The rain had just subsided.
Johnson (not real name) who had just arrived Port Harcourt after a long journey
disembarked from the vehicle. He had been battling with Hermorrhoids for some
months.
The showman appeared from
nowhere, advertising his herbal products.
“Doctor Cure It All” – that was
the name he called himself – said: “Just a bottle for N200 and your entire
gonorrhoea, malaria, dysentery, pile, ulcer, diabetes, syphilis and all kinds
of nyama-nyama (bad) disease go vamoose.”
His voice echoed to the entire
perimeter of the motor park, drawing attention of pedestrians and motorists
alike. Johnson, mesmerized completely, moved close to Doctor Cure It All, to
buy a bottle of the concoction. He hurried home to share the liquid with his
family. After he took the concoction, he found himself in the hospital the next
day. Johnson had a deadly gastroenteritis. But for the quick intervention of
his family physician, he would have kissed the world goodbye.
This is one incident out of many,
indicating the danger inherent in the use of herbal mixtures, whose contents
are not clearly spelt out. It also shows the unwholesome practice by some of
the practitioners. Many have been as lucky as Johnson; they are dead as a
result of the poisonous herbal products.
It is common knowledge that
anything called drug is meant to heal or kill as the case maybe. For the drugs
that heal, utter caution must be observed in their production, packaging,
distribution, sale and general handling. This reason disqualifies the
consumption of certain forms of herbal mixtures for the treatment of diseases
because there is a deviation from this standard.
“Doctors” in herbal practice
always say “where the rarity of modern medicine has failed, the potency of
herbs should hold sway” (the expression is for those who pay attention to them).
They are known to treat patients with herbs in preference to pharmaceutical
drugs.
Herbal mixtures are derived from
plants-roots, leaves, stems, fruits, seeds, shells, bee products, mineral and
certain animal parts.
The success of herbal mixtures in
our contemporary society is unparalleled and this venture has attracted both the
quacks and derelicts who claim they inherited the skills from their parents or
grandparents. These quacks have brainwashed many unsuspecting people with
claims that their concoction is multi-functional but does that have an iota of
truth?

Some herbal medicine
practitioners have peddled falsehood for decades, making people to believe that
all herbal products are good. It is necessary to note that not all fruits or
tree bark you are edible. Some could be poisonous. Majority of herbal medicine
in circulation today are poisonous concoctions.
Every medicine has adverse
effects; that is why an overdose of any drug has grievous consequences. In drug
administration, precision is the watchword when it comes to dosage. What could
be safe for an under 10 years may not be the same for an adult. What would be
considered safe for a pregnant woman may not be safe for another above 60.
Dosage in most herbal medical
practice is not guided by scientific precision. Therefore, most of the herbal
concoctions are unsafe for human or animal consumption.
Research has linked cancers,
renal failures, cardiac disorders, and liver cirrhosis to the consumption or
intake of toxic substances over a period of time. It should be noted that some
of the herbal mixtures’ components are extracts that could be toxic to the
body.
Neem Tree (Azadirachta indica)
commonly called Dongo yaro is a herbal tree, which has been effective
against plasmodium falciparum but a certain research by a Nigerian professor of
pharmacology, Maurice Iwu, and his colleagues in 1987 at the University of
Nigeria, Nsukka found that an overuse of Dongo yaro concoction could be
lethal in laboratory rats and rhesus monkeys.
It is about time excesses of
herbal practitioner are curbed, especially those with no scientific backgrounds.
They should have sincerity of purpose for whatever that is worth doing is worth
doing well. Today, China exports their herbal medicine to the United Kingdom
and other countries because it produces quality herbal medicine. Chinese are
not into it to line their own pockets but to contribute their own quota for the
general wellbeing of humanity. Same should be replicated in this part.
Regulatory agencies, such as
National Agency for Food, Drug and Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Traditional
Medicine Practitioners Association of Nigeria and Council for Alternative
Medical Practice in Nigeria should rise to this challenge. They should ensure
that all herbal products are registered and their distribution, regulated.
Enlightenment programmes should
be organised from time to time by these agencies to acquaint herbal medicine
practitioners and consumers of good and bad sides of herbal products, with best
practices in herbal medicine production and how to detect a fake herbal
mixture.
Finally, people should regulate
what they permit into their system. Taking care of our body is good because it
is the only place we have to live.
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