Medicinal Plants : : Their Role in Health and Biodiversity / / ed. by Timothy R. Tomlinson, Olayiwola Akerele.

From the beginning of human civilization, people have depended on plants to cure disease, promote healing of injuries, and alleviate pain. In many places that has changed very little. In the West, however, herbal and botanical cures have long been ignored in favor of "scientific medicine."...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter University of Pennsylvania Press Package Archive 1898-1999
MitwirkendeR:
HerausgeberIn:
Place / Publishing House:Philadelphia : : University of Pennsylvania Press, , [2015]
©1998
Year of Publication:2015
Language:English
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (240 p.) :; 44 illus.
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Other title:Frontmatter --
Contents --
Preface: Promoting the Worldwide Use of Medicinal Plants --
Acknowledgments --
Medicinal Plants, Scientific Progress, and Development --
1. A Case History of Plant-Derived Drug Research: Phyllanthus and Hepatitis B Virus --
2. An Expanded Program for Medicinal Plants --
Medicinal Plants in the Socioeconomic Context --
3. Exploiting Medicinal Plants: Why Do It the Hard Way? --
4. Safety, Efficacy, and the Use of Medicinal Plants --
5. Economics and Medicinal Plants --
6. The Medicinal Plant Marketplace --
Conservation: Issues and Future Prospects --
7. Linking Ethnopharmacology and Tropical Forest: Conservation in Belize --
8. Exploitation of Medicinal Plants --
9. Agronomics and Medicinal Plants --
10. The Role of Botanical Gardens and Arboreta in Traditional Medicine: A Personal Reflection and Case Study --
Promising Practices in the Use of Medicinal Plants --
11. The Legal Situation of Phytomedicines in Germany --
12. Indonesia: The Utilization of Medicinal Plants for Primary Health Care --
13. Ethnopharmacological Surveys in Brazilian Extractive Reserves --
14. Traditional Korean Medicine --
15. Utilization and Conservation of Medicinal Plants in China with Special Reference to Atractylodes lancea --
16. Medicinal Plants in the Philippines --
17. Promising Practices in the Use of Medicinal Plants in the United States --
Regulatory Issues --
18. Medicinal Plants and Phytomedicines within the European Community --
19. The Evolving Status of Herbals and Phytomedicines in the United States --
Appendixes --
Contributors --
Index
Summary:From the beginning of human civilization, people have depended on plants to cure disease, promote healing of injuries, and alleviate pain. In many places that has changed very little. In the West, however, herbal and botanical cures have long been ignored in favor of "scientific medicine." But the benefits of medicinal plants are being rediscovered in many developed countries, where consumers are turning to such therapies in place of, and in addition to, Western medical treatments. And, all over the world, the drive to lower the cost of health care has made herbals and botanicals an attractive alternative to more expensive synthetic remedies.In 1978, the World Health Organization responded to increased interest in medicinal plants by convening a series of international consultations, seminars, and symposia to explore and promote the use of medicinal plants. Medicinal Plants presents the proceedings of the last of these symposia, held in 1993. It brings together an vast range of information and presents an overview of the use of medicinal plants that includes a discussion of a variety of issues-scientific, economic, regulatory, agricultural, cultural-focused on the importance of medicinal plants to primary health care and global health care reform.
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9780812292633
9783110442526
DOI:10.9783/9780812292633
Access:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: ed. by Timothy R. Tomlinson, Olayiwola Akerele.