clinical ayurveda

Ayurvedic Nutrition: Food as Medicine

by Anuradha Gupta, CAP, MBA, YT-200

Pathye sati gadartasya kimaushadhanishevanaih
Pathye-asati gadartasya kimaushadhanishevanaih
— Vaidyajivanam

“With a wholesome diet there is no need for separate medical treatment;
with an unwholesome diet, even treatment becomes questionable.”

Ayurvedic Nutrition: Food as Medicine

Justin is a 14-year-old obese boy who suffers from asthma. His mom is perimenopausal and anemic, while his father has type II diabetes and appears emaciated. As Ayurvedic Practitioners, we know that a vital part of their individualized protocols consists of guidelines on pathya (wholesome and beneficial) ahara (diet) and vihara (lifestyle).

In Ayurveda, food is considered mahabhaisajya, the most superior medicine. This is true for both prevention of disease and disease management. Food is poornabrahma, which satiates the mind, body, and spirit. An important mechanism encompassed within Ayurveda is epigenetics, whereby gene expressions can be upregulated or downregulated as needed to restore balance through proper management of diet, digestion, lifestyle, behavior, stress, and environmental factors. This, in turn, can have a transgenerational impact. 

This approach to healthcare is highly relevant in today’s world where lifestyle-based disorders abound, and we are inundated with processed and convenience food. An apple often costs more than a bag of chips! The following statistics are mind boggling: 

  • According to the WHO (World Health Organization), globally, nearly 1 in 3 people suffer from malnutrition, obesity, and diet- and lifestyle-related non-communicable diseases (NCDs) like type II diabetes, cardiovascular and respiratory diseases, stroke, and certain types of cancer.

  • The United Nations has labeled the decade of 2016–25 as the “Decade of Action on Nutrition.”

  • NCDs continue to be the leading cause of death, disability, and lost productivity, responsible for more than half of the global burden of diseases.

  • Those conditions are a major risk factor for communicable diseases like COVID-19.

  • Poor nutrition has become an even bigger health issue than smoking; if people can modify their diets, 1 in 5 deaths can be prevented globally.

  • Six in ten adults in the US suffer from chronic lifestyle-based diseases; 42% are obese and over 70% are overweight.

  • UNICEF has warned that poor diets are significantly harming the health of children globally.

Ayurveda as a lifestyle-based, preventive form of medicine is uniquely poised to provide solutions with its emphasis on diet and lifestyle. In a world widely plagued by an epidemic of stress, a meaningful definition of health must encompass becoming grounded (svastha—being centered and well established in the self) and the three pillars of health, Trayopastambha, which are ahara (a diet that supports physical and mental well-being and faciliates efficient digestion of of the four inputs of life: nutrition, breath, water and liquids, and perception), vihara or brahmacharya (balanced lifestyle in alignment with your higher consciousness and higher purpose) and nidra (sleep).



How is your agni?

The headlines from every magazine scream, “Lose 10 pounds in 2 weeks, try xyz diet or supplement, the ultimate solution to turn your life around.” If these diets, fads, and trends were the answer to nutrition, weight loss, or whatever else is being promised, why haven’t they caused a positive, lasting shift in people’s health? Many people are confused about food, feel guilty, want to lose weight, eat salads indiscriminately, juice for many straight days, subsist on smoothies…and unwittingly commit apathya (unwholesome practices)!

Ayurvedic nutritional concepts are unique for the following reasons:  

  • We are what we digest, not what we eat. Our agni (digestive and metabolic fire) is the key to our well-being—the status of agni is the cornerstone of any Ayurvedic protocol.

  • Nutrition includes food, water and other liquids, breath, and sensory perceptions.

In the context of our mind-body system, food and mental health are inextricably linked. Foods are classified based on the gunas. Foods may be characterized as sattvik (conducive to the clear, light state of the mind associated with a diet of fresh, pure, high prana foods, such as complex whole grains, fruits, and dairy); as rajasic (liable to increase desire and restlessness, as tends to result from eating spicy dishes, garlic, and onion); or as tamasic (apt to cause lethargy and heaviness—a defining quality of processed and stale food and certain meats).

*Practices like meditation improve our our mental and physical health by helping us process perceptions more effectively and helping us make better dietary choices! 

  • Among the three considerations of what, when, and how much we eat, when we eat matters most. Aligning our bodily rhythms with the rhythms of nature is essential. Practicing dinacharya (daily routine) and ritucharya (seasonal transitional routine) guidelines for eating, such as having the heaviest meal at lunchtime when agni is strongest, are tremendously helpful in the optimization of our well-being.

  • The ideal diet is individualized based on our constitution (prakriti) and imbalances (vikruti).

  • Vyadhikshamatwam (immunity) became a buzzword during the pandemic. In particular, yuktikrita bala can be correlated to acquired immunity and is enhanced by a good diet that nourishes dhatus and their net essence, ojas, which lends bala (strength) to the body.

  • Dietary recommendations are based on the shadrasa, or the six tastes. In a state of health, we should favor all six tastes to avoid imbalances or deficiencies, while being mindful to consume more of the tastes that balance our innate constitution.

 

Shadrasa (the six tastes) and their significance in balancing the doshas


My friend loves kidney beans while they make me feel terribly bloated. I do great with rice pudding (kheer), which she cannot stomach!

Just as everything in the universe is composed of the five basic elements (panchamahabhutas) prithvi (earth), apa (water), tejas (fire), vayu (air), and akash (ether); this is true of our bodies and food! Of the three doshas (energy principles), vata, the energy of movement, is composed of ether and air; pitta, the energy of metabolism and transformation, is primarily composed of fire and water; and kapha, the energy of cohesion, structure, and stability, is composed of earth and water. Each of the six tastes comprises a preponderance of certain elements that exert an effect on the doshas and dhatus—pacifying some and aggravating others, according to the principle of “like increases like” and “opposites balance each other!”

This concept can be intuitive. If vata is out of balance with sandhigata vata (osteoarthritis) and particularly with the ruksha guna (dry quality) present, then we know the counterbalance of unctuousness (snigdha guna) is needed to balance those qualities as part of the dietary recommendations or overall chikitsa

To recap, the six tastes with dominating elements are 

  • Madhura (sweet: earth and water), pacifies vata and pitta

  • Amla (sour: earth and fire), pacifies vata

  • Lavana (salty: water and fire), pacifies vata

  • Katu (pungent: fire and air), pacifies kapha

  • Kashaya (astringent: air and earth), pacifies kapha and pitta

  • Tikta (bitter: air and ether), pacifies kapha and pitta


So, what makes a diet pathya, or wholesome? 

A lady with GERD and migraines adds a lot of ginger, garlic, and tomatoes to her food, believing them to have terrific nutritional value. In the summer, she constantly snacks on nuts, has highly aggravated pitta, develops pittaja vidhradhi (boils), and seeks an Ayurvedic consultation. The apathya is very clear. 

A pathya (wholesome and beneficial) diet is tasty, healthy, congenial to the dhatus, srotas, doshas, manas, and chitta and helps prevent vikruti. 

According to the Boston Medical Center, although 45 million Americans are on a diet annually and 50% on crash or fad diets, we are still plagued by an obesity epidemic.

My friend, a dermatologist, is very healthy and pleasant, has wonderful skin and lustrous hair, but has always considered herself overweight. She is kapha through and through, and mamsa-saar, but sadly forever caught up in yo-yo dieting. An Ayurvedic understanding of prakriti has helped her…

 Eight factors determine whether food is wholesome (or unwholesome) as per Charaka Vimanasthana,

  • Prakriti: Nature (rasa, virya, vipaka, prabhava); for example, heavy meats like pork pacify vata (by balancing vata’s inherent lightness)

  • Karana: Processing; churned yogurt becomes takra

  • Samyoga: Combination of foods changes their qualities

  • Rashi: Quantity (even good food in the wrong quantity is harmful)

  • Desha: Habitat and climate

  • Kala: Time; the ripening of fruits can make them sweet instead of astringent; similarly, seasons impact what we should or shouldn’t be eating; for instance, we should avoid consuming foods that are very heating in nature in the summer

  • Upayoga samstha: Rules governing food intake, which include eating warm, unctuous, cooked food, in the proper quantity (eating an anjali of food, with half the amount of space in the stomach for solid food, a quarter of it for liquids, and the remaining quarter should be left empty); eating mindfully, when hungry, well-paced, so you’re not eating too fast or slow, or on the go, washing up before eating, and chanting mantras (offering gratitude) before eating

  • Upayokta: The person who consumes food that is satmya (that they have grown habituated or adapted to, in accordance with what is suitable for their given state and level of health or illness)

 

A 19-year-old with ulcerative colitis has been eating processed food for years; he cleans up his act by skipping lunch, having a chilled protein smoothie in the evening with berries, milk, and a synthetic protein mix, chugging a lot of cold water, and exercising after dinner. He loses weight but develops vicharchika. A year later, many kids in his dorm get gastroenteritis, but his case persists, presenting with atisara (bloody diarrhea), and finally results in a colitis diagnosis. 

Virudhahara: Incompatible combinations. For example, milk and sour fruits are considered incompatible. Ayurveda places a lot of emphasis on avoiding combinations of incompatible foods, as they can generate ama and over time lead to autoimmune conditions. Protein mixes, especially synthetic ones, are heavier to digest, and chilled foods dampen agni. A warm, cooked lunch made with whole foods, would have been better for this youth, and years of consuming processed food were additionally detrimental to his health and well-being. By developing an understanding of the causes of imbalances (nidana parivarjana), we can help to eliminate many simple apathyas we unknowingly commit.

Therapeutic dietary considerations  

Justin’s father has type II diabetes but even without a diagnosis, we do a standardized Ayurvedic assessment. In Ayurveda, there are 20 types of prameha. While we personalize his protocol, in general, laghu, or light ahara, is considered pathya. A proper diet for this case would feature mudga, kulattha, karela, methi, patola, rasona, jambu, amalaki, kharjura, and haridra) while an apathya ahara would include buttermilk, oil, ghee, jaggery, and meat of animals from marshy regions, to name a few.

There are special dietary indications for various types of vikruti, and shamana (pacification through diet, lifestyle, and formulations) or shodhana (cleansing) routes of management. We formulate what Dr. Jayarajan Kodikannath calls the Namaste Protocol—matching the current vyadhi avastha (stage of disease) and stage of samprapti (as determined by assessing the status of agni, ama, and the doshas, dhatus, and srotas) with the recommended chikitsa for samprapti vighatana, or breaking the pathogenesis.

A basic principle would be individualization for rogi and roga. Even if, for example, we advise langhana with fasting for jwara. Besides yukti (our logic), we are blessed with aptopadesha like Sushruta’s Dvadasha Ashana Vichara for formulating a diet beyond the samanya or normal diet advised for healthy people. For instance, ahara with ushna guna, heating potency, is advised during shodhana and for vata-kapha vikruti. Shita guna, cooling potency, is appropriate for those who have burning or daha, alcoholism, emaciation, or pitta vikruti. 

 

Ayurveda: Comparisons and Myths

  1. Traditional Diets. Similar to Ayurvedic diets in many ways, these diets orginate from a region or ethnicity asociated with great health and longevity and include the Mediterranean (considered anti-inflammatory), Nordic, West African, rural Japanese, French Paradox, and Blue Zone diets. The food is fresh and not processed, local, and seasonal, favoring whole grains, beans, fruits and vegetables, fish, lean meats, and healthy fats; major drinks are water, tea, and some fermented and wine preparations. These diets are satmya to the population and easily digested! Portion sizes are smaller and meals are a community event. Active lifestyles that involve regular exercise are the norm in regions associated with these diets.

     

  2. Food Based Dietary Guidelines. Over 100 nations have developed food based dietary guidelines (FBDG) like the food pyramid in the U.S., and they now include holistic, lifestyle-based suggestions, urging a balanced diet, less salt, fat, and sugar, more fruits, and vegetables, moderating alcohol, and reducing red/processed meat. Swedish and German dietary guidelines advise less meat because of its environmental impact; some guidelines address sustainability as we realize the impact we are having on nature; our sustained adharma, which is a major factor in climate change and janapadodhwamsa vyadhis like COVID-19 and Monkeypox. 

     

  3. Other dietary trends. My friend’s son was medically advised to eat a keto diet to help manage his epilepsy, and it was carefully monitored. Rosie O’Donnell had a heart attack and opted for weight loss surgery; a pre-diabetic Janet Jackson chose Nutrisystem.

 

Some diets and cleanses are healthy and medically prescribed. Certain diets recommend specific nutrients or certain types of food, smaller portion sizes, and lifestyle changes like exercise. As Ayurvedic professionals, we honor and incorporate all dietary goals. including a quest for weight loss, where Ayurveda is very effective. But we need to be wary of media-driven trends like the latest detox and cleanse diets, the distortion of healthy standards by advertising’s and social media’s glorification of being thin regardless of your natural constitution, and risky fads like the sleeping beauty diet (sleeping to avoid eating) and the cotton ball diet (eating cotton balls dipped in juice or smoothies to manage hunger). Such practices and beliefs can be outright dangerous. Ayurveda recommends that diets be individualized to a person’s prakriti or vikruti and that they be holistic (attuned to mental as well as physical health) and sustainable.

 

Addressing Common Myths

Ayurvedic food does not have to be Indian, costly, or vegetarian. Charaka Samhita lists 8 types of meats and their properties. And any type of cuisine can be understood from the perspective of shadrasa and the basic principles of Ayurvedic nutrition.

 

Our quest as Ayurvedic Practitioners is to live life to our fullest potential and encourage our rogis to do so as well. How do we nurture ourselves? What dietary changes can we make in our lives to align with our practice? 


Ayurveda NAMA nutrition

About the Author

Anuradha Gupta is an MBA, Engineer, Certified Ayurvedic Practitioner, YT-200, and AD student at Kerala Ayurveda. She writes for Kerala Ayurveda, Art of Living, and Sri Sri Tattva and volunteers extensively. You can find her on Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn.

Member Spotlight: Anjali Deva, CAP

We are delighted to highlight NAMA members who presented TED-style talks at our first-ever VEDAtalks session at NAMA’s 2022 Annual Conference in Tucson, Arizona last April. Our community comes from all walks of life and we hope that you will find inspiration and encouragement as they share their stories and experiences. Learn more about the VEDAtalks session here →

Anjali will also be a panelist at NAMA’s 3rd Annual Ayurveda Day Summit in October — don’t miss it!

Anjali Deva, CAP is an Ayurvedic practitioner currently residing in Los Angeles. Her private practice, Rooted Rasa, specializes in an integrative and trauma-informed approach to Ayurveda. Anjali founded Mādhya Way, a school for Ayurveda. She is dedicated to sharing the Wisdom of Ayurveda for the benefit of all living beings.

What type of NAMA member are you?
I'm a NAMA AP [Professional] member.

How long have you been a NAMA member?
Since 2013

Where are you based?
Los Angeles, CA

Can you say a few words about why you are a NAMA member?
I'm a NAMA member because I believe in the power of community for progressing our professional field.

Learn more about Anjali’s Ayurvedic journey in the video below.

 
 
 

National Ayurvedic Medical Association 2021 Annual Conference Report

NAMA conference

by Baba Lou Haber

The 17th Annual Conference of the National Ayurvedic Medical Association (NAMA) brought together online 45 experts whose presentations centered on Ayurveda as evidenced-based and integrative medicine. The conference demonstrated how practitioners are harnessing scientific research to validate classical Ayurvedic approaches, growing expertise in disciplines of emerging importance such as microbiome research and genomics, and building bridges with Western medicine.

Integrative Medicine Defined

Among the first presenters was Victoria Maizes, MD, executive director and professor of medicine at the University of Arizona Andrew Weil Center for Integrative Medicine. Maizes offered a definition of integrative medicine as “healing-oriented medicine that takes account of the whole person, including all aspects of lifestyle” and “emphasizes the therapeutic relationship between practitioner and patient, is informed by evidence, and makes use of all appropriate therapies.”

An internationally recognized leader in integrative medicine, Maizes began with an alarming statistic from JAMA: Even though 70% of deaths in the United States are due to behavioral and environmental factors, only 1%–3% of healthcare dollars are spent on disease prevention, compared to 97%–99% spent on medical care and biomedical research. She emphasized how “something is missing from our healthcare systems, and we believe that we can do a better job taking care of our patients through integrative medicine.”

Innovative Integrative Approaches

That spirit of advancing a better way to improve healthcare and foster wellness was abundantly evident throughout the NAMA conference. Presentation topics included evidenced-based approaches to healing leaky-gut syndrome (in which an unhealthy gut lining allows undigested food and toxins to leak into the bloodstream); innovative therapies to address gastrointestinal tumors; Ayurvedic approaches to mitochondrial diseases and disorders (which occur when mitochondria fail to produce sufficient energy for the body to properly function); and Ayurvedic prevention and treatment of gynecological disorders.

Among the presenters on yoga were Susan Bass, AP- and AYT-NAMA, E-RYT 500, C-IAYT, a certified Ayurvedic practitioner and Ayurvedic yoga therapist who founded the Sarasvati Institute of Ayurveda & Yoga Therapy and the Sarasvati Mission. “Ayurveda excels at digestion and detoxification, so it is about improving the quality of blood,” noted Bass. “That’s why Ayurveda and yoga are exponentially more effective when practiced together, because who cares if you have the blood moving around the body when it is of poor quality and does not nourish the cells and the organs?”

Bass led two sessions. The first examined the beneficial role of yoga in reducing stress and improving mental health. In her second presentation, Bass brought together asana, pranayama, mudra (gestures), and marma (vital body junction points) therapy to address vishama agni (irregular/weak metabolism), the type of digestive imbalance caused by excess vata (air/wind).

A Deeper Understanding of “Evidence”

Bhushan Patwardhan, PhD, national research professor at the Interdisciplinary School of Health Sciences, Savitribai Phule Pune University, provided an overview of Ayurveda as an evidenced-based science. He emphasized that Ayurveda and yoga require a different approach to research and a fresh look at what constitutes evidence, given that they have an entirely different framework than Western medicine.

According to Patwardhan, the integration of Ayurveda and modern medicine will entail an “epistemological transformation process” in which Ayurveda as a holistic, experiential, and natural approach will need to be more fully appreciated and understood by medical practitioners and the medical research community.

A New Paradigm to Foster and Sustain Health and Wellness

In her presentation “Biodiversity Is Health; Biodiversity Is Sustainability,” Vandana Shiva, PhD, likewise emphasized the critical importance of a paradigm shift—one to a more holistic understanding of health that includes our interconnectedness with all species and the entire planet.

“The paradigm we have today is one that doesn’t work with whole systems,” said Shiva, a researcher and eco-feminist food-sovereignty activist who founded the Research Foundation for Science, Technology, and Ecology in Dehradun, India. In contrast, Shiva noted, Ayurveda teaches us that health is about balance. “The body is not little fragments and parts; the body is a non-separable whole interacting non-separably with the world and the biodiversity around us,” she said.

Shiva ended her talk with a call to action. “If there is one thing we can take forward from ecology, from biodiversity, from Ayurveda, it is our interconnectedness,” she said. “We are one, and we can be interconnected through health and regeneration, or through disease and degeneration. [E]ach of us should cultivate the will and determination and the hope that the regeneration part is what we will evolve.”

A Look at COVID-19

NAMA additionally offered a post conference event providing perspectives from conventional medicine and Ayurveda on COVID-19. The presentation, by Dhaval Dhru, MD, and Mimi Guarneri, MD, included a survey of preliminary research looking at promising results of both integrative and Ayurvedic treatments of the virus.

Throughout the conference, NAMA encouraged attendee donations to help the people of India during the country’s COVID-19 crisis through such organizations as Sewa International USA (www.sewausa.org).

Mark Your Calendars

Planning is already underway for NAMA’s next annual conference. The 2022 gathering will be a special event where participants will hopefully again meet in person. The theme of the conference, to be held in Tucson, Arizona, April 22–24, is “Ayurveda for Family Health.”

 

Originally published in Yoga Therapy Today, a publication of the International Association of Yoga Therapists (www.iayt.org). Shared with permission.


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About the Author

Baba Lou Haber has written for CBS News, served as a communications executive for several companies and public agencies, and is a Cicero Award–winning speechwriter. He is currently studying to be an Ayurvedic Health Counselor. Baba Lou also serves as a member of NAMA’s Communications Committee.

Integrating Ayurveda and Allopathic Medicine: An Interview with Charles Elder, MD, MPH

Internist, researcher, noted author, and NAMA member Dr. Charles Elder has expertise in both conventional and complementary medicine. He recently spoke with Baba Lou Haber, a member of the NAMA Communications Committee, to offer insights on how NAMA members can work collaboratively with allopathic practitioners. Read their conversation below.

Baba Lou Haber: Let’s start with how you became interested in Ayurveda.

Dr. Charles Elder: My journey actually began when I was admitted to medical school right out of high school. I was accepted to Boston University’s combined BA/MD program. I was only 17 and new to Boston, having been raised in northeast Ohio. To relieve the stress of it all I started a meditation practice at the greater Boston Transcendental Meditation Center and began practicing yoga as well. So I went through medical training meditating the whole time, which shaped my thinking. For example, if there was a patient suffering from anxiety for whom we were prescribing Valium, it struck me as bizarre that we were not suggesting meditation to help him.

I did my residency in Internal Medicine at the University of Michigan, where I met my wife, Leslie, who was also a resident. She also had a meditation practice and already had some interest in Ayurveda. Together we went on a weekend meditation retreat where one of the speakers was Dr. Hari Sharma, who is an outstanding scientist. He gave a talk describing the antioxidant and antineoplastic properties of some of the traditional Ayurvedic formulas that he was studying in his lab. I found the whole thing mindboggling.

Baba Lou Haber: What a gift to have discovered Ayurveda at the beginning of your medical career! How were you able to integrate it into your practice?

Dr. Charles Elder: When we finished our residencies 30 years ago, Leslie and I moved to Portland, Oregon. I started working as a primary care doctor at Kaiser Permanente, where I still am. For the first 10 years or so I was just working hard being an internist, and it was a busy time. My wife and I had to balance career and family, as well as pay off student loans. But we also made time to take short courses in Ayurveda for physicians offered by Maharishi University, and we incorporated what we learned into our own lives.

About six or eight years into my job, I started getting frustrated because I had patients coming in with problems such as chronic pain, functional bowel disorder, anxiety, depression – problems where allopathic medicine can be weak. I knew I had all these tools in these areas, but could not use them, which was problematic. Eventually I wrote a proposal and got permission from Kaiser Permanente to do some innovative Ayurvedic consultations with patients who had these conditions. I detailed what I was going to offer and the metrics that would measure outcomes. The reviews after working with about a dozen patients were so positive that the pilot initiative ended up getting expanded to a Kaiser Permanente referral-based clinic, where I have since been doing integrative Ayurvedic consultations.

Baba Lou Haber: How have you continued to spread the word about Ayurveda beyond your clinic in Portland?

Dr. Charles Elder: In 2000 I did a part-time sabbatical at the Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research, where there was a group of researchers interested in integrative medicine. That opened the door for me to begin research at the Center focused on how complementary medicine can improve mainstream medical care.

And in 2017 I took a second sabbatical during which Leslie and I wrote a book entitled Picture of Health to help people incorporate Ayurveda into their lifestyles. We use it as a manual for people who come to our clinic, and it also is designed to be a guide that people in conventional medicine can digest and assimilate.

Baba Lou Haber: Your story speaks to the importance of collaboration between Ayurvedic and allopathic practitioners.

Dr. Charles Elder: The potential for collaboration is enormous, and we need to make the most of it through relationship building around areas of mutual interest. There is so much common ground and so many things we can talk about in Ayurveda.

Take, for example, functional bowel disorders. Allopathic doctors in general are not great with what we call irritable bowel syndrome because it is abdominal pain and digestive complaints that we cannot explain. In so many words, that is the description and diagnosis. But the area of digestive disorders is one in which Ayurveda is very rich, and people can make a lot of progress seeing a NAMACB board certified practitioner. There are gastroenterologists out there who would love to have a competent, trustworthy person that could help these patients with diet and lifestyle.

Chronic pain is another example where Ayurveda can help patients make a lot of progress. Many times, not always, but many times, mind-body techniques, diet, daily routine, exercise, and yoga can a make huge difference in alleviating chronic pain.

There are many other areas – for example, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, depression, and menopausal disorders – where allopathic doctors need help and there is space for dialogue. So identifying and building relationships in those areas through dialogue can be extremely powerful.  

Baba Lou Haber: From my personal experience, not every doctor in conventional medicine is open to a conversation about Ayurveda. Are you being overly optimistic?

Dr. Charles Elder: Keep in mind that, in large part, training for allopathic doctors is focused on procedures and drugs, and their knowledge in other areas may be limited. Some doctors are more evolved and open to a conversation than others.

Remember also that different doctors will have sensitivities about different things. So you don’t want to jump right in talking about bastis and vamana, which are for a later discussion. And when you start prescribing herbs, be a little sensitive to where some doctors are coming from, because some have misconceptions. I would not necessarily talk about herbal supplements on a “first date.” As for me, I feel that if someone is getting herbs from a trained and certified practitioner, I don’t worry about it. On the other hand, if a patient just grabbed them off the shelf, I may be more concerned.

Baba Lou Haber: And what would you say to an Ayurvedic practitioner or student who looks with skepticism at for-profit companies within the healthcare industry?

Dr. Charles Elder: Let’s focus on people. I honestly believe that 99.9999 percent of healthcare practitioners want the patient to get better. With the well-being of the patient at the center of the discussion, everyone can get on the same page.

Baba Lou Haber: Tactically speaking, what is the best way for an Ayurvedic doctor to build bridges with allopathic doctors?

Dr. Charles Elder: That is a great question. How do you reach out to people? Get out there and network – that would be my approach. I think giving public talks is a good idea. Also, advertising in medical publications in a very targeted way. And if you can get into integrative medicine circles, good. Find institutions in your area that can serve as meeting grounds for people on both sides. Here in Portland, for example, there is a big integrative medicine community in which people can reach out if they are looking to collaborate. And there are a number of medical schools that have fellowship and research programs that may provide networking opportunities.

Of course, it is important to develop relationships with the right people. A lot of that can be personal chemistry. The good news is that, from what I see, the allopathic community is much more open these days than it used to be. The wisdom and science behind Ayurveda is so powerful – doctors are seeing that and taking notice.


 

About the Author

Charles R. Elder MD, MPH, FACP, received his MD and MPH degrees from Boston University School of Medicine and completed residency training in internal medicine at the University of Michigan hospitals. He has served as a primary care internist at Kaiser Permanente Northwest (KPNW) for 30 years and has been the physician lead for the complementary and integrative medicine program at KPNW for 20 years. In this capacity, Dr. Elder offers a referral-based integrative Ayurvedic clinic, advising patients in the areas of diet, exercise, herbal medicine, mind-body practices, and other complementary medicine modalities. Dr. Elder holds a Senior Investigator appointment at the Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research, where he has served as principal or co-investigator on a range of federally funded studies evaluating mind-body and other complementary medicine interventions in the setting of chronic disease management. Dr. Elder has an adjunct faculty appointment at Maharishi International University, where he serves as a course instructor for the online MS in Ayurveda program.

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Baba Lou Haber is the chair of the NAMA Articles and Interviews Subcommittee. He has written for CBS News, served as an executive in the communications functions for several companies and public agencies, and is a Cicero Award-winning speechwriter. A certified yoga instructor (RYT 200), he is currently studying to be an Ayurvedic Health Counselor. Baba Lou is a graduate of Swarthmore College and Brooklyn Law School.

How Applying Ayurvedic Therapeutic Practices in Working with Addiction

By Jessica Ferrol, AD, MHC, CYT, PKS

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that at least 72,000 Americans died from drug overdoses in 2017. This number does not include people who died from conditions related to alcohol or cigarettes. The same source asserts that 480,000 Americans die each year from smoking-related illness alone. The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism estimates that 88,000 die from alcohol- related conditions. It is not known how many Americans suffer from some form of addiction, but these statistics reveal a frightening reality.

Addiction is a disease without a specific cure. Treatment involves managed care. Substance abuse ranks as a leading cause of sickness and death, and addiction itself is now recognized as a chronic disease that causes long-term changes in neuronal activity patterns.

Most addictive substances cause the brain to release hormones that elicit a feeling of pleasure and, at high doses, euphoria. Addiction occurs when an individual has abused a substance or substances to the point that the brain loses the capacity to naturally generate pleasure hormones, leaving the individual to rely on one or more substances to achieve a feeling of normalcy. In fact, nothing about an addicted brain is normal.

Āyurveda, as a holistic healthcare system, provides a complete maintenance approach to supporting sobriety with daily self-care practices and routines that promote physical rejuvenation and mental well-being and restore a normal physical state over time. Āyurvedic theory states that all humans naturally experience kama (“the desire for pleasure”) and that this longing and the wish to avoid pain are basic survival instincts shared by all organisms. Āyurveda also asserts that the attachment to pleasure and the avoidance of pain can lead to disease if pursued at any cost. Addiction is a case in point: The addict will sacrifice nearly everything to feel a high. In the deepest throes of addiction, the addict will sustain a dangerous lifestyle simply to find a feeling of normalcy.

The Āyurvedic practitioner may use the conceptual theory of the five sheaths as a foundation for treatment of addiction. The theoretical understanding of the five sheaths provides a map of how to access body (annamaya kosha), breath (pranamaya kosha), mind (manomaya kosha), intelligence (vijnamaya kosha) and consciousness (anandamaya kosha) as well a way to understand how these parts are connected or can become disconnected.   

Addiction is a disease that takes residence in the body, breath, and mind sheaths and creates a disconnect from the intelligence and consciousness sheaths. Disconnection from intelligence results in an inability to discern reality from illusion, causing the mind to become flooded by irrational, obsessive thoughts. These negatively affect the movement of breath and create a state of hyperarousal (“heightened anxiety, fear, or anger and increased sensitivity to stimuli”) or hypoarousal (a feeling of depression, lethargy, or paralysis) in the physical body.

The addict hopes to achieve a feeling of normalcy by using a drug. In fact, the drug is dangerous, and it works against this end. When the short-term effect of the drug goes away, the addicted mind is once again overwhelmed with irrational, obsessive thoughts. It is in a physically worsened condition, and the cycle of substance abuse begins again. Addicts might instead employ Āyurvedic practices, which may bring stability to the mind and return the body to a well-regulated state.  Over time, these practices may re-establish access to innate intelligence. Connection to innate intelligence is crucial to relapse prevention. 

Proper diet, adequate sleep, and a healthy sensory environment will help minimize cravings. A safe environment is essential in order to deny access to substances that can be abused. Herbs will support the body in detoxifying while also sedating the nervous system. The overall goal is to guide clients to re-inhabit their body, to return home. By cultivating awareness and sensory connection to the physical body, the addicted client ignites activity in the root chakra and circulates a feeling of safety and stability through the mind. This in turn sets the stage for cellular repair to heal the body.

Restoration of the breath involves recovery of the natural, instinctual breath through meditative practices. Life events that are stored as implicit memory affect the natural depth of inhalation and the natural length of exhalation. Recovery of full inhale and full exhale through gentle breathing exercises creates a state of equilibrium in the parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous systems, generating an overall feeling of regulation in the mind and body.

The practitioner must guide the addicted client to the sensation of body through yoga asanas or meditative practices. This will slow the thought process and calm the mind. Trauma often accompanies addiction. Āyurvedic practitioners should be careful not to trigger the client while navigating the terrain of the mind. It might, therefore, be helpful to support this process with one-on-one therapy as well as group therapy, guided by trained mental health counselors.

The following is a method of healing that works with body, breath, and mind: 

Come into a comfortable position that feels supportive for your spine. Feel yourself intentionally withdraw your awareness from the outer environment into the inner terrain. Drop into the body through the breath. Track the movement of breath by feeling the air draw deeply into the nostrils, and follow it to the very end of the exhale. As the body drinks in the air, notice the physical feeling of needs being met. Invite the emotional heart to take in what it needs with the movement of incoming breath. Notice how your body responds to the words “I have all I need in this moment.”  Then, turn your awareness to the sensation of letting go that is present in every exhale. Invite the emotional heart to release that which it no longer needs with the movement of outgoing breath. Notice how the body responds to the words “I belong.”  Make a note of how your body feels at this moment. As you slowly turn your awareness back toward outer environment, stay in contact with inner body sensation. See if you can maintain awareness of inner sensation while you engage with the world around you.


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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jessica Ferrol, AD, MHC, CYT, PKS is an Ayurvedic Doctor, Holistic Mental Health Counselor, Herbalist and Certified Yoga Teacher.  She incorporates Ayurvedic practices and psychosomatic therapy in her private practice and an addiction treatment facility.  The purpose of her work is to rekindle the connection to one’s inner source of wisdom.

Research and Clinical Practice Highlight

with Clayton Bell M.D.

My name is Clayton Bell, and I am an Integrative Medicine physician and Assistant Clinical Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Tennessee Medical Center.  My current clinical practice as an Integrative Medicine physician combines cutting-edge, evidence-based Orthomolecular-Functional Medicine with the subtle yet powerful healing insights of Ayurveda. 

Personalized wellness plans are created for each patient based on their prakruti, vikruti, and current medical conditions.  Heavy emphasis is placed upon Lifestyle Medicine treatments and “miracles” often abound in the healing response.  Patients and fellow healthcare providers are often amazed to discover what happens when one brings the various aspects of their life (physical, psychological, emotional, spiritual) into balance.  To help expand this clinical knowledge, I am actively teaching Ayurvedic techniques to rotating medical students, residents, and providing Grand Rounds to various medical departments throughout the hospital as well. Combining the science of Western medicine and the wisdom of Eastern medicine creates the highest level of patient care possible.

Ayurveda began capturing my passion and professional curiosity three years ago during my Integrative Medicine Fellowship at the University of Kansas Medical Center. For my fellowship thesis, I wanted to scientifically validate if the various Ayurvedic prakruti (Vata, Pitta, Kapha) were truly biostatistically correlated with Integrative and Western Medicine diagnosis.  Through researching both national and international peer-reviewed journals, many articles began to emerge linking specific prakruti to various biomarkers and genomic patterns.  However, nowhere could I find where any researchers had ever biostatistically validated these most foundational theorems regarding prakruti and various disease states.  

Our research study participants were patients of the KU Integrative Medicine Clinic. Eligibility criteria included adult patients ages 21 and older with no language barriers and the ability to give consent. Approximately 150 participants were screened, 129 were enrolled with 119 successfully completing both the Mind-Body Survey and the Medical History Form. The Mind-Body Survey consisted of 10 self-assessment questions pertaining to specific physical and psychological characteristics. This survey was adapted from The Chopra Center’s Prakruti Patient Intake Form and provided quantitative subscores for each Ayurvedic dosha (Vata, Pitta, Kapha). Participants were also given a Medical History Form to determine active, past, or lack of history for 47 common integrative medicine diagnoses. Biostatistical analysis was analyzed to determine positive and inverse correlations between prakruti and specific disease diagnosis.

Based on our findings, we have discovered multiple statistically significant positive and inverse correlations between prakruti and self-reported medical diagnosis. Vata was associated with anxiety (r = .22, p = .02) and sleep disorders (r = .25, p = .01), whereas Kapha appeared to be protective from anxiety (r = –.31, p = .001) and sleep disorders (r = –.19, p = .04) as well as osteoporosis (r = –.22, p = .02), hyperthyroidism (r = –.24, p = .01) and environmental allergies (r = –.19, p = .04). However, Kapha was statistically associated with obesity (r = .32, p = .001) and overweight (r = .32, p = .001), whereas Vata was protective from obesity (r = –.19, p = .05) and overweight (r = –.39, p < .001). Vata was also statistically correlated with constipation (r = .19, p = .04), depression (r = .22, p = .02), irritable bowel syndrome (r = .26, p = .01), and panic attacks (r = .29, p = .002). Vata was inversely correlated with hypertension (r = –.22, p = .02) and solid organ cancers (r = –.25, p = .01). No statistical associations were found for Pitta.

We were very excited to discover the positive and inverse correlations, which verified the ancient Ayurvedic teachings and our research was published in the Ayurveda Journal of Health—an incredible experience! I learned so much through the entire research and publication process and highly recommend others to do the same.  Our research and many other current publications are validating Ayurveda as an incredibly useful and pragmatic medical system.  To learn more, see the Ayurveda Journal of Health 2017 Summer edition and read our article: Ancient Wisdom: Can Ayurvedic Prakruti Provide Invaluable Insights into Integrative Medicine?

Remember, as a NAMA member you have a subscription discount to the Journal. Check your Member Discounts from the NAMA Member Center.


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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Dr. Clayton Bell, M.D., is an Integrative Medicine physician and Assistant Clinical at the University of Tennessee Medical Center.  He utilizes evidence-based Orthomolecular Functional Medicine and the ancient wisdom of Ayurveda to create personalized wellness plans for each patient.  

Patient Encounter Guidelines

Definition of Patient Encounter (PE)

A patient encounter is defined as a combination of the following, a substantial percentage of which should involve direct, hands-on contact. A patient encounter refers to each encounter: initial or follows up. Schools are encouraged to provide the opportunity for long-term follow up by which students can experience outcomes.

a) Experience history and/or outcomes of patients in order to build an internal database of clinical knowledge and experience. This internal database can be built by a variety of experiences whether it is observation, internship, externship, small group work or apprenticeship (working under and alongside the practitioner in a graduated responsibility model).

b) Carry out procedures such as history taking; prakṛti and vikṛti assessment; pulse, tongue and nail diagnosis; as well as other appropriate methods in order to gain assessment fluency. This cannot be accomplished by passive observation but can be attained in a variety of settings including intern, small group work or apprenticeship (working under and alongside the practitioner in a graduated responsibility model). 

c) Carry out the clinical application of Ayurveda as per category designation. *Refer to the Scope of Practice for the Ayurvedic Profession, Ayurvedic Health Counselor: Educational Outline for Competency, Ayurvedic Practitioner: Educational Outline for Competency and Ayurvedic Doctor: Educational Outline for Competency documents for specific details.

Three Settings for Patient Encounters

1) Observation: Observing the teacher/clinician working with a client in a classroom setting.

2) Student/client encounter with direct supervision of a teacher. This includes working one-on-one or in small groups of two or three.

3) Student/client one-on-one, in a more intimate setting with the student doing complete intake, recommendations, and follow-up; to be supervised directly or via externship.

Patient Encounter Requirements by Category

Ayurvedic Health Counselor

Requires a minimum of 50 patient encounters with at least 25 in the first two settings as indicated above and 25 one-on-one*.

Ayurvedic Practitioner

Requires a minimum of 100 patient encounters over and above the 50 of the AHC category. Twenty-five observation, 25 under direct supervision onsite and 50 completely one-on-one* with direct or indirect supervision.

Ayurvedic Doctor

Requires 250 client encounters that will include the 100 client encounters from the AP category with the additional 150 as mainly one-on-one sessions reviewed by senior faculty or senior Doctor of Ayurveda.

*One-on-one typically means one client, per one student/intern. However, some schools have found that students learn better when working with a client in groups of two or three students, all of whom are fully engaged in all aspects of diagnosis and chikitsa. This is an acceptable substitution for one-on-one encounters, provided students also gain experience working with patients one-on-one before graduating.

Definition of Supervised/Supervision

Each and every patient encounter a student has is supervised by one or more of the methods outlined below. Schools offer a variety of valid methods of supervision, including but not limited to:

a) Supervisor present during consultation

b) Onsite supervisor checks students’ work after student has seen patient

c) Live Internet supervision via a HIPPA-compliant telemedicine platform, e.g. VSee (www.vsee.com)

d) Roundtable discussions

e) Use of approved local mentors

“Six months of supervised clinical practice” should read “Equivalent to six months of supervised clinical practice.” While some school formats would deliver this in a six-month block, others might be interspersing it throughout the training. A student might see only a few patients in six months. Hence, the number of clinical patient encounters is of more importance than the time taken to accrue them.

Recording Patient Encounters

For schools with onsite clinics, students can fill out a form or worksheet that is signed by the clinic for verification. For schools where the students are being mentored from a distance, an online recording system could be used. Some schools may choose to retain the patient encounter forms, while others might record the patient encounters on spreadsheets and return them to the students for their portfolio.

When the student applies for NAMA professional membership, the school informs NAMA that they have completed the required patient encounters, just as the school informs NAMA that they have completed the other educational requirements.

Recommended Roll-out of Increased Patient Encounter Criteria by 2016

Ayurvedic Health Counselor 50 PE

Ayurvedic Practitioner 100 PE