MD, PhD, MAE, FMedSci, FRSB, FRCP, FRCPEd.

It has been reported that King Charles’ charity, formerly the Prince’s Foundation, is compelled to return £110,000 to the Indian government. The funds were earmarked for an NHS alternative medicine clinic championed by Charles, which never materialised. The proposed clinic was aimed at integrating Indian traditional medicine into the UK’s healthcare system.

But why did the plan fail?

The answer is simple: the National Health Service (NHS) did not approve it.

The history of the UK ‘Ayurvedic Centre of Excellence’ goes back several years. Here is an excerpt of my book ‘CHARLES, THE ALTERNATIVE KING‘ where I discuss it as one of Charles’ many pipe dreams in the realm of so-called alternative medicine (SCAM):

In 2018, India’s prime minister Narendra Modi paid a visit to the Science Museum in London where he inspected the ‘5000 Years of Science and Innovation’ exhibition. The event was hosted by Charles and included the announcement of new ‘Ayurvedic Centres of Excellence’, allegedly a ‘first-of-its-kind’ global network for evidence-based research on yoga and Ayurveda. The first centre was said to open in 2018 in London. Funding was to come partly from the Indian government and partly from private donors. The central remit of the new initiative was reported to be researching the effects of Ayurvedic medicine.

Dr Michael Dixon (yes, you may have met him several times before, e.g. here, here, or here) commented: “This is going to be the first Ayurvedic centre of excellence in the UK. We will be providing, on the NHS, patients with yoga, with demonstrations and education on healthy eating, Ayurvedic diets, and massage including reflexology and Indian head massage. And all this will be subject to a research project led by Westminster University, to find out whether the English population will take to yoga and these sorts of treatments. Whether they will be helped by it and finally whether it will reduce the call on NHS resources leading to less GP consultations, hospital admissions and operations.”

 On its website, the College of Medicine and Integrated Health announced that a memorandum of understanding with India’s Ministry of Ayurveda, Yoga and Naturopathy, Unani, Siddha and Homoeopathy (AYUSH) had been signed “to create centres of excellence in the UK … Dr Michael Dixon agreed the joint venture to provide the UK centres, which will offer and research traditional Indian medicine… The Indian government will match private UK donations to fund the AYUSH centres in the UK”. In November 2019, the following press release by the president of India offered more details:

The Prince of Wales called on the President of India, Shri Ram Nath Kovind, at Rashtrapati Bhavan today (November 13, 2019).

Welcoming the Prince to India, the President congratulated him on his election as the head of the Commonwealth. He said that India considers the Commonwealth as an important grouping that voices the concerns of a large number of countries, including the Small Island Developing States.

The President said that India and the United Kingdom are natural partners bound by historical ties and shared values of democracy, rule of law and respect for multi-cultural society. As the world’s pre-eminent democracies, our two countries have much to contribute together to effectively address the many challenges faced by the world today.

The Prince planted a Champa sapling – plant native to the subcontinent which has several uses in Ayurveda – in the Herbal Garden of Rashtrapati Bhavan. He was taken around the garden and shown different plants that have medicinal properties. The Prince showed a keen interest in India’s alternative model of healthcare.

The President thanked the Prince of Wales for his support for Ayurveda research. The Prince of Wales Charitable Foundation and the All India Institute of Ayurveda signed an MOU during the visit of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to the UK in April 2018. Under the MOU, the All India Institute of Ayurveda and the College of Medicine, UK will be conducting clinical research on Depression, Anxiety and Fibromyalgia. They will also be undertaking training programme for the development of Standard Operating Protocol on “AYURYOGA” for UK Health professionals.

_________________________

END OF EXCERPT

Charles’ initiative, encompassing Ayurveda, yoga, naturopathy, and homeopathy, was intended to be a landmark project, with the Indian government contributing £110,000 to the King’s Foundation for its implementation. However, the NHS, responsible for St Charles Hospital, never endorsed the project. Despite initial talks, the proposed collaboration did not progress, and the clinic failed to materialise. According to the west London clinical commissioning group (CCG), which oversaw the hospital at the time, there was no official involvement, and discussions ceased in 2020.

Under charity law, funds designated for a specific project cannot be diverted without donor permission and regulatory approval. The King’s Foundation has acknowledged the need to return the remaining budget to the Indian government but has not disclosed when this decision was made or why the funds were not promptly returned.

The initiative faced opposition from the NHS, as a year before the clinic’s launch, NHS England’s CEO Simon Stevens had issued guidance discouraging the prescription of homeopathy and herbal remedies, citing their limited efficacy and misuse of NHS funds.

Despite the failed project, connections between key figures persist. Dr Michael Dixon played a significant role in finalising agreements with the Indian government. The King’s Foundation defended its actions, stating that due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the project shifted online, resulting in reduced costs. They claim to have contacted the Indian government for the return of unused funds, emphasising that the money remains in a restricted account.

As the controversy unfolds, questions arise about the intersections between alternative medicine advocacy, royal endorsements, and international collaborations within the context of public healthcare.

An article in the Daily Mail reported that the original plan proposed that Ayush treatments would be provided to patients, who would be referred by local GPs, at St Charles Hospital in Kensington. Isaac Mathai, who runs Soukya, a homeopathic yoga retreat in Bangalore which Charles and Camilla have visited, was an adviser to the project at St Charles Hospital.

The Indian government made a payment from the budget of the Ayush Ministry, which Mr Modi has used as a tool of diplomacy to promote Indian medicine and culture worldwide, to the King’s Foundation. It was proposed the charity would use its expertise to help set up the clinic. But the NHS at no point agreed to the plans.

A spokesman of the west London clinical commissioning group (CCG), which administered St Charles Hospital at the time, said: ‘Provision of homeopathy and herbal treatments were not considered as part of the project by the CCG. The aim of the project was to test the use of yoga and massage to support the overall health and wellbeing of patients with long-term conditions.’ A King’s Foundation spokesman added that the initial intention had been to deliver Indian traditional medicine at St Charles Hospital.

5 Responses to King Charles’ “Ayurvedic Centre of Excellence” turns out to be an embarrassing failure

  • Altogether a strange initiative to be promoted by a Fellow of the Royal Society (founded by Charles II) .

    One explanation for Charles III’s interest lies in the Daily Mail’s comment: “The Indian government made a payment from the budget of the Ayush Ministry, which Mr Modi has used as a tool of diplomacy to promote Indian medicine and culture worldwide, to the King’s Foundation.”

    There is, of course, no such thing as ‘Indian medicine’ – only medicine which works, and that which does not.
    Any ‘medicine’ (or therapy) developed in India is welcomed as soon as its efficacy is proved. Plastic surgical techniques being a notable example.

    The critical concept is that Mr Modi is keen to promote Indian culture. Fair enough – that’s his job.
    But he should not encourage advantage being taken of vulnerable and gullible patients, or princes.
    Sigh.

  • Providing longterm support for patients with.long- term conditions is long overdue. We should not though be entertaing any thoughts of homeopathy or other SCAM treatments in the NHS. Doing so just legitimises the thousands if SCAM practitioners who are just purely out to make.money out of the sick and vulnerable.

  • For some unknown reason, this word popped into my mind…

    meretricious [adjective]:
    1. apparently attractive but having no real value.

    2. ᴀʀᴄʜᴀɪᴄ relating to or characteristic of a prostitute.

    Similar words:
    artificial, bogus, false, fake, fakey, faked, fraudulent, cheap, chintzy, flashy, garish, gaudy, imitation, kitschy, loud, plastic, pretentious, sham, specious, spurious, tacky, tasteless, tawdry, tinselly, trashy

    — Oxford Languages

  • Ayurvedic drugs are thought to have enhanced potency, when they contain heavy metals- very often above WHO limits

    Heavy metals were detected in all formulations (n=42),

    details:

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8882783/

    Some people also drink Ayurvedic teas – which also can contain heavy metals. I know of an Pb intoxication caused by such a tea.

    • Heavy metals in traditional Indian remedies. Ernst E. Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 2002 Feb;57(12):891-6. doi: 10.1007/s00228-001-0400-y.
      PMID: 11936709

      Toxic heavy metals and undeclared drugs in Asian herbal medicines. Ernst E. Trends Pharmacol Sci. 2002 Mar;23(3):136-9. doi: 10.1016/S0165-6147(00)01972-6. PMID: 11879681

      Ayurvedic medicines. Ernst E. Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2002 Sep;11(6):455-6. doi: 10.1002/pds.756. PMID: 12426929 No abstract available.

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