The growing use of herbal medicines: issues relating to adverse reactions and challenges in monitoring safety
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Abstract
The use of herbal medicinal products and supplements has increased tremendously over the past three decades with not less than 80% of people worldwide relying on them for some part of primary healthcare. Although therapies involving these agents have shown promising potential with the efficacy of a good number of herbal products clearly established, many of them remain untested and their use are either poorly monitored or not even monitored at all. The consequence of this is an inadequate knowledge of their mode of action, potential adverse reactions, contraindications, and interactions with existing orthodox pharmaceuticals and functional foods to promote both safe and rational use of these agents. Since…
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1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Medicine
- Adverse effect
- Quality (philosophy)
- Risk analysis (engineering)
- Traditional medicine
- Intensive care medicine
- Pharmacology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Good health and well-being
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