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By
MATTHEW
GREEN
Reuters
Posted
on
Sun,
Mar.
24,
2002
NYERI,
Kenya
Jack
Githae
believes
Africa
could
defeat
its
catastrophic
AIDS
epidemic
if
only
it
would
embrace
the
healing
powers
of
herbs.
Stalking
into
the
bush
with
a knife
and
briefcase
in
search
of
asparagus,
the
Kenyan
healer
symbolizes
a growing
belief
among
African
herbalists
that
ancient
wisdom
could
turn
the
tide
of
a modern
disease.
``To
me
this
is
a natural
pharmacy,''
said
Githae,
56,
gesturing
at
a woodland
clearing
on
the
slopes
of
Mount
Kenya.
``We
have
seen
such
miraculous
cures
from
this
natural
pharmacy
in
the
last
30
years
that
I don't
tell
anybody
'you
are
going
to
die',''
he
said.
Traditional
healers
across
the
continent
say
their
remedies
offer
huge
potential
to
fight
diseases
like
tuberculosis
and
pneumonia
that
prey
on
HIV
patients,
but
accuse
governments
and
doctors
of
spurning
their
offers
of
help.
``How
can
we
ignore
such
knowledge
when
people
are
dying
like
flies?,''
said
the
grey-bearded
Githae,
who
cuts
a slightly
incongruous
figure
wearing
a white
lab
coat
in
the
woods.
Battling
what
they
say
is
a wall
of
skepticism
and
prejudice
in
much
of
the
medical
establishment,
herbalists
are
hoping
to
win
more
government
support
to
distribute
their
remedies.
Africa
has
28.1
million
of
the
world's
40
million
people
living
with
HIV-AIDS.
Healers
say
even
the
most
skeptical
of
Western-trained
doctors
need
all
the
help
they
can
get.
``SHORES
OF
DEATH''
Herbalists
argue
that
their
pills
and
potions
are
cheap,
available
in
remote
areas,
and
above
all,
that
they
work.
``We
went
with
those
people
who
the
white
doctors
had
abandoned
and
told
to
go
home
and
die,''
said
Credo
Mutwa,
an
80-year-old
South
African
healer
and
visionary.
``We
brought
them
back
from
the
shores
of
death,''
he
said,
adding
that
he
uses
the
Sutherlandia
Frutescens
plant
to
combat
AIDS-related
wasting.
For
centuries,
African
healers
have
used
plants
to
treat
illnesses
like
diarrhea
and
lung
infections
that
attack
immune
systems
shattered
by
HIV.
It
is
these
diseases,
rather
than
the
virus
itself,
that
can
kill
AIDS
patients.
Such
herbs
are
affordable.
Githae
charges
250
shillings
($3.20)
a week
for
a concoction
for
HIV
patients
that
he
says
boosts
their
immunity
levels.
Pharmacies
charge
at
least
1,500
shillings
for
an
equivalent
doses
of
anti-retroviral
drugs.
While
doctors
say
they
want
more
evidence
that
traditional
remedies
work,
many
patients
swear
by
them.
``I
was
suspicious
of
herbal
medicine.
I thought
of
it
as
witchcraft,''
said
one
26-year-old
HIV-positive
Kenyan
woman,
who
uses
a Neem tree
soap
to
treat
herpes.
``Now
everyone
asks
me
what
I use
on
my
skin
because
I don't
have
ugly
wounds
any
more,''
she
said,
waiting
at
a herbal
clinic
in
a Nairobi
slum.
The
World
Health
Organization
(WHO)
says
80
percent
of
people
rely
on
herbs
in
countries
from
South
Africa
to
Ethiopia.
In
Ghana,
there
is
about
one
traditional
practitioner
for
every
400
people,
compared
to
one
doctor
per
12,000
people.
Doctors
worry
that
the
tonic
soups
and
ground
root
powders
dished
out
by
the
herbalists
may
expose
patients
to
exploitation
by
quacks,
or
worse,
trigger
dangerous
side
effects.
Herbalists
counter
that
they
could
have
a greater
positive
impact
if
more
governments
would
allow
them
to
use
their
medicines
in
hospitals
and
provide
registration
procedures
to
weed
out
charlatans.
Prejudice
on
both
sides
of
the
divide
between
healers
and
their
drug-dispensing
counterparts
has
hindered
cooperation.
COLONIAL
OUTLAWS
Herbalists
say
much
of
the
skepticism
dates
back
to
colonial
days,
when
imperial
governments
ruling
countries
as
diverse
as
Namibia
and
Burkina
Faso
outlawed
traditional
medicine,
branding
it
as
``primitive''
and
against
the
grain
of
progress.
``They
look
at
us
with
mistrust,
we
look
at
them
with
a superiority
complex,''
said
Serge
Eholie,
deputy
clinic
head
at
the
infectious
and
tropical
disease
unit
of
the
Treichville
hospital
in
Ivory
Coast,
west
Africa.
``But
no
African
doctor
can
dismiss
traditional
healers
or
pretend
they
are
not
there.
We
need
to
train
them
and
work
with
them
so
they
can
help
us
treat
people,''
Eholie
said.
Repeating
a gripe
common
among
health
officials
across
the
continent,
Eholie
said
the
main
problem
was
that
herbal
lore
passed
on
by
grandmothers
was
seldom
researched
and
documented.
Plant
treatments
suffered
an
extra
setback
in
Ivory
Coast,
which
has
one
of
west
Africa's
highest
HIV
prevalence
rates,
standing
at
10
to
12
percent.
A
herbal
drug
named
Therastim
was
billed
as
a wonder
cure
for
AIDS
in
January
last
year.
Hope
evaporated
when
Treichville
researchers
said
they
had
found
no
evidence
that
it
worked.
MIXED
RESPONSE
Governments
have
given
herbalists
a mixed
reception.
Tiny
Benin
allocated
$14,000
to
developing
traditional
medicine
in
its
1998-1999
budget,
but
Ugandan
herbalists
say
the
government
has
only
recently
realized
their
potential.
``There
is
no
council,
no
legislation
and
no
policy
on
traditional
healers.
We
are
working
in
the
dark,''
said
Dorothy
Balaba,
director
of
Traditional
and
Modern
Health
Practitioners
Together
Against
AIDS
And
Other
Diseases.
Kenya
said
this
year
that
a task
force
had
been
set
up
to
prepare
a bill
to
integrate
herbal
medicine
into
the
formal
healthcare
system,
but
the
Kenya
Medical
Association
warned
that
bringing
herbalists
into
hospitals
could
cause
chaos.
Fears
in
Kenya
are
echoed
across
Africa
by
doctors
who
say
the
ideas
of
the
ancients
must
be
vetted
by
modern
laboratories.
``We
must
legalize
something
on
the
basis
of
evidence,''
said
Andrew
Kita,
Director
General
of
Tanzania's
National
Institute
for
Medical
Research.
``Science
has
to
lead
us.''
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