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Integrating Ethnomedicine Into Public Health
Mary E. Northridge, PhD, MPH,
Editor-in-Chief and Richard Mack, Jr, PhD, Chair, Community Advisory
Board, Harlem Health Promotion Center
October 2002, Vol
92, No. 10 | American Journal of Public Health 1561
© 2002
From an anthropological perspective, ethnomedicine—meaning
the folk medicines of specific ethnic groups—depends on
location. Preliterate indigenous populations used plants that
were available in their local environments to treat illness
and promote health. Diverse folk remedies thus evolved that
were passed down through oral traditions. Most traditional
healers learned their art through apprenticeship. As
populations converged, dominant cultures gained ascendancy,
and in most places throughout the world today Western medicine
is considered preeminent. Indeed, "complementary and alternative
medicine" (CAM) refers to a broad set of health care practices
that are not integrated into the dominant health care system.
Nonetheless, close to 25% of modern medicines are descended
from plants that were first used traditionally.
In May 2002, the World Health Organization (WHO) launched the
First Global Strategy on Traditional and Alternative Medicine.
This strategy provides a framework that policymakers can use
to regulate CAM, with the goal of making its use safer, more
accessible, and sustainable. It also addresses concerns about
the loss of biodiversity and the need to preserve and protect
traditional knowledge.
Our motivation for devoting an entire issue of the Journal to
CAM is its widespread and growing use. Up to 80% of people in
the poorest countries of the world use CAM as part of primary
health care. In Mozambique, for example, a WHO survey found
that while there was only 1 medical doctor for every 50 000
people, there was 1 traditional healer for every 200 people.
Meanwhile, CAM is fully integrated into the health systems of
China, North Korea, South Korea, and Vietnam. In the United
States, spending on CAM stands at $2.7 million per year, and
growing numbers of patients are beginning to rely on CAM for
preventive or palliative care
The collaborative effort that pulled this issue together grew
out of a research project funded through the Harlem Health
Promotion Center by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention. In Vince Silenzio and Connie Park, we found 2
dedicated guest editors who regularly combine CAM research,
practice, and education with healthy doses of sensitivity and
good humor
We issued an open call for papers in fall 2001 to better ensure
broad publicity, as critical research on CAM has been neglected
to date in the peer reviewed literature. The WHO estimates that
there are currently studies and published papers on only 100
of the nearly 5000 medicinal plants discovered so far. We received
scores of submissions, largely from authors who had never
published in the Journal. As a result, we more than tripled
our referee base for CAM research and are now better equipped
to review future CAM submissions.
We strove to include papers on a diversity of CAM modalities
and populations. While evaluation of safety is essential, we
also sought evidence on effectiveness—from controlled
clinical trials to the lived experiences of people who use CAM.
Because there has been limited financial support for CAM research
to date, many of the research reports were on pilot or preliminary
studies and were published as briefs.
Jonathan D. Quick, the WHO Director of Essential Medicines,
has noted that the CAM field tends to divide into 2 poles:
"uninformed skeptics who don’t believe in anything, and
uncritical enthusiasts who don’t care about data" Through the publication of this landmark issue, the Journal
hopes to bridge the gap between these poles and increase the
CAM knowledge base.
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