PARTICIPATORY RESEARCH AND INVOLVEMENT
OF LOCAL COMMUNTIES AND TRADITIONAL HEALERS
2.1 PARTICIPATORY RESEARCH APPROACHES FOR COMMUNITY
PARTICIPATION (CAPITALS)
Main Problem:
n Lack of community participation
Objectives:
n To promote community participation in
research
Strategies:
n To develop and implement participatory
research methodologies (PRM)
Constraints:
n Research not user friendly
n No feed back from researchers
n Lack of community involvement
n Fear of exploitation
n Lack of flexibility and compromise
n Mistrust by Traditional Medical
practitioner on research
n Lack of cultural sensitivity by
researchers
n Poorly trained researchers
Activities:
n Community workshops focused on research
n Preliminary and continuous
consultations with communities
n Training and capacity building to
empower communities
n Identification of problems and possible
solutions in conjunction with community
Actors:
n Researchers
n Traditional healers
n Traditional leaders
2.2. Involvement of communities and researchers (capitals) in
researching traditional and conventional/ orthodox medicine
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Main Problem:
n Communities are not given a role in the
initiation of research activities (both for Traditional and Conventional
medicine)
n Communities are used to legitimate
research activities and research institutions to the benefit of researchers and
institutions NOT for the benefit of communities
n Communities are even less involved in
research activities concerning conventional medicine
n Community and individual contributions
to research activities are typically not acknowledged by researchers and
research institutions (there is a lack of respect)
Objectives:
n Involve the community in research and
promote the respect by researchers of the communities when researching
traditional and conventional medicine
n Give the communities the ability to
know and understand the activities of research institutions
n Compensation for traditional knowledge
Strategies:
n Use ethical principals for community
involvement in research activities
n Liaison between traditional and
conventional medical personnel in research activities where there is a true
equitable treatment
n Bring traditional healers into research
institutions to understand and validate the processes there
n Inform traditional healers of research
findings and allow them to review findings before publication
n Identify Who, How and How much
compensation should take place
Obstructions:
n Ambitions of researchers and research
institutions
n Attitudes of western researchers and
research institutions towards Africa (Neo-colonialism)
n Lack of exposure of poor research by
the media and co-researchers
n Poor oversight of research activities
by research institutions and their lack of proper research protocol
n Political tensions which effect
research access
n Lack of gender and cultural sensitivity
by researchers
n Lack of education on the part of local
communities about their rights concerning research activities
-3-
Activities:
n Deposit of research data, findings and
reports into a repository for local communities
n Creation of a national research council
and national research policy concerning research activities in countries where
lacking
n Research activities should be
negotiated and contracted for local community involvement (local communities
get a contract)
n Education of local communities on their
rights and ability to be compensated (including the right to say ‘no’ to
researchers)
n Create a platform for continuous
interaction between traditional healers and conventional medicine
Main Actors:
n Local communities
n Traditional healers
n Western medical personnel
n Researchers
n Researchers institutions
n Government structures
n NGOs, CBOs and donors
n Industry
2.3 Validation (laboratory) of Traditional medicine/ medical
preparations and practices (capitals)
REASON
FOR VALIDATION: To confirm the claimed efficacy of the
preparations in Traditional medical practices.
Problems:
n There is need for validation of
Traditional medical practices so that this sector can get rightful place in the
healthcare system
Objectives:
n To establish scientific basis for the
use of traditional medicine
n To promote a wider use of traditional
medicine
n Scientific: repeatable
Strategies:
n To develop acceptable methods to
validate traditional medicine
n To win confidence of Traditional
medical practitioners
Constraints:
n Lack of facilities suitable for
validation of traditional medicines
-4-
n Lack of protocols for ethical
procedures
n Lack of legal protection of property
rights
n Lack of information from the side of
traditional medical practitioners on the:
n preparation methods
n collection methods
n posology/ dosages
n constraindications/ Aetiology
n mechanism of action of the preparations
n toxicity/ antidote
n Lack of collaboration among the
stakeholders
Activities:
n Establish and enable anenable
enviroment for exchange of information
n legal aspects
n benefits
n seminars
n workshops
n Protection of IPR
n Collection & documentation of
methods for validation of traditional medical practitioners
n Development of validation methods by
the Traditional healers
n lab
n physic
n clinical
n subclinical
n customary
Main Actors:
n Traditional medical practitioners
n Community/ patients
n Biomedic
n Researchers
n Governments
n Public & private organizations
n NGOs
n Funding agencies
n Students
2.4 Preparation and development of written national pharmacopea
of medicinal plants through involvement of all stakeholders
DEFINITIONS:
-5-
Pharmacopoeia:
- Different types in existence i.e. including different types of information and different
modes of development
2
major types can be identified:
n Analytical pharmacopoeia
n very detailed information on the
phytochemical and biological properties
n developed through extensive laboratory
experimentation and analysis
e.g.
includes tissue-level and the “weight of burnt matter/ashes”
n Traditional pharmacopoeia
n based largely on the documentation of
traditional knowledge available on both the biological characteristics as well
as the uses of the plants & support of the information through additional
scientific data
Main Problem:
n Lack of comprehensive/ written
national; pharmacopoeia
Objectives:
n To establish a broadly accessible
pharmacopoeia to assist all those concerned with medicinal plants.
Strategies:
n Starting point!: refer to the African pharmacopoeia developed under the
auspices of the OAU;
n refer to other sources of relevant
information: i.e. existing traditional documents
n devise a multidisciplinary approach in
the gathering/ analysis of information
n national-level coordination of ongoing
activities
n identification of core/ essential data
required
n identification of available resources
(including human, financial, technical/ infrastructural)
Constraints/ Needs:
n Achieving national level coordination:
a challenging undertaking in itself! Many different actors and interest groups
in existence…
n Too many species to be addressed: need
for prioritization!
n Documentation technology/ expertise and
facilities may be inadequate or lacking
n A large amount of information necessary
n Overall: a time consuming endeavor!
Activities:
n Establish a coordinating body/
“steering committee”
n Establish a multidisciplinary research
team
-6-
n Evaluate the OAU pharmacopoeia’s
relevance/ adequacy for the country (e.g. in terms of species coverage;
coverage of the major applications of the various plants)
n Identify and collect key sources of
other relevant information (databases; other pharmacopoeia)
n Convene key actors involved: through a
national workshop/ meeting
n to identify key areas for research
n to agree on and implement the national
work plan
n to set up regional groups
Main Actors:
A. Formal sector organizations/
1. Research institutions/ Universities
2. NGOs with specific objectives;
interests; activities relevant to medicinal plants
3. Community/ state herbaria
4. Government bodies/ parastatals
5. Pharmaceutical companies
6. Hospitals and clinics
B. Specialists/ community members
7. Mothers
8. Traditional healers
9. Ethnopharmacologist/ Ethnobotanists/ Medical anthropologist
10. Medical doctors; nurses
11. Public health workers/ practitioners
(involved in preventive/ primary health care)
12. Botanists/ Taxonomists/ Ecologists/
Agronomist
13. Phytochemists/ Pharmocologist/
Toxicologists
14. “Documentalists”; (information
technology expertise)
2.5 Biopiracy, bio-diversity prospecting & conservation in
the distribution of benefits from Traditional Medicines (capitals)
Main Problems:
n Unequitable distribution and exchange
of benefits from bioprospecting.
Objectives:
n Equitable terms of trade
n Biodiversity conservation
-7-
Strategies:
n Increase awareness (consumers and
communities)
n Develop negotiating capacity
n Develop benefit sharing models
n Develop multilateral agreements
n Develop incentives for biodervisty
conservations
Activites:
n National, regional and local awareness
campaign (government, public & private sector) economic and financial, -
rights information
n Establish process for assistance -
negotiation and legal
n Survey & analize benefit sharing
case studies
n Review existing legislation and
international obligations and implement policy reform
n Regional Pharmonisation of policy &
legislation
n Green labels and standards in companies
n Pressure groups in communties
n Increase value - added production at
local and international level
n Promote cultivation by local commercial
growers
n Monitoring biodiversity
Constraints:
n Lack of resources - technical,
financial and human
n Trade research and surveys
n Lack of political will
n Community property rights
n Fragmentation of stakeholders (inter
& intra national)
Main Indicators:
n Number of sharing models adopted
n Legislation adopted
n Number of value added (national
enterprises)
n Number of protocals/ agreements adopted
n Number of agronomic practices adopted
n Threatened species registered.
Thanks for taking the time to discuss this, I feel strongly about it and love learning more on this topic.
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