MUMBAI—Ayurveda,
an ancient Hindu healing method, has seen a resurgence as India
vies for a share of the lucrative Asian medical tourism market
by offering traditional massages and beauty treatments to
wealthy tourists.
Also, India,
like Thailand, Singapore, Philippines and other countries in the
region, is pushing for a share of Asia’s medical tourism market
which is forecast to grow almost four times in value to $2.3
billion by 2012.
The push is
coming via luxury hospitals for foreigners and wealthy locals
staffed by highly-trained doctors such as Apollo Hospitals,
which offers low priced surgeries — from cardiac to plastic —
along with guided tours.
But the revival
of more traditional remedies through treatment centers and
beauty products is also seen as a potentially lucrative drawcard
for tourists as well as locals becoming increasingly affluent
from India’s economic transition.
Pharmacies and
shops carry a range of over-the-counter herbal and ayurvedic
products containing combinations of herbs, spices, flowers and
fruits such as saffron, basil and green apple.
Their products
— ranging from face packs to throat lozenges and medications to
treat hair loss, diabetes and skin disease — generate a big
chunk of the estimated $200 to $300 million alternative therapy
market in India’s burgeoning beauty industry.
Past the glass
doors of the spa at Indian Hotels’ Taj Wellington Mews, is a
softly lit ayurveda room with a brass-edged, wooden treatment
platform dotted with flowers.
In the corner
is an idol of Dhanavantari, the Hindu god of health, garlanded
with flowers and lit by an oil lamp.
Therapists in
cotton saris pray to Dhanavantari before each ayurveda session,
from a basic head massage to an intense detox scrub and wrap,
that can last from 45 minutes to five-and-a-half hours and are
priced at 950 rupees ($21) to 10,000 rupees. "We get a mix of
people: those that are familiar with ayurveda, as well as those
who are just curious and want to give it a try," said Silvia
Mot, manager at the Taj spa in Mumbai.
Ayurveda ("ayu"
means life and "veda" knowledge in Sanskrit) is an ancient Hindu
system of holistic healing with herbs, metals and minerals that
are believed to have therapeutic benefits.
Traditional
practitioners have always abounded, and now a growing interest
in natural therapies is boosting ancient methods like ayurveda,
homeopathy and siddha, which uses minerals.
Ayurveda
combines religion and philosophy with science to bring balance
to the three doshas — vata, pitta and kapha — elements of the
human body similar to the Latin humors.
Ayurveda’s
origins are rooted in mythology and religious texts. The Hindu
god of creation, Brahma, regarded as the fount of knowledge, is
believed to have passed on knowledge of ayurveda to Daksh
Prajapati, the father of goddess Parvati.
Another legend
has it that sage Bharadwaj went to heaven to seek knowledge.
Ayurveda texts, written by ancient physicians dating back more
than 2,000 years, are still followed by practitioners.
The practice
can also be traced to Atharva Veda, a sacred Hindu text. Passed
on by sages, it was developed into a school of medicine with
eight specialties, including pediatrics and psychiatry, and
taught in the ancient universities of Takshila and Nalanda.
Ayurveda
declined with the growth of modern medicine during the British
rule but it is thriving again, particularly in Kerala and Tamil
Nadu in the south where home medicine chests contain ayurvedic
pain balms and digestives alongside modern medications. India
has even contested a move by some Western companies to patent
the use and healing properties of herbs like neem, tumeric and "ashwagandha"
or Indian ginseng, which are used from everything from treating
acne and wounds to aiding digestion.
The modern
Indian market for alternative therapies is estimated at
$200-$300 million, and is dominated by hundreds of traditional
practitioners and small firms that peddle creams, syrups and
pills in unmarked jars or wrapped in paper.