. Profitable cultivation of medicinal plants can be practiced by farmers/ companies/ entrepreneurs along with traditional agricultural horticultural crops as sole crops, intercrops, sequential crops etc. They can be profitably intercropped in plantations/ orchards. Medicinal plants are a source of biomolecules with therapeutic potential and as a lead to develop new drugs. Herbal medicines are considered as safer, better physiological compatibility and cost-effective. India is a gold mine of medicinal plants and a rich repository of traditional medicinal knowledge. Demand for the medicinal plant is increasing with expansion in human needs, numbers and trade purpose. Plants are mostly collected from wild sources that may pose a serious situation, along with this loss of biodiversity and forest is another major concern for sustainable supply of medicinal plants in the future. With the increased realization that many species are collected from wild sources and being over-exploited, agencies (private/public) are recommending bringing the important medicinal plants into cultivation systems. Cultivation of medicinal plant can decrease the amount to which wild populations are harvested, it will also help to preserve plant species from extinction and will promote socio-economic growth. This chapter deals with the medicinal importance and cultivation of yam, sarpagandha, opium, periwinkle, aloe, guggal, belladonna, nux vomica, medicinal solanum, aonla/amla, senna, isubgol, stevia, coleus, acorus, and ocimum.
AMDRF
Medicinal plants are valuable natural resources. A data base relating the use of traditional veterinaty and human medicinal plants in the world. The goal of AMDRF data bank is to summarize from about 1000 scientific publications the use of traditional medicinal plant devoted for traditional human medicine and traditional veterinary medicine. Phytochemicals of medicinal plants encompass a diverse chemical space for drug discovery. India is rich with a flora of indigenous medicinal plants that have been used for centuries in traditional Indian medicine to treat human maladies. A comprehensive online database on the phytochemistry of Indian medicinal plants will enable computational approaches towards natural product based drug discovery. In this direction, we present, IMPPAT, a manually curated database of 1742 Indian Medicinal Plants, 9596 Phytochemicals, And 1124 Therapeutic uses spanning 27074 plant-phytochemical associations and 11514 plant-therapeutic associations. Notably, the curation effort led to a non-redundant in silico library of 9596 phytochemicals with standard chemical identifiers and structure information. Using cheminformatic approaches, we have computed the physicochemical, ADMET (absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion, toxicity) and drug-likeliness properties of the IMPPAT phytochemicals. We show that the stereochemical complexity and shape complexity of IMPPAT phytochemicals differ from libraries of commercial compounds or diversity-oriented synthesis compounds while being similar to other libraries of natural products. Within IMPPAT, we have filtered a subset of 960 potential druggable phytochemicals, of which majority have no significant similarity to existing FDA approved drugs, and thus, rendering them as good candidates for prospective drugs. IMPPAT database is openly accessible at: https://cb.imsc.res.in/imppat.
Blood Dontation
You don’t have to be only Doctor or Nurse to save lives. The Nepal Red cross Society blood transfusion service is always looking for blood donors to provide blood for the patients .Blood donors can come from all areas of life.If you are feeling fit and healthy, aged between 18 and 65, and weight at least 50kg the chances are you can save a life by giving blood. Blood donation camp can be held in different places or can be donated directly at the Red Cross Center Kathmandu. Why Donate Blood?
- Till date there no substitute for blood. Only donated blood can provide adequate supply of blood to save life of those who need it. You give a second chance to someone unknown to you. Sometimes it one who need blood could be a friend, family member or yourself.
- Whenever you donate blood, the body can easily replenish the lost blood within 24-48 hours. Hence you are welcoming new blood into your body. In that way there no loss.
- Donating blood helps to maintain iron content in blood.
- Whenever you donate you will be losing excess cholesterol accumulated in blood. Hence reducing the proximity of Heart Attacks.
- A one unit of donated blood can save upto 3 people when supplied into three different components as Red blood cells, Fresh frozen plasma and Platelet concentrate/platelet rich plasma.
- A self fulfillment for a lifetime of saving a person life during emergency.
Student Activities
Interactive teaching is all about instructing the students in a way they are actively involved with their learning process. There are different ways to create an involvement like this. Most of the time it’s through
- teacher-student interaction
- student-student interaction
- the use of audio, visuals, video
- hands-on demonstrations and exercises
- Entry tickets focus student attention on the day’s topic or ask students to recall background knowledge relevant to the day’s lesson: e.g., “Based on the readings for class today, what is your understanding of ___________?”
- Exit tickets collect feedback on students’ understanding at the end of a class and provide the students with an opportunity to reflect on what they have learned. They can be helpful in prompting the student to begin to synthesize and integrate the information gained during a class period. For example, a muddiest point prompt: “What was the muddiest point in today’s class?” or “What questions do you still have about today’s lecture?”.
- Pose a question, usually by writing it on the board or projecting it.
- Have students consider the question on their own (1 – 2 min).
- Then allow the students form groups of 2-3 people.
- Next, have students discuss the question with their partner and share their ideas and/or contrasting opinions (3 min).
- Re-group as a whole class and solicit responses from some or all of the pairs (3 min).
- What is the situation? What questions do you have?
- What problem(s) need to be solved? What are some solution strategies? Evaluate pros/cons and underlying assumptions of these strategies.
- What information do you need? Where/how could you find it?
- What criteria will you use to evaluate your solution?
- Introduce the goal and description of the demonstration.
- Have students think-pair-share (see above) to discuss what they predict may happen, or to analyze the situation at hand (“pre-demonstration” state or situation).
- Conduct the demonstration.
- Students discuss and analyze the outcome (either in pairs/small groups, or as a whole class), based on their initial predictions/interpretations.
Free Health Camp
AMDRF, in collaboration with local governments and NGOs, sponsors free health camps in rural and disaster affected regions of Nepal. We sponsor 1–3 camps each month, prioritizing communities those newly affected by natural disasters. Communities and Partners Free health camps are initiated when AMDRF is invited to villages by communities in need. Our local partner organizations obtain legal consent from local authorities, then an AMDRF program team visits the community to analyze the situation and approve a health camp. These health camps are set up in schools and other village buildings and staffed by Nepali physicians, medical consultants, paramedics, and nurses. Services Provided Each free health camp is tailored to meet the community’s specific needs, and in addition to free check-ups and health education, medication, contraceptives, or dental hygiene supplies are provided as appropriate. Depending on the communities’ needs, services offered during these health camps may include:
- General medicine
- Pediatrics
- OB/GYN
- Eye exams
- Dentistry
- Orthopedics
- ENT (ear, nose, and throat)
- Accessing remote villages
- Lack of up-to-date healthcare facilities in remote areas
- Finding local Nepalese doctors and medical professionals to staff rural health camps
Books
A collection of costly books, Manuscript, thaliyola/ palm leaves and old back volumes of journals are kept in this section. Books belonging to this section shall on no account be taken away from the library. It can be referred only with the permission of the staff on duty.
Ayurveda Journals
Teaching from the time immemorial has been considered as a noble profession. Teaching, Research, and Publication are the three basic components (TRISTAMBHAS) that one need to take care in the system of education. Traditionally, new knowledge is disseminated through research papers published in peer-reviewed journals. Currently, peer-reviewed publications by the researchers are the measurable index of their performance. To showdown the credibility, an institution should have a good number of quality publications over a time scale. A good and responsible university will always reorient itself and generate good quality papers. Considering the impact of good publications in the field of science, certain universities such as Savitribai Phule Pune University has come out with a comprehensive policy on research publications, primarily to curb the growing tendency to publish papers in dubious and predatory journals, which, in turn, lowers the quality of research and affects the reputation of an institution. Such stringent policies developed by Savitribai Phule University are needed in current times and all universities should come forward to take measures that curb academic pollution. But, whether such policies will work in the field of Ayurveda? It is a difficult question to answer. Despite of larger investments in Ayurveda researches and a huge number of Ayurveda PG/PhD Scholars coming-out every year, they failed to publish the outcome because of many reasons. Lack of good journals to encourage Ayurveda research publications may be one of the reasons. On the other hand, it is well known that professional advancement of a scientist can be obtained by publishing good quality research. The system of promotions in universities also depends on the papers published by an individual in an academic calendar. In such a scenario of publication driven promotions, annual appraisals, and lacking of Ayurveda journals, mushrooming of casual or spurious or predatory journals is witnessing. Such academic black market guarantees the researcher, a publication over the night. This ultimately produces a poorly taught generation, which is a serious concern to the society and to the science There are only few journals in the field of Ayurveda that understand and encourage Ayurveda concepts and researches. AYU managed by IPGT and RA Jamnagar, JAIM by the Institute of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine, Bangalore, and ASL by The Ayurvedic Trust, Coimbatore are the only three Ayurveda journals indexed with PubMed and PubMed Central. Another journal, IJAR was started with great expectations, but was closed with certain administration wrangles. There are few more journals that exclusively encourage Ayurveda works In addition, certain journals such as Indian Journal of Natural Products and Resources, Indian Journal of Traditional Knowledge, and Journal of Scientific and Industrial Research of NISCAIR also support Ayurveda researches to some extent. The scenario is pathetic and painful. There is a need to conduct training programs on research methodology, create awareness about predatory journals, and develop scientific writing skills to Ayurveda professionals. On the other hand, there is no encouraging atmosphere for aspiring young researchers of Ayurveda. If enthusiastically someone wants to communicate their publications to foreign journals, they cannot meet the expenses. In such situation, to uplift Ayurveda researches and publications, Ministry of AYUSH and other responsible authorities for AYUSH Education should think and take immediate actions to define a roadmap that will go ahead for a long. The two important issues that may help in uplifting the Ayurveda researches are:
- Appointing Bio-statistician in all the Ayurveda research centers and Post Graduate education centers and hospitals
- Establishing a PUBLICATION CELL at central level.
Partners
AMDRF is a non-profit, global health organization that fights social injustice by bringing the benefits of Ayurveda medical science first and foremost to the most vulnerable communities around the world. ANDRF focuses on those who would not otherwise have access to quality health care. AMDRF partners with the world’s leading academic institutions to create rigorous evidence that shapes more sound and all-inclusive global health policies. AMDRF also supports local governments’ efforts to build capacity and strengthen national health systems Our supportive Organisations are: http://Nepal Ayurveda Trust International Journal of AYUSH Case report Nepal Ayurveda pharmaceutical Nepal Innovative Nexus