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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter June 6, 2020

First Nations Healing: From Traditional Medicine to Experimental Ethnopharmacology

  • Thomas Efferth EMAIL logo , Gladys Alexie , Kai Andersch and Mita Banerjee

Abstract

Focusing on First Nations traditional medicine, we investigated whether traditional knowledge of medicinal plants can be validated by modern scientific methods of molecular and cellular pharmacology and whether this information is of value for improving current therapy options. Based on two projects on medicinal plants of the Gwich’in – a First Nations group on the Canadian North West Coast – we found that extracts from several plants traditionally used medically were able to kill tumor cells, including otherwise multidrug-resistant cells. Investigating medicinal plants from Indigenous communities raises questions about ownership, appropriation, and commercial use. At the same time, because of the intricacies of patent law, publishing scientific investigations on medicinal herbs represents an effective way to prevent biopiracy. Therefore, research cooperation between industrialized and developing countries, and between Western and non-Western knowledge systems will facilitate ethically sound ethnopharmacological research and merge a diversity of competencies and knowledges.


Corresponding author: Prof. Dr. Thomas Efferth, Department of Pharmaceutical Biology, Institute of Pharmacy and Biochemestry, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Staudingerweg 5, 55128 Mainz, Germany

Acknowledgment

This paper has been prepared in the framework of the Research Training Group “Life-Science – Life Writing” (DFG GRK 2015/2). All experimental data presented have been generated with funding of the Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany, without any financial support from the pharmaceutical industry.

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Published Online: 2020-06-06
Published in Print: 2020-06-25

©2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

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