Legal Status of Traditional Medicine and Complementary/Alternative Medicine: A Worldwide Review
(2001; 200 pages) Ver el documento en el formato PDF
Índice de contenido
Ver el documentoAcknowledgements
Ver el documentoForeword
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenidoIntroduction
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenidoAfrica
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenidoThe Americas
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenidoEastern Mediterranean
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenidoEurope
Cerrar esta carpetaSouth-East Asia
Ver el documentoBangladesh
Ver el documentoBhutan
Ver el documentoDemocratic People's Republic of Korea
Ver el documentoIndia
Ver el documentoIndonesia
Ver el documentoMyanmar
Ver el documentoNepal
Ver el documentoSri Lanka
Ver el documentoThailand
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenidoWestern Pacific
Ver el documentoReferences
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenidoAnnex I. The European Union
 

Bangladesh

Background information

Ayurvedic medicine is widely practised in Bangladesh.

Regulatory situation

When Bangladesh constituted the eastern part of Pakistan, the Pakistani Board of Unani and Ayurvedic Systems of Medicine was operative in the country. Following independence, the Bangladesh Unani and Ayurvedic Practitioners Ordinance of 1972 restructured this body as the Board of Unani and Ayurvedic Systems of Medicine, Bangladesh (184). The Board is responsible for maintaining educational standards at teaching institutions, arranging for the registration of duly qualified persons (including appointing a registrar), and arranging for the standardization of unani and ayurvedic systems of medicine. A research institute has been functioning under the Board since 1976.

The Bangladesh Unani and Ayurvedic Practitioners Ordinance of 1983 (185) prohibits the practice of unani and ayurvedic systems of medicine by unregistered persons. A significant feature of the Ordinance is the deliberate omission of a provision contained in preceding legislation that made it an offence for an ayurvedic or unani practitioner to sign birth, medical, and physical-fitness certificates.

Education and training

Control over the teaching of unani and ayurvedic medicine rests with the Board of Unani and Ayurvedic Systems of Medicine (186). There are nine teaching institutions under the Board, five for unani medicine and four for ayurvedic medicine. They offer diplomas upon completion of a four-year programme. The Registrar of the Board also serves as the Controller of Examinations.

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Última actualización: le 3 mayo 2013