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Herbal
medicine, use of natural plant substances (botanicals) to treat
and prevent illness.
The practice has existed since prehistoric times and flourishes
today as the primary form of medicine for perhaps as much as 80%
of the world's population. Over 80,000 species of plants are in
use throughout the world. Along with , herbal medicine is considered
primary health care in China, where it has been in documented use
for over 2,500 years.
Herbs may be used directly as teas or extracts, or they may be used
in the production of drugs. Approximately 25% of the prescription
drugs sold in the United States are plant based. Many more herbal
ingredients are present in over-the-counter drugs, such as laxatives.
Medicines that come from plants include from willow bark (Salix
species) and from foxglove (Digitalis purpurea).
Scientific interest in herbal medicine in the United States has
lagged behind that in the countries of Asia and W Europe; in Germany,
for example, one third of graduating physicians have studied herbal
medicine, and a comprehensive therapeutic guide to herbal medicines
has long been published there. Nonetheless, millions of people in
the United States use herbal products to treat a wide variety of
ailments or to enhance health. Among the more popular remedies used
are , to increase stamina and as a mild sedative; , for mild depression;
, to aid the immune system and alleviate colds; kava, to calm anxiety
and treat insomnia; saw palmetto, for enlarged prostate; and ginkgo
biloba, to improve short-term memory. Some people have used botanicals
in an attempt to stave off serious illnesses such as AIDS.
This widespread use has prompted demands that herbal remedies be
regulated as drugs to insure quality standards. The U.S. (FDA) can
require a clinical trial on any herb that has a health claim on
its label, but medical testing, which is geared toward observing
a particular active component, is difficult to apply to herbs, which
may have many interacting ingredients. Debate over botanicals' validity
and safety as medicines and over the appropriate degree of government
regulation continues. The Dietary Supplement Health and Education
Act, passed in 1994, reclassified herbs as dietary supplements rather
than food additives. It forbids unreasonable health claims by the
manufacturers, but makes it the FDA's responsibility to prove that
a marketed product is unsafe. (In contrast, in prescription and
over-the-counter drugs, it is the manufacturer's responsibility
to prove safety and effectiveness before a drug can be marketed.)
Another concern surrounding herbal medicine is the availability
of wild plants for a growing market; it is feared that the limited
supplies of known wild herbs are being threatened by over-harvesting
and habitat loss. The potential of isolating beneficial drugs from
plants, however, has prompted large pharmaceutical companies to
contribute to the conservation of the tropical rain forest. Biologists
have called for more careful study of medicinal plants, especially
regarding their capacity for sustainable harvesting and the effects
of cultivation on their efficacy as medicaments.
Bibliography
See V. E. Tyler and S. Foster, Tyler's Honest Herbal (rev. ed. 1999);
The Physicians' Desk Reference for Herbal Medicines (annual).
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