Explore how IndiaPathy organizes traditional medicine knowledge.
This section is where condition pages, herb references, therapy explainers, source-backed editorial content, and system-level knowledge architecture live. The homepage stays focused on the core product purpose: trusted doctor discovery.
Built around content integrity before marketplace scale
The numbers below describe the knowledge architecture the site is now being shaped around.
5
Traditional systems
Ayurveda, Homeopathy, Naturopathy, Unani, and Siddha.
4
Source tiers
Government, classical, research, and structured datasets.
3
Content priorities
Herb wiki, conditions library, and therapy guides.
100%
Editorial intent
Doctor review, safety language, and citation-first content design.
Doctor-reviewed content built on authoritative sources
IndiaPathy content should read like a serious medical reference for traditional systems: classical grounding, government references, open-access research, and explicit safety framing.
Every page is written as educational guidance, never as a personal prescription.
Classical sources, government references, and open-access research are used together instead of SEO filler.
Safety notes, contraindications, and referral guidance belong on every condition and remedy page.
Final publication requires review and sign-off by a qualified doctor from the relevant system.
Phase 1
Herb Wiki
Seed high-intent herb pages with CCRAS, API, IMPPAT, and open-access journal support.
Phase 2
Conditions Library
Build multi-system condition pages covering Ayurveda, Homeopathy, Naturopathy, Unani, and Siddha.
Phase 3
Therapy Guides
Publish practitioner-reviewed explainers for Panchakarma, Rasayana, Nasya, Basti, and naturopathy protocols.
Source-backed editorial formats for the knowledge platform
These preview cards now reflect the kinds of pages IndiaPathy should publish: herb monographs, multi-system condition pages, and practitioner-reviewed therapy guides.
Ashwagandha: traditional uses, safety notes, and what modern research actually shows
Built from CCRAS references, Ayurvedic Pharmacopoeia standards, IMPPAT phytochemistry, and open-access journal citations instead of generic herb-blog claims.
PCOD across Ayurveda, Homeopathy, Naturopathy, Unani, and Siddha: how IndiaPathy should structure the page
A multi-system condition page should explain each tradition separately, include referral boundaries, and connect users to verified doctors by specialty.
What Panchakarma means in classical Ayurveda and how to explain it responsibly online
Therapy guides should clarify indication, preparation, supervision, and who should not self-experiment, rather than market Panchakarma as a catch-all detox.
The reference stack behind IndiaPathy content
These are the source classes used to populate condition pages, herb entries, therapy guides, and practitioner knowledge surfaces.
Government & AYUSH Sources
Primary reference layer for editorial credibility, practitioner verification context, and research discovery.
AYUSH Research Portal
Condition-page research citations across Ayurveda, Yoga, Naturopathy, Unani, Siddha, and Homeopathy.
CCRAS
Herb monographs, journals, pharmacopoeia references, and Ayurvedic clinical protocols.
AYUSH Global Portal
System definitions and practitioner ecosystem context.
E-Charak Portal
Navigation point for medicinal plant and classical-text resources.
Indian Medicinal Plants Database
Vernacular herb names, authenticated images, and cross-system plant mapping.
Classical Texts
Primary-source layer that grounds IndiaPathy content in the traditions themselves rather than generic wellness summaries.
Charaka Samhita
Ayurveda condition frameworks, therapeutics, and foundational principles.
Sushruta Samhita
Ayurvedic surgical, wound-healing, and intervention-oriented references.
Kent, Boger, and Hering Materia Medica
Homeopathic remedy and repertory references.
Ibn Sina's Canon of Medicine
Unani drug properties, humoral theory, and disease classification.
Open-Access Research
Evidence layer used to explain where modern research is aligned, preliminary, limited, or mixed.
Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine
Clinical, safety, and integrative medicine citations for public education pages.
Journal of Research in Ayurvedic Sciences
Government-backed Ayurveda research, safety data, and pharmacovigilance context.
PubMed / PMC
Free-full-text research discovery across conditions, herbs, and therapies.
Structured Herb Datasets
Bulk-population layer for the herb wiki, phytochemical mapping, and structured educational metadata.