Thursday, March 12, 2026
News

IAMF Calls for Central Statutory Regulation for Yoga & Naturopathy (BNYS); Terms It Essential for Academic Justice and Public Health Clarity

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

| February 20, 2026 5:51:04 PM IST
PNN

New Delhi [India], February 20: The Indian AYUSH Medical Federation (IAMF) has formally urged the Government of India to establish a Central statutory regulatory framework for Yoga & Naturopathy (BNYS), stating that the issue concerns academic justice, professional clarity, and public healthcare accountability.

The representation was issued by Dr. Aravind Lakshminarayanan, National President of the Indian AYUSH Medical Federation, following growing concern among BNYS students and practitioners across multiple states regarding the absence of a dedicated national regulatory authority for the discipline.

A Visible Regulatory Gap

In 2020, India restructured AYUSH governance through the establishment of:

* The National Commission for Indian System of Medicine (NCISM) governing Ayurveda, Siddha, Unani and Sowa-Rigpa

* The National Commission for Homoeopathy (NCH)

However, Yoga & Naturopathy were not included under an equivalent statutory commission.

While certification and institutional mechanisms currently exist, there is no comprehensive central statutory authority regulating Yoga & Naturopathy education, registration, and professional standards uniformly across India.

According to IAMF, this has resulted in administrative inconsistency and varying recognition across states.

Drugless Does Not Mean Unregulated

BNYS is a 5 1/2 - year medical education program including internship and clinical exposure. The curriculum includes: Anatomy, Physiology, Pathology, Diagnosis, Clinical training, Preventive and lifestyle medicine, Yogic therapy and naturopathy modalities

"These professionals are trained to address preventive healthcare, rehabilitation, and lifestyle disorders -- areas of increasing national importance," said Dr. Aravind Lakshminarayanan.

He further stated:

"Drugless therapy does not mean regulation-less therapy. Any healthcare discipline dealing with human health must function within a clear legal and professional framework."

Student Concerns Emerging Nationwide

Discussions among students and practitioners across several states indicate increasing concern regarding:

* Lack of uniform central registration

* Differences in recognition between states

* Professional identity ambiguity

* Long-term career clarity

IAMF clarified that the issue is not a conflict between medical systems but a structural regulatory gap.

"This is not a comparison with any other medical system. The request is simply for clarity within Yoga & Naturopathy itself," the federation noted.

IAMF Recommendations to Government of India

The Federation has proposed two policy pathways:

1. Establish a Separate National Commission / Central Council for Yoga & Naturopathy

OR

2. Create a statutory Board under a Central Act empowered to regulate:

* Education standards

* Curriculum uniformity

* Central practitioner registration

* Institutional recognition

* Ethical and disciplinary mechanisms

* National professional identity

Public Health Significance

IAMF emphasised that Yoga & Naturopathy play a major role in:

* Preventive healthcare

* Lifestyle disease management

* Non-communicable disease control

* Integrative healthcare models

"With lifestyle disorders rising rapidly, strengthening preventive healthcare capacity is a national priority," the federation stated.

A Constructive Representation

IAMF clarified that the appeal is constructive and solution-oriented.

"India has taken historic steps to promote AYUSH globally. This representation seeks completion of that vision through statutory clarity for Yoga & Naturopathy," said Dr. Aravind Lakshminarayanan.

National Implications

The federation cautioned that absence of regulatory clarity may lead to:

* Reduced student admissions

* Public confusion regarding professional status

* Administrative inconsistencies

* Underutilisation of preventive healthcare workforce

Conclusion

The Indian AYUSH Medical Federation reiterated that its request is based on:

* Academic justice

* Professional dignity

* Patient safety

* Regulatory clarity

* Strengthening preventive healthcare

"Recognition brings responsibility. Regulation protects the public," the statement concluded.

Issued by:

Indian AYUSH Medical Federation (IAMF)

Dr. Aravind Lakshminarayanan

National President

(ADVERTORIAL DISCLAIMER: The above press release has been provided by PNN. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of the same.)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS (0)
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE BUSINESS NEWS
Jindal Steel Declared Preferred Bidder f...
Dr. Rasha Kelej, CEO of Merck Foundation...
Dt. Priyanka Jaiswal: Dietician in Delhi...
West Asia conflict hits Bhilwara textile...
Nandita Desai Unveils a Unique Painting ...
FuturixAI Builds Governance-First Enterp...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
Budget Session of Tripura Assembly to be...
Cutting across party lines MPs raise con...
Modi govt 'clearly afraid' of discussion...
Daily wager's son cracks UPSC in first a...
Gujarat farmer drives dairy prosperity t...
CBI issues court notice to Telangana Jag...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
Uttarakhand: Dehradun DM holds meet... 
Pritika Barman's brace helps India ... 
Sunil Gavaskar, Sachin Tendulkar, Y... 
"Bangladeshi workers are in devasta... 
"India consistently supported us in... 
This is parliament, not canteen: Ni... 
Oman Air cancels multiple routes ti... 
"No kissing baby anywhere...": Emin...