Ignorance of traditional herbal remedies
- Decline of herbal medicine
- Disregard of folk medicine
- Underuse of naturopathy
- Ignorance of traditional medical practices
- Ignorance of traditional plant remedies
Nature
Between 25,000 and 75,000 flowering plant species have been used in traditional medicine throughout the world. Only about one percent of these have been acknowledged through scientific studies to have real therapeutic value, though many are effective in producing a placebo effect. As many as 40,000 of the earth's 265,000 species of plants may have undiscovered medicinal value for humans. Many are already used by tribal healers, but this knowledge is unwritten and can be lost within a few generations.
Background
Plants have yielded strong analgesics, cardiovascular drugs, powerful antibiotics, anti-parasitic and anti-cancer compounds, laxatives and diuretics. Plants have also provided precursors for the production of oral contraceptives, and anti-inflammatory drugs. Products derived from plants are also used as suspending agents in the pharmaceutical industry, in the production of spermicidal jellies, toothpaste and skin lotions. Today, however, when buying a medicinal preparation, there is a one chance in four that the product owes its origin to one of the plants from this small, already explored group.
Incidence
Traditional medicine is still used by 70% of the African population. During the Gulf War, European doctors treated some wounds with a sugar paste that traces back to Egyptian battlefield medicine of 4,000 years ago. Most native cultures have systems of traditional medicine which are suppressed during the process of cultural invasion and domination, as has happened in many colonized countries and in Tibet under communist China.