AbstractSeveral United Nations bodies have advised countries to actively preserve Traditional Medicine (TM) knowledge and prevent its misappropriation in regulatory structures. To help advance decision-making around this complex regulatory issue, we examine the relationship between risk discourse, epistemology and policy. This study presents a critical, postcolonial analysis of divergent risk discourses elaborated in two contrasting Ontario (Canada) government reports preceding that jurisdiction's regulation of acupuncture, the world's most widely practised TM therapy. The earlier (1996) report, produced when Ontario's regulatory lobby was largely comprised of Chinese medicine practitioners, presents a risk discourse inclusive of biomedical...
The global demand for traditional Chinese medicine ( TCM ) has exploded in the last thirty years. De...
In Singapore, the institutional preference for biomedicine and the cultural importance of traditiona...
# Background Widespread use of traditional medicine (TM), the issue of their safety, combined with ...
AbstractSeveral United Nations bodies have advised countries to actively preserve Traditional Medici...
Many complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) interventions, such as acupuncture and herbal medi...
Traditional medical knowledge is experiencing increased attention worldwide in light of global healt...
In 2006, the Ontario government passed the Traditional Chinese Medicine Act, which granted Tradition...
This paper interrogates the depoliticising effects of a seemingly neutral regulatory drive at the he...
Many traditional and complementary and alternative healthcare systems or practices, such as Traditio...
This paper examines the steps that three complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) groups - natur...
In Canada, there is a growing interest in regulating the practices of acupuncture and Chinese herbol...
Abstract Background In line with recent World Health ...
This paper explores the joint roles of law and biomedicine in constituting the boundary between legi...
The regulation of herbal traditional medicine (HTM) is of much importance as it ensures the safety, ...
Many traditional and complementary and alternative healthcare systems or practices, such as Traditio...
The global demand for traditional Chinese medicine ( TCM ) has exploded in the last thirty years. De...
In Singapore, the institutional preference for biomedicine and the cultural importance of traditiona...
# Background Widespread use of traditional medicine (TM), the issue of their safety, combined with ...
AbstractSeveral United Nations bodies have advised countries to actively preserve Traditional Medici...
Many complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) interventions, such as acupuncture and herbal medi...
Traditional medical knowledge is experiencing increased attention worldwide in light of global healt...
In 2006, the Ontario government passed the Traditional Chinese Medicine Act, which granted Tradition...
This paper interrogates the depoliticising effects of a seemingly neutral regulatory drive at the he...
Many traditional and complementary and alternative healthcare systems or practices, such as Traditio...
This paper examines the steps that three complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) groups - natur...
In Canada, there is a growing interest in regulating the practices of acupuncture and Chinese herbol...
Abstract Background In line with recent World Health ...
This paper explores the joint roles of law and biomedicine in constituting the boundary between legi...
The regulation of herbal traditional medicine (HTM) is of much importance as it ensures the safety, ...
Many traditional and complementary and alternative healthcare systems or practices, such as Traditio...
The global demand for traditional Chinese medicine ( TCM ) has exploded in the last thirty years. De...
In Singapore, the institutional preference for biomedicine and the cultural importance of traditiona...
# Background Widespread use of traditional medicine (TM), the issue of their safety, combined with ...