NEW DELHI, INDIA — The Indian Pharmaceutical Association (IPA) has aggressively urged the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare to completely excise all Ayush and Homeopathy clauses from the newly proposed National Pharmacy Commission (NPC) Bill, 2026. Leading professional factions, spearheaded by state-level leadership, have officially termed the inclusion of traditional healthcare practices inside a governing body meant for allopathic pharmaceutical sciences as an unnecessary regulatory overreach.
The Core Controversy: Diluting Modern Science
The friction traces directly back to the revised draft of the National Pharmacy Commission Bill, which was published by the Central Government to permanently replace the archaic Pharmacy Act of 1948.
- The Government’s Intention: The draft legislative document aims to structurally bring modern medicine pharmacy, Indian systems of traditional medicine (Ayush), and homeopathy under a singular, unified regulatory framework.
- The Professional Backlash: Striking a fiercely protective tone, the Indian Pharmaceutical Association (IPA) argued that blending radically disparate medical sciences threatens to fundamentally compromise the technical integrity, professional focus, and clinical focus needed to advance modern drug discoveries.
Concerns Over Decision-Making Equilibrium
The professional pharmaceutical community has raised serious alarms regarding the structural balance of decision-making power inside the planned central commission. Modern pharmacologists firmly maintain that intricate administrative policies—ranging from modern institutional ratings to high-level academic curriculum development—must be executed exclusively by seasoned experts rooted in modern pharmaceutical sciences. Introducing professionals from entirely divergent alternative medicine philosophies into the primary apex body risks bottlenecking technical advancement and creating regulatory gridlocks.
A Demanded Front of Nationwide Resistance
In response to these developments, demands have been made for the national wing of the IPA to execute an emergency assembly to formalize a unified, nationwide front. The association intends to file a hard, non-negotiable memorandum demanding that traditional systems be entirely stripped out of the NPC Bill’s jurisdiction before the Ministry of Health’s official stakeholder feedback window closes on July 31, 2026.
