| No images? Click here ![]() Thursday, 13 November 2025 SAVE THE DATE Second WHO Global Summit on Traditional Medicine The second WHO Global Summit on Traditional Medicine Restoring balance: The science and practice of health and well-being will be held from 17 to 19 December 2025 at Bharat Mandapam Convention Centre, New Delhi, India. Media participation The Summit will be a hybrid event and is open to journalists for in-person or online attendance. To attend the Summit virtually, please register here: https://tm-summit.org/register/. Registrations will close on 5 December. If you have any questions about your registration, write to TMGlobalSummit@who.int. For in-person attendance, accreditation by the Government of India is required. Please submit your accreditation request by 5 December to TMGlobalSummit@who.int. Questions about media accreditation can be addressed to the same address. Media moments, photography and multimedia
About the Summit The second WHO Global Summit on Traditional Medicine aims to advance a global movement to restore balance for people and the planet, grounded in the science and practice of Traditional Medicine. Guided by the Global Traditional Medicine Strategy 2025–2034, the Summit will highlight the latest evidence and innovations, and address critical issues including health systems regulation and integration; respectful information exchange with Indigenous Peoples and across knowledge paradigms; biodiversity preservation and intellectual property rights; and the transformative potential of frontier technologies. New products, collaborations and initiatives will be presented, alongside concrete pledges and commitments. Further information, including the provisional agenda and the key initiatives to be launched: https://tm-summit.org/ About the WHO Bulletin special issue on traditional medicine In the run-up to the Summit, the Bulletin of the World Health Organization (WHO) has released a special issue dedicated to traditional medicine. The first such thematic issue on this topic since 1977, the issue contains three news items, two original research papers, two systematic reviews, five policy and practice papers, and five perspective pieces. The special issue reviews the integration of traditional medicine into primary health care, delves into policy and practice, discusses Indigenous rights and traditional knowledge, and examines the use of artificial intelligence. For further information about the Bulletin, or to request interviews with the experts, please write to mediainquiries@who.int with a copy to smailbegovica@who.int Additional information and resources:
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