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March 28, 2023Climate change is impacting biodiversity and threatening the development of traditional medicine, Dr. Mithika Mwenda, the Executive Director of the Pan-African Climate Justice Alliance has said.
He was addressing a sitting of committees of the Pan-African Parliament at the precinct of the African Union’s lawmaking organ in Midrand South Africa that ran from the 6th to the 17th of March 2023.
He said climate change can have a complex impact that also influences human and animal health altering the conditions for pathogens and vectors of zoonotic diseases and eliciting new challenges for maintaining human and animal health.
Dr. Mwenda alluded to the World Health Organization (WHO)’s goal in medicines: “to help save lives and improve health by ensuring the quality, efficacy, safety and rational use of medicines, including traditional medicines, and by promoting equitable and sustainable access to essential medicines, particularly for the poor and disadvantaged”.
The climate change expert said climate change can lead to zoonotic diseases. Zoonoses refer to the transmission of diseases/infections from animals to humans. Statistics indicate that six out of ten infectious diseases arise from the animal-to-human transmission with global prevalence in urban or rural areas. Zoonotic diseases have increased in recent years with the rise in global temperatures curating favorable conditions for breeding specific vectors, especially in poorly developed countries.
Increased precipitation and parallel flooding conditions provide the perfect breeding grounds for vectors amplifying the possibility of waterborne disease transmission.
Climate change can also influence the geographical distribution of insect-spread diseases where Zoonotic viruses previously localized to areas with high temperatures, such as the tropics, have been observed worldwide. “Biodiversity plays a key role in health. While at it, Traditional Medicine (TM) plays a crucial role in health care for a large part of the population living in developing countries which for centuries was the only health care system available for the prevention and treatment of diseases in different cultures.
“The interdependence between the sustainability of the environment and the human species needs full recognition and the development of new public health practices. The goal is to increasingly translate into policies and actions with the recognition that the sustainable use of finite natural resources is a major determinant of health. Ingredients sourced from wild plants and animals are not only widely used in traditional medicines but are also increasingly valued as raw materials in the preparation of modern medicines and herbal preparations,” Dr. Mwenda said.
He added that the commoditization of plant medicine and animal parts has seen a marked increase in the sale of herbal remedies, precipitating large-scale harvesting of medicinal plants, factory-like production of herbal drugs, and animal poaching in many parts of developing countries. Despite international regulations and several national laws against poaching and heavy penalties for culprits, the extremely high prices offered for the parts of some species serve as strong incentives for illegal trade in animal parts to flourish. Many medicinal plant species have spread globally both via intentional and carefully planned transfers and as the unintentional outcome of people’s movements. Traditional drugs and traditional medicine in general represent a still poorly explored field of research in terms of therapeutic potential or clinical evaluation.
Biodiversity plays an integral role in recovery from illness and significantly contributes to preventing disease since well-functioning ecosystems protect human health. The poor and vulnerable suffer most from scarce or polluted water and air, and from diseases associated with disrupted ecosystems. Ecosystems also play a substantial role in controlling the emergence and spread of infectious diseases by maintaining equilibria among predators and prey, and among hosts, vectors, and parasites in plants, animals, and humans.
Wild populations of numerous species are overexploited around the globe, the demand created by traditional medicine being one of the causes of the overexploitation. Significant changes in forests, savannas, and other vegetational types have impacted the procurement and preparation, as well as the cost of plant medicine.
The desecration of spiritual spots, sacred spaces, and grooves has tended to reduce the dignity of such ‘landscapes’ and to encourage their abuse contributing to loss and damage. The impact of industrialization and urbanization has led to western medicine displacing indigenous medical systems in many areas, in the process leaving many without any health care. Traditional medicinal knowledge is rapidly disappearing, owing to cultural change and declining access -in both urban and rural areas- to sources of natural medicinal products.
Most villages in the world are no longer surrounded by the natural habitat which was a source of medicine and bodies of folk knowledge that have accumulated and been honed for thousands of years are disappearing at an alarming rate The procurement of plant and animal species needed by indigenous medical practitioners requires long-distance travel affecting the operational costs of providing traditional medical services, particularly in urban areas, but also the forms of herbal medicine prepared.
Through biodiversity loss, climate change is affecting traditional medicine and conventional medicine. The quality of drugs depends on the performance of plants and animal species, which are becoming extinct and chemical concentrates are affected by declining soil quality and climate variability. The chemical composition of medicinal plants can also be affected by climate change where changes in temperature or moisture levels can alter the concentration of active compounds in plants, potentially affecting their efficacy and safety.
Some medicinal plant species are at risk of extinction with rising temperatures, drought, and extreme weather events threatening plant populations. Dr. Mwenda said traditional medicine needs to be integrated into a public health framework illustrating potential bilateral benefits, limitations, and ultimate roles with an awareness of social, cultural, and political dimensions. The construction of regulatory measures will increasingly require the involvement of stakeholders, who must be made aware of the need for the conservation of natural resources as a guarantee for their sustainable exploitation. Informed participation of holders of traditional medical knowledge in consultation/decision processes may further foster much-needed cooperation to ensure the equitable sharing of the benefits arising from the utilization of traditional knowledge, innovations, and practices.
Source: Spikemedia.co.zw-By Byron Adonis Mutingwende
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