BMJ 1994;308:673-674 (12 March)
Editorials
Towards the safer use of traditional remedies
About 80% of the world's population does not have access to Western medicine and therefore depends on traditional medical practices. When people from less developed countries emigrate they continue to seek medical advice from traditional practitioners working in their own communities, even in countries where all citizens have free access to good quality Western medicine. Though the main reasons for this are probably cultural and linguistic, the role of mistrust and fear should not be underestimated.
Large amounts of traditional medicines are imported into Britain, legally and illegally, and use of such medicines is frequently not admitted on occasions when serious illness forces patients to consult Western medical practitioners. These medicines carry with them a risk of adverse reactions; the risk needs to be quantified and as far as possible minimised.
The safer use of traditional remedies was the subject of a one day meeting held last month at the . . . [Full text of this article]

CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
StumbleUpon
Technorati What's this?
Relevant Articles
-
Phytotherapeutic research
- E Ernst
BMJ 1994 308: 1640.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
-
Safer use of traditional remedies
- Jonathan Howell, Peter James, and Sam Ramaiah
BMJ 1994 308: 1161-1162.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
-
Remedies may contain cocktail of active drugs
- Berengere I Vander Stricht, Olivier E Parvais, Renee J Vanhaelen-Fastre, and Maurice H Vanhaelen
BMJ 1994 308: 1162.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
-
Safer use of traditional remedies Clinical trials may fail to get ethical approval
- D J M Reynolds
BMJ 1994 308: 1043.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Dunne, F. J.
(2009). The 'Natural Health Service': natural does not mean safe. Adv. Psychiatr. Treat.
15: 49-56
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
Cohn, J., Lyons, M., Fink, R., Marker, J. H.
(2000). A Case Study in Assessing an Ethnically Diverse Community-Based Aging Population: A Multimethod Approach. American Journal of Medical Quality
15: 157-166
[Abstract]
-
Guedenon, A., Zinsou, C., Josse, R., Andele, K., Pritze, S., Portaels, F., Meyers, W. M.
(1995). Traditional Treatment of Buruli Ulcer in Benin. Arch Dermatol
131: 741-742
[Abstract]
-
De Smet, P. A G M
(1995). Should herbal medicine-like products be licensed as medicines. BMJ
310: 1023-1024
[Full text]
-
Ernst, E
(1994). Phytotherapeutic research. BMJ
308: 1640-1640
[Full text]
-
Vander Stricht, B. I, Parvais, O. E, Vanhaelen-Fastre, R. J, Vanhaelen, M. H
(1994). Remedies may contain cocktail of active drugs. BMJ
308: 1162-1162
[Full text]
-
Howell, J., James, P., Ramaiah, S.
(1994). Safer use of traditional remedies. BMJ
308: 1161c-1162
[Full text]
-
Reynolds, D J M
(1994). Safer use of traditional remedies Clinical trials may fail to get ethical approval. BMJ
308: 1043-1043
[Full text]