Exploring the preference for indigenous medicinal plant medicine in Buliisa District, Western Uganda

This paper explores the preference for indigenous medicinal plant medicine in Buliisa district, situated in the Albertine Graben. Despite attempts to improve access to conventional health services, there seems to be a preference for alternative medicine from medicinal plants. The specific objectives...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kyazike Elizabeth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2021-07-01
Series:Inkanyiso
Subjects:
Online Access:https://inkanyisojournal.org/index.php/ink/article/view/14
_version_ 1797788742060081152
author Kyazike Elizabeth
author_facet Kyazike Elizabeth
author_sort Kyazike Elizabeth
collection DOAJ
description This paper explores the preference for indigenous medicinal plant medicine in Buliisa district, situated in the Albertine Graben. Despite attempts to improve access to conventional health services, there seems to be a preference for alternative medicine from medicinal plants. The specific objectives included examining the forms of indigenous herbal medicine, how they are administered and passed on from generation to generation, preservation challenges and mitigation measures. The study utilises a multidisciplinary approach by using archaeological transect walks, oral interviews with 50 herbalists, observation of the administration of herbal medicine, focus group discussions, and documentary review to collect data. Four hundred and seventy-seven medicinal plant sites were marked using a hand-held Global Positioning System at 80 locations. The results revealed that all plant parts are used for treatment as either independent parts or combined and often with other plant types. The most commonly used medicinal plant parts are the leaves. Buliisa medicinal plants cure various diseases, but the most common ones are sterility, sexually transmitted infections, high blood pressure, back pain, eye diseases, external body injuries, poisoning, and nose bleeding. In addition, treatment for aspects such as luck and spiritually related ailments are also handled. Though the harvesting poses a key conservation challenge, the secrecy embedded in the transmission of indigenous knowledge, education, Christianity and oil exploration is each equally a threat. The study recommends that since most herbal medicines have no overdose, there is a need to undertake more research to document the dosage and side-effects of using medicinal plants and compile a red list of the endangered species. The study has implications for the knowledge and development of herbal indigenous medicinal plants.
first_indexed 2024-03-13T01:40:56Z
format Article
id doaj.art-983b034cc9a846e0b3ee28c7e322439c
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2077-2815
2077-8317
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-13T01:40:56Z
publishDate 2021-07-01
publisher AOSIS
record_format Article
series Inkanyiso
spelling doaj.art-983b034cc9a846e0b3ee28c7e322439c2023-07-03T14:05:36ZengAOSISInkanyiso2077-28152077-83172021-07-0113110.4102/ink.v13i1.1414Exploring the preference for indigenous medicinal plant medicine in Buliisa District, Western UgandaKyazike Elizabeth0Department of History and Political Science, Kyambogo UniversityThis paper explores the preference for indigenous medicinal plant medicine in Buliisa district, situated in the Albertine Graben. Despite attempts to improve access to conventional health services, there seems to be a preference for alternative medicine from medicinal plants. The specific objectives included examining the forms of indigenous herbal medicine, how they are administered and passed on from generation to generation, preservation challenges and mitigation measures. The study utilises a multidisciplinary approach by using archaeological transect walks, oral interviews with 50 herbalists, observation of the administration of herbal medicine, focus group discussions, and documentary review to collect data. Four hundred and seventy-seven medicinal plant sites were marked using a hand-held Global Positioning System at 80 locations. The results revealed that all plant parts are used for treatment as either independent parts or combined and often with other plant types. The most commonly used medicinal plant parts are the leaves. Buliisa medicinal plants cure various diseases, but the most common ones are sterility, sexually transmitted infections, high blood pressure, back pain, eye diseases, external body injuries, poisoning, and nose bleeding. In addition, treatment for aspects such as luck and spiritually related ailments are also handled. Though the harvesting poses a key conservation challenge, the secrecy embedded in the transmission of indigenous knowledge, education, Christianity and oil exploration is each equally a threat. The study recommends that since most herbal medicines have no overdose, there is a need to undertake more research to document the dosage and side-effects of using medicinal plants and compile a red list of the endangered species. The study has implications for the knowledge and development of herbal indigenous medicinal plants.https://inkanyisojournal.org/index.php/ink/article/view/14indigenous knowledgemedicinal plantsherbal medicineheritage preservation
spellingShingle Kyazike Elizabeth
Exploring the preference for indigenous medicinal plant medicine in Buliisa District, Western Uganda
Inkanyiso
indigenous knowledge
medicinal plants
herbal medicine
heritage preservation
title Exploring the preference for indigenous medicinal plant medicine in Buliisa District, Western Uganda
title_full Exploring the preference for indigenous medicinal plant medicine in Buliisa District, Western Uganda
title_fullStr Exploring the preference for indigenous medicinal plant medicine in Buliisa District, Western Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the preference for indigenous medicinal plant medicine in Buliisa District, Western Uganda
title_short Exploring the preference for indigenous medicinal plant medicine in Buliisa District, Western Uganda
title_sort exploring the preference for indigenous medicinal plant medicine in buliisa district western uganda
topic indigenous knowledge
medicinal plants
herbal medicine
heritage preservation
url https://inkanyisojournal.org/index.php/ink/article/view/14
work_keys_str_mv AT kyazikeelizabeth exploringthepreferenceforindigenousmedicinalplantmedicineinbuliisadistrictwesternuganda