Yoga and Tai Chi: a Cross-Cultural Comparative Study of Health Benefits, Cultural Sustainability, and Global Public Health Implications

* By Huan Zhou, Aleksandra Bojarczuk et al, Frontiers in Public Health, March 2026 *

Abstract

Background The escalating burden of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) demands cross-culturally adaptive interventions. Yoga (India) and Tai Chi (China) are both valuable mind-body practices. However, their distinct health governance pathways have not been systematically compared. Objectives This study aimed to: (1) decipher differential health promotion mechanisms (cardiopulmonary/pain/anxiety outcomes); (2) quantitative assessment of the different trade-offs in cultural sustainability (analysing the communication characteristics under market-oriented and institutionalized models); (3) the implications of different policy integration models for global public health scalability are evaluated. Methods We developed a comparative framework examining three interconnected dimensions: (1) Health Benefits—by synthesizing clinical trial evidence; (2) Cultural Sustainability—by analyzing patterns in global digital and academic discourse; and (3) Policy Integration—by reviewing official documents and modeling the relationships among all three dimensions. Results (1) Equivalent efficacy in cardiopulmonary function ( d = 0.45), chronic pain ( d = 0.62), and anxiety reduction ( d = 0.51); (2) Cultural Sustainability Exhibits an Asymmetric Pattern: although yoga boasts a more extensive and well-established clinical evidence base (particularly in the field of mental health), its standardized movement retention rate in the process of global dissemination (68%) is significantly lower than that of Tai Chi (82%, p < 0.001). It should be noted that yoga’s inherent philosophical tenet of Viniyoga (i.e., individualized adaptation) may lead to a systematic underestimation of its cultural authenticity when assessed using standardized metrics; (3) Structural equation model of health-culture-policy interactions. Key pathways: health benefits → policy inclusivity (β = 0.63); cultural transmission → policy inclusivity (β = −0.30); policy feedback → cultural transmission (β = 0.45). Conclusion Yoga and Tai Chi represent two complementary paradigms in the modernization of mind-body practices. The former excels in market adaptability and rapid innovation diffusion, while the latter demonstrates strengths in institutional norms and community-based public provision. This study advocates that effective global health governance should avoid a single model and instead construct a contextualized hybrid framework. By selectively integrating the advantages of both approaches based on specific socio-cultural contexts and health system needs, we can simultaneously ensure the evidentiary validity, cultural relevance, and social accessibility of interventions.

Full Text

About the author(s)

Huan Zhou: Gdansk University of Physical Education and Sport, Gdansk, Poland,
Anhui International Studies University, Hefei, China

Aleksandra Bojarczuk: Professor (Associate) at Gdansk University of Physical Education and Sport, Gdansk, Poland,

monperatoto

monperatoto

bandar togel

kampungbet

monperatoto

monperatoto

toto slot

toto togel

bandar togel

slot gacor

toto slot

toto slot

situs togel

situs toto

slot gacor

slot resmi

toto togel

slot gacor

toto slot

monperatoto

Share and Enjoy !

Shares