Abstract

Ethnopharmacological relevanceBecause about 50% of the Zimbabwean population is at risk of contracting malaria each year, the majority of people, especially in rural areas, use traditional plant-based medicines to combat malaria. This explorative ethnobotanical survey was undertaken to document how malaria is conceptualized and diagnosed by traditional healers, and to record the medicinal plants used in the prevention and treatment of malaria, their mode of preparation and administration. Materials and methodsThe research was conducted in three villages in Headman Muzite׳s area and in Chiriga village. These villages are located in the Chipinge district in the Manicaland Province in Zimbabwe.Traditional healers were selected with the assistance of the headman of the Muzite area and a representative of the Zimbabwe National Traditional Healers Association. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 14 traditional healers from four villages in the Chipinge district in Zimbabwe. ResultsIn total, 28 plants from 16 plant families are used by the healers who manage malaria with medicinal plants. The most cited plant is Cassia abbreviata Oliv. (Leguminosae) followed by Aristolochia albida Duch (Aristolociaceae) and Toddalia asiatica (L.) Lam. (Rutaceae). Roots (55.3%) are the most common part used. Most of the plant parts used to treat malaria are stored as dried powders in closed bottles. The powders are soaked in hot or cold water and the water extract is taken as the active medicine. The healers consider their medicinal knowledge as a spiritual family heritage. Only 25% of the healers refer the malaria patients that do not respond to their treatment to hospital – they believe evil spirits cause their remedies to failure and they would rather try a different plant or perform a cleansing ceremony. ConclusionsLocal knowledge of medicinal plants in the treatment of malaria still exists in all four villages surveyed and traditional healers appear to play an important role in primary health care services in this remote rural area in Zimbabwe. This explorative survey underscores the need to preserve and document traditional healing for managing malaria and for more future scientific research on the plants to determine their efficacy and their safety. This could improve their traditional anti-malarial recipes and might contribute to a better integration of Zimbabwean traditional medicine into the national health system in the future.

Highlights

  • World-wide, an estimated number of 3.4 billion people are still at risk of malaria

  • The aim of this study was to collect comprehensive data from traditional healers on medicinal plant-based remedies commonly used to treat malaria in order to document their methods of preparation and administration, together with information on how the healers conceptualize and diagnose malaria to contribute to the overall documentation of anti-malarial plant species used by traditional healers in Zimbabwe

  • The communities are well known for their traditional beliefs and use of plants for primary health care and are all located within the Chipinge district which has high seasonal malaria hot spots (Midzi et al, 2004; Ministry of Health and Child Welfare (MOHCW), 2008)

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Summary

Introduction

World-wide, an estimated number of 3.4 billion people are still at risk of malaria. In 2012 approximately 207 million cases of malaria occurred globally with most cases (80%) and deaths (90%) occurring in Africa. Malaria continues to be a major cause of morbidity and mortality. It is caused by five species of parasite that affects humans. All the parasites belong to the genus Plasmodium: Plasmodium falciparum, Plasmodium vivax, Plasmodium ovale, Plasmodium malariae, Plasmodium knowlesi. Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium falciparum are the most important. The latter is the most deadly form and it predominates in Africa

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