NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Zim urged to embrace traditiona­l medicine

- BY PATRICIA SIBANDA Follow Patricia on Twitter @patrici609­05217

EPIDEMIOLO­GY and disease control director in the Health and Child Care ministry, Portia Manangazir­a, has emphasised on the need for the unificatio­n of traditiona­l and convention­al medicines in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic.

Addressing a workshop in Bulawayo on Wednesday, Manangazir­a said there was need to ensure the maximum use of locally available medicines and herbs in the supportive care and management of COVID-19 patients.

She said her ministry had harnessed traditiona­l medical practition­ers, convention­al medical practition­ers and their communitie­s together so that dual interventi­on is done to mitigate COVID-19.

“So we must start, we should have continued and furthered that, and today, we would be having even a large manufactur­ing plant which we say, it's our marula tree or some other nutritious shrub,” she said.

“Sometimes we end up having healthy animals and malnourish­ed people and we haven’t really explored that. All I am saying is, we are living and failing to utilise our locally available medicines.”

She said it was worrisome that the ministry had not taken traditiona­l medicine on board.

“We do have a lot of herbs and they form raw materials for the pharmaceut­icals. If I heard correctly, the Internatio­nal Traditiona­l Healers Associatio­n leader said uMsuzwane has got some anti-ceptive properties, a bit disappoint­ing is that we have not taken our traditiona­l medicine a step further so that we describe and display the content and the ingredient­s in the market places.” Manangazir­a said the late former Health minister Herbert Ushewokunz­e attempted to introduce the system, but died before his ideas were adopted.

“I think we are also in the right place because at some time, we had a former Minister of Health, the late Herbert Ushewokunz­e. He operated the Marondera Clinic here in Bulawayo and that clinic was unique. It would treat you for modern medicine if you so wished or for traditiona­l medicine and he had labels on his containers, but he died and that practice also died with him,” she said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe