Revisiting the approaches of psychotherapy in Ayurveda with Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) framework: a review
W. Upadhyaya, A. Iyer

TL;DR
This paper reviews Ayurvedic psychotherapy approaches and maps them to the RDoC framework to explore their relevance for mental health promotion and therapy.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel mapping of Ayurvedic psychotherapy concepts to RDoC constructs, enabling cross-cultural and cross-disciplinary understanding.
Findings
Ayurvedic psychotherapy models from Charaka Samhita and Ashtanga Hridaya were mapped to RDoC constructs.
The models include dimensions like spiritual awareness and self-control linked to memory and cognitive control.
These approaches can be used for both therapy and mental health promotion.
Abstract
Recently there have been increased acceptance of complementary and alternative medicine (including traditional medicines) not only among laypersons but also various medical specialities. Ayurveda is one such, that originated at least in 3000 BC in the Indian subcontinent. Ayurveda aims at not only treating diseases but also maintaining optimum health. Psychiatry branch of Ayurveda recommends the use of both medicines and psychotherapy. Past papers on Ayurvedic psychotherapy have limitations in terms of semantics, conveying relevance and practical implementation. To tide over such limitations, we review concepts of psychotherapy in the Ayurveda texts Charaka Samhita (CS), Sushruta Samhita (SS), Ashtanga Hridaya (AH) and their commentaries from the original Sanskrit texts, in light of RDoC framework. The approaches derived can be used not just for therapy but also as mental health…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMindfulness and Compassion Interventions · Complementary and Alternative Medicine Studies
