Biodiversity
and Health Symposium Conclusions and Recommendations
The final half
day of the Symposium was designed to focus the attention of participants
on the implications for policy of information presented in previous
sessions and to collectively identify those areas of research that
are most critical to furtherance of policy objectives. An important
part of this was the invitation to traditional healers and other representatives
of indigenous peoples (seven of the Symposium participants) to express
their needs and concerns before an international audience. Their collective
response was an endorsement of the Symposium's aims and objectives
and emphasized the need to include more healers in the future and
to support opportunities for Healers' Associations to hold international
conferences. General conclusions
It was agreed that several of papers offered a positive direction
for the future. That is, a solution to many of our modern environmental
and social problems in the developing countries is the protection
and promotion of biological and cultural diversity. Specifically,
the diversity of medicinal plants along with the knowledge of traditional
healers can effectively mitigate health, economic, and environmental
dilemmas incident to rapid globalization. This consensus called
attention to the weakness of indigenous peoples' (and local communities')
voice in international forums. The most important policy objective
to emerge from this convocation of specialists in natural medicine
was therefore a social one: With a commitment to improve human and
environmental health and well-being, governments and international
aid agencies must provide a conduit for indigenous knowledge to
enter the policy debate and an effective voice for local communities
in the decision process.
To increase the effectiveness of healthcare as well as to alleviate poverty in the poorest parts of the world, participants recommended urgent attention to three principles:
- Success will only be achieved if both biological diversity and cultural diversity are conserved
- Leadership must come from indigenous peoples/(local communities) in the use of traditional knowledge for broader health benefits;
- International cooperation and partnerships are necessary to ensure safety and quality of traditional phytomedicines.
These principles reflect the central theme of the conference: collaboration to forge strategic partnerships. Many critical issues are unique to specific locations and circumstances. Effective action to address them will require links between public and private sectors, urban and rural communities, developed and developing countries, aboriginal peoples/(local communities) and their governments, the elderly and the young, as well as traditional and modern health practitioners.
Presentations demonstrated that research and indigenous knowledge have made important contributions to the information made available on medicinal plants and especially to sustainable use and management. Nonetheless, an urgency to satisfy increasing consumer demand for natural products and supplements threatens to overwhelm these efforts. To illustrate, annual purchases in Canada exceed $4.5 billion, the United States $27 billion, and the international market is over US $60 billion and growing at a rate of 7% per annum. National and international policies are required to ensure sustainable resource development and equitable division of costs and benefits. As a major source of knowledge in this domain of medicinal plants and traditional healing, Canada has an important role to play in formulating policy.
Participants unanimously welcomed the support of the Canadian government, its international development agencies, researchers, and civil society to international efforts including the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), WHO's Health for All and Good Agriculture and Collecting Practices actions, WHO/IUCN/WWF Revised Guidelines on the Conservation of Medicinal Plants and programs, and the Global Strategy for Plant Conservation. They also urged further support from the Canadian government for international agreements and conventions toward a legal framework that will encourage conservation of biological and cultural diversity and sustainably manage resources.
Background criteria for specific recommendations
The health-environment-economy nexus produces a policy dilemma of longstanding. The emphasis on cultural diversity in this Symposium introduces an important resource for mitigating the entire complex of problems. In coming to its recommendations respecting each of these four elements, the Symposium identified important values to be respected as well as specific policy objectives.
A. Values and principles that should be reflected in policies
Cultures
- Recognize
that traditional medicine is the people's choice and culturally
acceptable (and accessible);
- Culture
represents an important source of health knowledge that is crucial
to sustaining smallholder productivity and social safety net;
- Traditional
knowledge and the holders of that knowledge merit respect and
protection;
- Ensure the
participation of local (indigenous) peoples, specialists, including
women and other members of the lo-cal communities, in all activities
related to biodiversity and health;
Health
- Formal recognition
that traditional medicine has a role to play in primary healthcare
provision, especially for the rural and urban poor;
- Validation
of the safety and efficacy of traditional treatments would improve
general level of healthcare in developing countries;
- As well as
a source of medicines, biodiversity is valuable to human health
for its environmental services, bioindicator values, and therapeutic
contribution to the over-all environment;
- Link between
health and diet needs greater emphasis.
Environment
- Indigenous
peoples' lands contain important biodiversity, including sources
of medicinal plants;
- Maintenance
of this biodiversity in our lands is important to health promotion
as well as medical care;
- Medicinal
plant conservation requires much more attention worldwide.
Economy
- Commercial
development of safe, efficacious, and afford-able phytomedicines
could extend and improve general healthcare in many countries;
- Although
it may not be adequately measured as part of the formal economy,
medicinal plants and the knowledge of their use make a significant
contribution to productive activities. incomes. and well-being
in developing countries
- Notwithstanding
these opportunities, local communities should have the right to
control commercialization of their knowledge;
- Local communities
have the right to equitable sharing of the benefits arising from
the use of their knowledge.
B.
Objectives of policy (implications of the values and principles)
Cultural
- Formal recognition
of traditional medicine in developing countries that rely on it
for a majority of healthcare needs and explicit support for its
continuance and augmentation;
- Education
and public awareness programs that acknowledge the contributions
of traditional knowledge and bridge traditional and scientific
research approaches;
- Mechanisms
to protect indigenous people's knowledge as a property right.
Health
care and promotion
- A commitment
to improve local healthcare using traditional means before considering
commercialization of medicinal plant products in global trade;
- Assistance
to (rural) healers and birth attendants for establishing associations
to express their collective needs and concerns;
- Links between
governments and traditional healers' associations to support integration
of traditional and modern medical practices;
- Financial
and moral support to local NGOs (e.g., TRAMIL, PROMETRA, (Eastern
Africa Network on Medicinal Plants and Traditional Medicine),
et al.) that are actively involved in assisting communities in
the maintenance of traditional sources of healthcare;
- A "Consultative
Group for Traditional Medicine Research" (CGTMR) to focus
on regional needs (analogous to CGIAR).
Ecosystem
maintenance
- A baseline
inventory of ecosystems and threatened habitats (especially dry
and semi-arid regions) that contain medicinal plants so that protection
priorities can be established;
- Harvesting
guidelines for the sustainable collection of wild medicinal plants;
- The identification
of sustainable propagation/cultivation practices;
- The development
of new medicinal crops to avoid the threat to wild types;
- Establishment
of genebanks and botanic gardens to protect germplasm of native
medicinal plant species; An evaluation of the conservation status
of medicinal plants in all countries to provide a basis for protection
and management.
Economic
development
- Government
recognition that traditional medicine and medicinal plants in
a culturally acceptable healthcare system offer significant economic
benefits;
- Commitment
by governments to maintain and augment a traditional system
- Commitment
by government to implement, where necessary, constraints on commercialization
and export of traditional knowledge to protect both biological
and cultural diversity;
- Explicit
provision, where cultivation is a response to enhanced appreciation
of medicinal plants, to compensate for the displacement of collectors
(generally women and landless peoples) from their accustomed source
of livelihood.
Recommendations
for effective partnering
The
following comments apply to all governments, but the details reflect
the Canadian context of the Symposium. Government agencies responsible
for health, agriculture, environment, and overseas development assistance
have all shown leadership in their various capacities, but even
more could be accomplished if collaboration between parties were
officially supported. This would permit greater synergy of actions
and efficient use of financial resources. Specifically, an interdepartmental
(Environment, Health, Agriculture, Foreign Affairs) agreement on
the parameters of a national biodiversity and health concept would
give Canada a more effective voice as global issues on this topic
become more urgent. It is recommended that Canada's development
agencies (CIDA and IDRC) increase their efforts to encourage client
(developing) countries to embrace the values and adopt the policies
detailed above in developing their own national policies for traditional
medicine (and medicinal biodiversity). As an example, such actions
would go far to implementing recommendations in African countries
called for under the Declaration of the Period 2001—2010 as
the Decade of African Traditional Medicine.
Furthermore,
it is recommended that the Canadian government incorporate the importance
of biodiversity to human health in all relevant national policy
frameworks and pro-grams and that attention be given to working
with client (partner) countries to accomplish the following:
- Increase
global efforts to conserve medicinal plant biodiversity and the
traditional knowledge of their use in global healthcare;
- Support R&D
actions to evaluate and standardize traditional phytomedicines
in order to promote their safe, effective, and affordable use;
- Establish
effective regulatory systems for registration and quality assurance
of phytomedicines;
- Establish
sustainable commercial enterprises for local phytomedicine production
that offer new income alternatives.
- These should
be linked to the specific socio-cultural background, resource
potential, and the technological capabilities of each country;
and
- Work with
the World Trade Organization (WTO), the World Intellectual Property
Organization (WIPO), and other relevant organizations to identify
a process that effectively regulates the international trade of
medicinal plant species and protects local communities as well
as the individual country's resources and rights.
Focusing
future research to the policy objectives and recommendations
The
Symposium and its output of reports and recommendations reflect
the understanding and values of researchers and practitioners whose
expertise lies primarily in the fields of biological sciences and
health care. We are conscious that further action on our recommendations
depends on a favor-able response from controllers of budgets and
that these in turn depend on a compliant political environment.
It is there-fore important for us as a research community to focus
our attention on possible sources of resistance to what we consider
desirable policy directions and to encourage the kinds of research
that will lend greater precision and higher value to policy goals.
The
following are some of the research projects which Symposium participants
identified as important input to formulation of an integrated biodiversity
and health policy. Such research would benefit from a multi-sector
partnership between Health, Agriculture and Environment, and Trade.
- Socio-economic
assessments of volumes and values of harvested medicinal plants
for optimizing opportunities in market supply and demand (Health,
Trade, and Finance);
- Inventory
of medicinal plants that identifies threatened species, threatened
ecosystems, and threatened habitats (especially dry and semi-arid
regions) (Environment and Health);
- Information
required for recovery actions aimed at threatened species;
Data required for effective, in situ and ex situ protection;
- Harvesting
guidelines for the sustainable collection of wild medicinal plants
(Environment and Health);
- Identification
of sustainable propagation/cultivation practices and opportunities
(Agriculture and Health);
- Estimate
of social impact of cultivation on collectors (generally women
and landless peoples);
- Development
of new medicinal crops to avoid the threat to wild types and satisfy
human needs (Agriculture and Health);
- The potential
social and biological impact of marketing and trade (local, regional,
and international) on the resource-base and people's livelihoods
(Environment, Agriculture, Trade, and Finance);
- Identification
of appropriate mechanisms to improve and ensure equity in access
to, and benefit from, medicinal plant resources;
- Analysis
of factors and challenges for policy development, harmonization,
and implementation in developing countries;
Identification of opportunities for community-based processing
of plant materials, quality development, and marketing;
- Identification
of key considerations in/for integrating traditional medicine
and use of medicinal plants in public health care sector;
- Assessment
of factors and policies that determine and constrain household
dietary diversity and nutritional status. and the opportunities
to enhance it;
- Identification
of mechanisms to resolve potential conflicts between local level
access and benefit sharing priorities and national/international
interests.
In
submitting this list along with our report and recommendations,
we especially solicit the attention and advice of decision-makers
and their advisors on any potential resistance to the plans and
policy objectives outlined. There are also some specific relevant
questions. For example: Are there important additions to the list?
Is there a ranking of them that will promote greater likelihood
of success in the overall enterprise?
This
IK Note was written by John Lambert, and prepared in collaboration
with discussion leaders T. Johns, N. Turner, E. Dickenson, R. Martes,
F. Gasengayire, J. Thor Arnason, and K. Wilde. It is excerpted from
the Biodiversity and Health Symposium: Conclusions and Recommendations,
Proceedings of the International Symposium, Biodiversity & Health:
Focusing Research to Policy, Ottawa, Canada, October 25-28, 2003.
The original paper was edited by J.T. Arnason, P.M. Catling, E.
Small, P.T. Dang, and J.D.H. Lambert, as published by.NRC Research
Press, Ottawa, Ontario. pp. 135-138. For more information or if
you have questions, please contact John Lambert at jlambert@worldbank.org
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