Empowering MBBS Graduates with world-class Integrative medecine.

I-PRISM training to build a global, future-ready healthcare career.

Your Learning Journey at a Glance


What you may have learned:

You have mastered human anatomy, physiology, pathology, microbiology, pharmacology, and developed core clinical, diagnostic and treatment skills through rotations and internship.

What you may not know:

Integrative diagnostics, holistic biomarkers, Ayurvedic–quantum interpretations, and systems-based preventive care beyond conventional medicine.

What you will learn:

You will learn PRISM diagnostics, regenerative systems medicine, dosha-mapping, AI prediction skills, phytochemical therapeutics, and integrative research for complex diseases.

Basic Certification in PRISM

The Basic Certification empowers medical graduates with dual clinical fluency the ability to interpret disease simultaneously in biomedical pathology and VPK-based systems biology. MBBS/MD learners gain competency in all 12 I-PRISM modules including dosha metrics, algorithmic physiology, organ-system mapping, herbal–drug compatibilities and lifestyle algorithmics. The focus is on safe, responsible, evidence-compatible integrative decision-making alongside standard of care.

Who should join: Medical students and doctors (MBBS, MD, DO, BDS) interested in chronic care optimisation, geriatric medicine, pain, gut disorders, metabolic syndromes and holistic clinical practice.

Outcomes

  • Competently interpret PRISM case dashboards and digital dosha outputs.
  • Integrate PRISM-guided protocols safely alongside conventional care.
  • Become bilingual in Allopathy + VPK systems biology for multidisciplinary care.

Advanced Certification in PRISM

The Advanced Certification transitions clinicians from knowledge to real-world practice. Participants apply PRISM algorithms in live cases, evaluate response kinetics, personalize protocols, and design translational case models. Strong emphasis on case-rounds, inter-disciplinary conferences, dose-response analytics and practice-readiness.

Who should join: Basic-level graduates planning to practice integrative clinical medicine or pursue research/teaching pathways.

Outcomes

  • Become an industry-ready Integrative Clinician.
  • Competently manage complex chronic cases with PRISM-guided plans.
  • Build track record for research, practice development, and international roles.

Academic & Clinical Disciplines Covered in I-PRISM

Provides MBBS doctors with a working knowledge of Ayurveda’s core concepts (Tridosha theory of Vata-Pitta-Kapha).
Objective: Enable understanding of patient constitution and disease predisposition in Ayurvedic terms, so they can incorporate lifestyle/dietary insights from Ayurveda into clinical practice. This module bridges ancient and modern paradigms, helping doctors view patient health in a more holistic, systems-based way rather than organ-specific silos.

Augments doctors’ strong pathology background by introducing holistic biomarkers and integrative diagnostics beyond the conventional lab tests.
Objective: Teach doctors to use novel diagnostic tools (like Nadi Pariksha pulse analysis and Docture-Poly VPK™ device) alongside MRI/CT, interpreting results in an integrative manner. This improves early detection of imbalance (e.g. subtle inflammatory or metabolic changes) before overt disease, aligning with preventive care.

Introduces cross-disciplinary “-omics” sciences (genomics, metabolomics, microbiomics) and their interplay with chronic disease.
Objective: Train doctors to correlate Ayurvedic dosha imbalances with molecular pathways and multi-omic profiles. For instance, an allopathic doctor learns to interpret a patient’s genomic risk factors or gut microbiome changes in light of Ayurvedic principles of metabolic “dosha-mapping”, leading to truly personalized treatment plans.

Builds on physicians’ knowledge of pathology by focusing on restoring organ function rather than only managing disease.
Objective: Cover stem cell therapies, tissue engineering, and novel regenerative protocols that can apply to cardiac failure, neurodegeneration, etc. With this, doctors gain tools to attempt regeneration of tissues (e.g. myocardium in heart failure) where traditional medicine would only offer palliative care.

Allopathic doctors know pharmacology of modern drugs; this module teaches phytochemical therapeutics and herb-drug synergies.
Objective: Familiarize doctors with evidence-based herbal medicine (phytochemicals, medicinal plant extracts) and how to integrate them safely with prescription drugs. Given that ~35% of modern medicines originate from natural products, this knowledge helps doctors broaden treatment options (for example, using curcumin as an adjunct anti-inflammatory in rheumatoid arthritis).

Leverages doctors’ clinical acumen by adding training in artificial intelligence for healthcare.
Objective: Enable MBBS grads to use AI-driven predictive analytics and big data in clinical decision-making. They learn to analyze patient datasets for pattern recognition (e.g. AI models predicting complications), to use wearable sensors for monitoring, and to apply the PRISM digital tools in practice. This prepares them for the tech-driven future of medicine, as the global AI-in-healthcare market is expected to exceed $120 billion by 2028.

 A series of sub-modules focusing on major organ systems (cardiovascular, neuroendocrine, musculoskeletal, etc.) under an integrative lens. Objective: Teach doctors how to manage common end-stage diseases in each specialty by combining modalities. For example, Integrative Cardiology covers using Ayurvedic rasayana herbs for heart failure, yoga-breathing for rehabilitation, and modern drugs/devices together. Integrative Oncology might cover complementary therapies (nutrition, mind-body) alongside chemo/radiotherapy. This module ensures doctors can tackle complex chronic illnesses (like coronary artery disease, diabetes, autoimmune disorders) with a 360-degree approach.

Expands on public health and preventive medicine training by including yoga therapy, meditation, stress management, and nutrition as formal therapeutic tools. Objective: Instruct doctors in prescribing lifestyle interventions (yogic exercises for hypertension, meditation for anxiety, diet changes for metabolic syndrome) grounded in both ancient practice and modern evidence. Given that many NCDs are lifestyle-driven, this equips physicians to address root causes rather than just treating complications.

Teaches doctors classical diagnostic methods like Nadi Pariksha (pulse diagnosis) and Tongue/Face diagnosis, then correlates them with modern findings (e.g. pulse wave analysis via sensors).
Objective: By understanding these techniques and their modern interpretations, doctors enhance their diagnostic sensitivity. For instance, they can incorporate Nadi readings (augmented by VPK-18 algorithms) to detect constitutional imbalances that might not yet manifest in lab reports. This module fosters an appreciation of subtle diagnostics in a measurable way.

Reinforces doctors’ training in clinical research with specific focus on integrative medicine trials and publications.
Objective: Teach how to design studies that evaluate multi-modal interventions (e.g. herbal + drug + yoga) and how to critically appraise CAM research. Participants learn to contribute to the PRISM evidence base (which already boasts case reports of success in lupus, Crohn’s, CAD, etc). The aim is to create clinician-researchers who can publish and drive global standards for integrative medicine.

Introduces concepts of healthcare management, economics, and the franchise model.
Objective: Guide doctors in applying their new skills beyond the bedside – for example, how to set up an integrative clinic franchise, understanding revenue models, regulatory compliance (aligned with ICMR, USFDA, NHS standards), and digital health business opportunities. By highlighting the potential to save India ~$70 billion in GDP lost to chronic diseases, this module inspires doctors to be innovators who fill care gaps and capture emerging markets.

Emphasizes working in teams across disciplines (Ayurveds, pharmacists, technologists, etc.) and ethical practice in integrative care.
Objective: Ensure doctors can communicate and collaborate with non-allopathic practitioners effectively. Training covers clinical case discussions where, for example, an MBBS doctor coordinates with an Ayurveda doctor and a data scientist to co-manage a patient. It also instills respect for diverse medical traditions and the ethical use of each system’s tools. This prepares physicians to lead in “unified global standards for integrative medicine” in tandem with experts from various fields.

Application Process

Stage – 1
Eligibility & Application
Candidates must hold MBBS/MD qualification with internship and medical registration, and submit NEET-PG / INI-CET / USMLE score along with CV, SOP & references.
Stage – 2
Score Normalization
Academic Index is calculated using standardized weights from entrance exam percentile (60%) and graduation marks (40%) to ensure fair comparison.
Stage – 3
ISAT Examination
Applicants attempt ISAT assessing clinical reasoning, pathophysiology, investigation choice and readiness for integrative systems medicine.
stage – 4
Shortlisting
A combined CPIS merit score (AI + ISAT) is used to rank and shortlist the top candidates for interviews.
stage – 5
Interview
Focused on evaluating patient-safety judgment, clinical red-flag recognition, and openness to evidence-based integrative thinking.
stage – 6
Final Selection
Final Selection Score (Academic + ISAT + Interview) determines ranking; offers issued to those meeting competency and suitability thresholds.
stage -7
Enrollment & Bridging
Selected candidates complete documentation and undergo bridging modules like introductory data scie nce to prepare for coursework.
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I-PRISM Assistant