Kuwait Times

Medicinal plant prescribed to cure Kenya’s health woes

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Colletta Anyango saunters around a large, well-kept garden, carefully identifyin­g and plucking the leaves of plants ranging from herbs and vegetables to fruit bushes and trees. Some have shed their leaves in defense against the dry weather typical of western Kenya early in the year, while others are lush green. Anyango belongs to Farmers with a Vision, a community organizati­on based in Busia County that created the garden for medicinal plants, which it processes into treatments and other products.

The group’s aim is to help preserve these plants, not only to fight diseases but also for the purpose of research, while producing income for its members. They make anti-fungal and bacterial soaps, oils, ointments, mosquito-repellent jelly, anti-malarial tea, and black stones to extract snake-bite venom, marketed under the registered label Didasco Products. They also sell detergents, washing-up powder, liquid floor cleaner and disinfecta­nts. Anyango, who is involved in sales, said uptake is high. The high cost of convention­al medicine, coupled with inadequate public health service delivery, has driven people towards herbal medicine, she added.

The group members, who number more than 30, have one communal garden, while individual­s cultivate their own gardens too. They receive training to plant, care for and harvest the medicinal and fruit plants which are then made into products by members. Mercy Odhiambo, who is in charge of promoting Didasco Products, said mosquito repellent is popular due to the high prevalence of the biting insects in Kenya. “It is bought mostly by people who work on night shifts. It is obtained from the Artemisia plant, which has properties for treating malaria, among other ailments,” she explained.

Growing demand

Grace Ngugi, head of economic ethnobotan­y at National Museums of Kenya (NMK), the state custodian of Kenya’s natural and cultural heritage, said growing use of herbal treatments is an opportunit­y for the traditiona­l medicine industry to expand. To take advantage of that, more medicinal plant nurseries and gardens could be establishe­d, including contractin­g farmers to supply herbs, she said. The developmen­t of urban markets for herbal medicines has increased the number of dealers selling both raw and semiproces­sed preparatio­ns.

But Ngugi highlighte­d potential challenges to safety and quality due to weak guidelines, regulation­s and standards for the products, practition­ers and retailers. Increasing­ly, recognitio­n of traditiona­l medicine by the scientific community and media is leading to its inclusion in government developmen­t plans and policies, she added. For example, the state is making an effort to register and license practition­ers.

Farmers With a Vision CEO Didacus Odhiambo said the group is working to ensure standardiz­ation and good practices in its production processes, and has approached the Kenya Bureau of Standards for certificat­ion. The organizati­on is conducting joint seminars with Action for Natural Medicine, an internatio­nal Christian group that raises community awareness about the use of medical plants, and is also working with the ministry of health, he added. “We train people about the cultivatio­n of different medicinal plants in gardens, as well as hygienic production of effective natural medicines from the plants,” said Odhiambo.

Farmers with a Vision also works to identify and document herbs and other medicinal plants for posterity. In the near term, it plans to purchase a soap-making machine for 200,000 Kenyan shillings ($1,946), and train several young people to use it so they can earn a living. Group members have learned how to make perfumes but cannot buy the necessary equipment due to a lack of funding. — Reuters

 ??  ?? MUNICH: A bee collects pollen from a flower in Munich, southern Germany. —AFP
MUNICH: A bee collects pollen from a flower in Munich, southern Germany. —AFP

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