Institutionalization of African traditional medicine in health care systems in Africa
Kenya Medical Research Institute
In recent times, the phrase " traditional medicine" has become a
catchword among the peoples in all countries in Africa. This has been
due partly because the use of herbal remedies has gained popularity
worldwide and the exploitation of these remedies has become a
multimillion industry. The term "African traditional medicine" is not
synonymous with "Alternative and complimentary medicine" which is a
misnomer which is sometimes used. African traditional medicine is the
African indigenous system of health care and therefore cannot be an
alternative. In Africa, there is an important reason why African
traditional medicine has become increasingly popular. The high cost of
allopathic medical health care and the expensive pharmaceutical products
have become unavailable to a majority of people. Naturally, the many
centuries-old alternative sources of health care have become handy,
often in desperate situations. In fact, the frequently quoted statement
that 85 per cent of the people in Africa use traditional medicine, is an
understatement because this figure is much higher and continues to
increase. At the Alma Atta Declaration of 1978, it was resolved that
traditional medicine had to be incorporated in the health care systems
in developing countries if the objective of the "Health for All by the
Year 2000" was to be realized. Notwithstanding this strategy, African
countries did not come near the objective at the end of the 20th
century. Therefore, the Member States of the WHO African Region adopted a
resolution in 2000 called "Promoting the role of traditional medicine
in health care systems: A strategy for the African Region". This
strategy provides for the institutionalization of traditional medicine
in health care systems of the member states of the WHO African Region.
Furthermore, the OAU (African Union) Heads of State and Government
declared the period 2000 - 2010 as the African Decade on African
Traditional Medicine. In addition, the Director General of the World
Health Organization also declared 31st August every year as African
Traditional Medicine Day. All these declarations signify the importance
and the approval by Governments and international institutions of the
need to institutionalize African traditional medicine in health care.
Therefore the mechanisms for institutionalization have to be developed
to make these resolutions a reality. In view of the complexity and
heterogeneity of African traditional medicine, a system of incorporation
in the current health care systems has to be developed. During the last
four years the WHO Regional Director for Africa and his Secretariat
took up the challenge and have developed model guidelines that the
Member States can adapt or adopt as may be appropriate in the respective
Member States. Some of the relevant guidelines include the following:
1. Guidelines for the formulation, implementation, monitoring and
evaluation of a National Traditional Medicine Policy 2. Model legal
framework for the practice of traditional medicine: The Traditional
Health Practitioners Bill; 3. Model Codes of Ethics for Traditional
Health Practitioners 4. A Regional framework for the registration of
traditional medicines in the WHO African Region; 5. A regulatory
framework for the protection of intellectual property rights (IPR) and
indigenous knowledge of traditional medicines in the WHO African Region.
These guidelines and others provide a basis for the incorporation of
African traditional medicine in a manner that would best suit a
particular country. The WHO Regional Director for Africa also appointed a
Regional Expert Committee on Traditional Medicine which assists in the
development of these guidelines. It is important to emphasize that as
more and more people use this traditional health care facility, there is
an urgent need for the appropriate systems of quality control in the
practice as well as in the production and use of the medicines. Such
systems will protect the public and also ensure that the best practices
and the most useful medicines are made available in the most affordable
manner. Every country in the African region would be expected to adopt a
method of incorporation that would be suitable: integrative, inclusive,
or tolerant, as the case may be. It is an undeniable fact that we
cannot afford to sit on the fence. All the stakeholders stand to gain a
great deal in the development and promotion of African traditional
medicine. In particular, all the practitioners in the present allopathic
health care system will gain professionally as well as economically as
they will have access to an additional culture-friendly system with
which to provide services to the people. All the stakeholders must join
hands in the effort to institutionalize the appropriate African
traditional medicine in the health care systems in order to provide the
health services that are urgently needed in the communities.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17298111
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