Health

Corona new treatment medicinal herbs

On Saturday, the World Health Organization approved a protocol regulating testing African herbal medicines as potential treatments for the Corona virus and other epidemic diseases.

The spread of COVID-19 has raised the issue of using pharmaceutical In the treatment of traditional diseases, WHO certification clearly encourages tests with standards similar to those used in laboratories.

And on Saturday, experts from the World Health Organization, along with their colleagues from two other African organizations, approved “a protocol for conducting Phase III clinical trials of herbal medicines for the treatment of Covid-19, in addition to a charter and powers to establish a safety monitoring and data collection council” for clinical trials on herbal medicines, according to a statement.

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The statement pointed out that "the third phase of clinical testing (for a group of up to 3 people for testing) is pivotal to fully assessing the safety and efficacy of new medical products."

Between herbal medicine and traditional medicine

"If the safety, efficacy and quality of a traditional medicine product is established, the World Health Organization will recommend it (it) for its rapid local manufacture on a large scale," the statement quoted the WHO's Regional Director, Prosper Tomosemi.

The organization approved the protocol in partnership with the African Center for Disease Control and Prevention and the African Union Commission for Social Affairs.

"The emergence of COVID-19, like the Ebola outbreak in West Africa, has highlighted the need for robust health systems and accelerated research and development programmes, including traditional medicine," Tomosimi added.

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The WHO official did not mention the drink of the President of Madagascar, which was widely distributed in Madagascar, and was also sold to many other countries, especially in Africa.

In May, the World Health Organization's Africa director, Matshidiso Moeti, told media that African governments had committed in 2000 to subject "traditional treatments" to the same clinical trials as other medicines.

"I can understand the need and motives to look for something that can help," he added, "but we would very much like to encourage scientific testing that the governments themselves have committed to."

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