Traditional antimalarial phytotherapy remedies used by the South Coast community, Kenya

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Date
2010Author
Nguta, J M
Mbaria, J M
Gakuya, D W
Gathumbi, P K
Kiama, S G
Type
ArticleLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Aim of the study: This study was conducted to document herbal medicines used in the treatment of
malaria as well as the existing knowledge, attitudes and practices related to malaria recognition, control
and treatment in South Coast, Kenya.
Methods: Data was collected using semistructured questionnaires and interviews. A focused group discussion
held with the community members, one in each of the study villages supplemented the interview
and questionnaire survey.
Results: The respondents were found to have a good understanding of malaria and could distinguish it
from other fever types. They were also aware that malaria was spread by mosquitoes. Malaria prevalence
was high, and affected individuals an average of four times a year. Community members avoided
mosquito bites by using mosquito nets, clearing bushes around their homesteads and burning plant parts
to generate smoke. They prevented and treated malaria by taking decoctions or concoctions of traditional
herbal remedies. Forty plant species in thirty-five genera distributed in twenty-four families were used
as antimalarials in the study area. Five plant species, namely; Heeria insignis Del. (Anacardiaceae), Rottboelia
exaltata L.F (Gramineae), Pentanisia ouranogyne S. Moore (Rubiaceae), Agathisanthenum globosum
(A. Rich) Hiern (Rubiaceae), and Grewia trichocarpa Hochst ex A. Rich (Tiliaceae) are documented for the
first time in South Coast, Kenya, for the treatment of malaria.
Conclusions: The plants documented in the current study are a potential source for new bioactive compounds
of therapeutic value in malaria treatment. The results provide data for further pharmacological
and toxicological studies and development of commercial antimalarial phytotherapy products.
Citation
Journal of Ethnopharmacology 131 (2010) 256–267Publisher
Elsevier Department of Public Health, pharmacology and Toxicology Department of clinical studies
