*Important Disclaimer


*Please read carefully

*No promise of longevity:

Ayusha Health uses Stay Healthy, Delay Ageing, Live Longer in their tagline and similar words elsewhere on their website.

However it is explicitly clarified that Ayurveda science, treatments and Ayusha Health, its directors and treatment providers, do not make any claims of complete cure or increased life expectancy or magical healing by following the treatments or the advice given to individual clients by the treatment providers at Ayusha Health.

This tagline is not be construed as a representation or as giving hope or promises for complete cure, healing or longer life.

No one can know, predict or guarantee – including the medical doctors – the lifespan of an individual, their life expectancy or longevity. No one can predict or foresee how a person would age when it comes to ageing.

Ayurveda recommends positive lifestyle choices which are positively co-related to quality and duration of life in the similar way smoking is negatively correlated to quality and duration of life.

That means that for one who smokes, the chances of longer life expectancy are less. Similarly, the person who makes better lifestyle choices of not smoking, not drinking alcohol, following a balanced diet, does regular exercise, is emotionally balanced and manages stress well, is having better chances of longer life. However, that does not mean that such individual will outlive the one who smokes or makes incorrect lifestyle choices and vice-a-versa.

The relation between life expectancy and its determinant factors of health, lifestyle choices, hygiene, diet and nutrition, exercise etc is explained in various research below. The following research is sourced from google.com and is mentioned below for general purposes only and Ayusha Health does not guarantee its authenticity or usefulness or application.

Ayusha recommends patients to do their own prior research .

Article No. 1

Significant factors that affect individual’s life expectancy include gender, genetics, overall health condition, access to health care, hygiene, diet and nutrition, exercise, lifestyle, infectious diseases prevalent and crime rates, to name a few.

Evidence-based studies indicate that longevity is based on two major factors, genetics and lifestyle choices.

Twin studies have estimated that approximately 20-30% of an individual's lifespan is related to genetics, the rest is due to individual behaviors and environmental factors which can be modified.

In addition, it found that lifestyle plays almost no factor in health and longevity after the age of 80, and that almost everything in advanced age is due to genetic factors.

https://www.disabled-world.com/fitness/longevity/

Article No. 2

The differences among causes of death were nonsignificant, but there was some indication that mental health problems were more strongly related to deaths from injury and cardiovascular disease. The overall relationship was significant for men but weaker for women.

https://psycnet.apa.org/record/1995-43706-001

 Article No. 3

Stopping smoking as early as possible is important, but cessation at any age provides meaningful life extensions. (Am J Public Health. 2002;92:990–996)

https://ajph.aphapublications.org/doi/full/10.2105/AJPH.92.6.990

 Article No. 4

Gene expression can be optimised for health and longevity through manipulation of transcription factor (TF) activity. The effects of many such TFs are conserved between animal species indicating evolutionary conservation of underlying mechanisms.

Lifespan-determining TFs regulate a plethora of cellular and organismal functions, including stress resistance, metabolism and growth. They interact with each other both within and between cells. Manipulating their activity in a single cell type can often be sufficient to insure longevity.

The evolutionary conservation of their effects on ageing is most likely a reflection of the conservation of their function in processes, such as reproduction, growth, and metabolism, that are important earlier in life. Their effects on early and late life can, however, often be uncoupled.

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0168952520300482

 Article No. 5

This may explain why the social relationships, environmental, physical, and mental factors were important for the Quality of Life (QOL).

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7544013/

 Article No. 6

https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/healthandsocialcare/healthandlifeexpectancies/articles/whataffectsanareashealthylifeexpectancy/2017-06-28

An evidence base article showing the correlation of smoking, alcohol, diet and physical activity on area life expectancy

Article No. 7

Research demonstrates that among those who live beyond an average life expectancy, approximately 25% of the increased lifespan is related to genetics. The remaining 75% is largely due to environmental factors, mainly diet and lifestyle factors, that have the ability to influence genetic effects for increased longevity.

https://krex.k-state.edu/dspace/handle/2097/38266

 Article No. 8

They have found that long-lived individuals have little in common with one another in education, income, or profession. The similarities they do share, however, reflect their lifestyles—many are nonsmokers, are not obese, and cope well with stress. Also, most are women. Because of their healthy habits, these older adults are less likely to develop age-related chronic diseases, such as high blood pressure, heart disease, cancer, and diabetes, than their same-age peers.

https://medlineplus.gov/genetics/understanding/traits/longevity/

 Article No. 9

Exercising regularly, adopting a healthful diet, not smoking, not becoming overweight, and drinking only moderate amounts of alcohol could all lengthen life at age 50 for women by 14 years and for men by 12 years.

https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/321671

 Article No. 10

The study found no evidence for a substantial impact of common genetic factors on smoking, BMI and longevity. This suggests that only a small fraction of the genetic influences on longevity is mediated via a genetic influence on smoking and BMI and, furthermore, that it is unlikely that the associations between smoking and mortality and between BMI and mortality are confounded by common genetic factors.

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs004390050241

To know more about Ayurveda – click the links below or do your own independent research.

https://www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au/health/conditionsandtreatments/ayurveda  

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5041382/

Ayurveda can have positive effects when used as a complementary therapy in combination with standard, conventional medical care. (https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/wellness-and-prevention/ayurveda)

*No guarantee of cure:

Ayurveda treatments can offer significant health benefits / improvements however Ayusha Health can not guarantee any cure of a disease condition and, practitioners at Ayusha do not claim that their treatments offer ‘cure’, due to various reasons as below:
1. Unlike other countries, due to various regulations in Australia, many Ayurvedic medications and treatments can not be offered, limiting the ability of Ayurveda to offer ‘cure’.
2. Modern medicine also does not guarantee complete cure for many conditions. Similar to modern medicine practitioners, we will explain you risks and benefits of the treatments we offer so as to help you make an informed decision prior to pursuing Ayurvedic treatment.
3. Often patients come to Ayurveda after they have explored / exhausted other treatment options including modern medicine. In this process, their condition often worsens, making the desired health outcome difficult or prolonged using Ayurveda.
4. The outcome of any treatment is dependent upon the shared responsibility between the practitioner and the patient. Ayurveda puts a great emphasis on this shared responsibility model to achieve the ‘cure’ as an outcome. The practitioner can not be held responsible for any lapses in this shared responsibility. 

*No discontinuation of any treatments or medications:

Ayurveda works as a complimentary therapy and is not a substitute for treatments and/or medications prescribed to you by your GP or Specialist. Clients and patients are expected to continue their all existing treatments and medications.

Ayusha or its practitioners will never advise you to discontinue any of your current treatments or medications.

If you are in any doubt re following any Ayurvedic recommendations provided by Ayusha including therapies, herbal formulas, diet and lifestyle changes, please talk to your GP before following them.