80% of Africa’s Population Relies On Traditional Medicine -WHO

August 30, 2022
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August 30, 2022
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The World Health Organization,WHO, has said that 80% of  Africans  rely  on traditional medicine for their basic health needs.

Its Regional Director for Africa, Dr Matshidiso Moeti, who disclosed  in her message to commemorate 2022 African Traditional Medicine Day, said traditional medicine has been the trusted, acceptable, affordable and accessible source of health care for African populations for centuries.

She emphasized the need for  governments to  strengthen collaboration between science, technology and innovation institutions; traditional health practitioners and  the private sector, to fast-track research and development, and local manufacturing of traditional medicine-based therapeutics for the health and well-being of Africa’s people.

She said since African Traditional Medicine Day was initiated in 2003, the continent has seen the implementation of WHO regional strategies on promoting and enhancing the role of traditional medicine in health systems, 2001-2010 and 2013–2023, as well as plans of action for the first (2001-2010) and second decades of African Traditional Medicine (2011-2020).

She also said member states have used the day to catalyze discussion forums around national policies on traditional medicine, cultivation of medicinal plants, including training of traditional health practitioners, and their collaboration with their conventional counterparts.

“These activities prompted more than 40 African Region countries to develop national traditional medicine policies by 2022, up from only eight in 2000. Thirty countries have also integrated traditional medicine into their national policies, a 100% improvement on the situation in 2000. Additionally, 39 countries have established regulatory frameworks for traditional medicine practitioners, compared to only one in 2000, demonstrating good governance and leadership”, she added

She said, with 34 research institutes in 26 countries dedicated to traditional medicine research and development, it remains a promising industry, with great commercial potential if marketed appropriately internationally. Twelve of these countries reported making public fund allocations to this research and development across the past 10 years.

She also said these institutes have employed WHO guidelines and protocols to assess the quality, safety and efficacy of traditional medicine-based therapeutics for priority diseases, such as HIV/AIDS, malaria, diabetes, hypertension, sickle-cell disease and, recently, COVID-19.

According to her, 17 countries, as opposed to zero in 2000, currently have frameworks for the protection of intellectual property rights and traditional medical knowledge.

She added:”To advance continental efforts towards equitable access to medical products and technologies, all but eight African Member States are now engaged in large-scale cultivation of medicinal and aromatic plants. Nineteen countries have also established facilities for the local manufacture of herbal medicines, with the number of herbal medicines registered by national regulatory authorities in 14 countries increasing from just 20 in 2000, to more than 100 this year. More than 45 herbal medicines now feature on national essential medicines lists.

“In another important advance, 25 countries have now integrated traditional medicine into their health sciences curricula, while 20 have established training programmes for traditional health practitioners and health sciences students, to strengthen human resources in both traditional medicine and primary health care. Thirty-nine countries have also developed legal frameworks for traditional health practitioners’’.

“Positive signs of traditional and conventional health systems working in parallel for the good of their patients is that referrals of patients between the two sectors are now taking place routinely in 17 countries. A total of 24 countries have also developed Codes of Ethics and Practice for traditional health practitioners, to ensure safety and standards of service delivery. Ghana is setting the example for the continent, with the establishment of traditional medicine clinics in 55 regional hospital settings to date.

“WHO in the African Region has supported joint missions with partners to the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ghana, Madagascar, Nigeria, South Africa and Uganda, to monitor clinical trials of traditional medicine-based therapeutics proposed for COVID-19, eight of which are ongoing. The political will displayed by countries to support these innovations has been inspiring, as has the level of available infrastructure and skills”, she stressed.

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