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Tatas
to set up ayurveda centre
Business Standard
April 21, 2008
In a move to catapult ayurveda
to the main stream of healthcare in the country, the
Tata Group is setting up the Indian Institute of Ayurveda
Integrated Medicine (IIAIM) in Bangalore.
The institute will function in association with the
Department of Science and Technology (DST), and the
Foundation for Revitalisation of Local Health Traditions
(FRLHT), a Bangalore-based NGO that supports traditional
healing methods.
Designed by FRLHT on the lines of Indian Institutes
of Management (IIM) and Indian Institutes of Science
(ISC), the IIAIM will act as Indias premier finishing
school for qualified ayurvedic doctors, post graduates,
physiotherapists and Yoga experts.
The Institute will offer highly-specialised, short-term
and long-term courses to help the students practice
in accordance with the demands of modern healthcare
delivery systems, besides advanced research and post-doctoral
programmes.
The IIAIM and a 100-bed Ayurveda and Yoga hospital,
with a total investment of Rs 64 crore, will come up
at Yelahanka, Bangalore, by 2009. The Tata Groups
Sir Dorabji Tata Trust will invest Rs 34 crore. The
rest is likely to come from DST, said Dr G G Gangadharan,
joint director, FRLHT.
Though about 15,000 graduates come out from 310
ayurveda colleges in India every year, few of them are
able to establish themselves as good professionals owing
to their inability to adapt to the needs of modern healthcare.
The programmes at IIAIM will resolve this issue and
help them practice anywhere in the world, said
Gangadharan.
Apart from this, the Sir Dorabji Trust has agreed to
fund Rs 15 crore to the Ayurvedic firm Kottakkal Arya
Vaidyasala in Kerala to undertake drug research based
on medicinal plants, said Jasmine Pavri, programme officer
for the trust in Mumbai.
It may be noted that the Tatas, who had exited from
the pharmaceutical business almost a decade ago by hiving
off their Rallis Indias pharma division, re-entered
the scene two years ago by promoting Advinus Therapeutics,
a Bangalore-based pure drug discovery company headed
by Dr Reshmi Barbaiya, a former Ranbaxy R&D head.
The Tatas have also invested in Avesthagen, a Bangalore-based
biotechnology company and Indigene, a Hyderabad-based
biopharmaceutical firm.
FRLHT is also planning to set up 100 Ayurvedic clinics
and 150 mother and childcare centres in the country.

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