dc.description.abstract | Malaria is a major public health problem that is presently complicated by the development
of resistance by Plasmodium falciparum to the mainstay drugs. Thus, new drugs with
unique structures and mechanism of action are required to treat drug-resistant strains of
malaria. Historically, compounds containing a novel structure from natural origin represent
a major source for the discovery and development of new drugs for several diseases.
This paper presents ethnophytotherapeutic remedies, ethnodiagnostic skills, and related
traditional knowledge utilized by the Digo community of the Kenyan Coast to diagnose
malaria as a lead to traditional bioprospecting.The current study was carried out in three
Digo villages of Diani sub-location between May 2009 and December 2009. Data was
collected using semi-structured interviews, and open and close-ended questionnaires. A
total of 60 respondents (34 men and 26 women) provided the targeted information.The
results show that the indigenous knowledge of Digo community on malaria encompasses
not only the symptoms of malaria but also the factors that are responsible for causing
malaria, attributes favoring the breeding of mosquitoes and practices employed to guard
against mosquito bites or to protect households against malaria.This knowledge is closely
in harmony with scientific approaches to the treatment and control of the disease. The
Digo community uses 60 medicinal plants distributed in 52 genera and 27 families to treat
malaria. The most frequently mentioned symptoms were fever, joint pains, and vomiting
while the most frequently mentioned practices employed to guard against mosquito
bites and/or to protect households against malaria was burning of herbal plants such as
Ocimum suave and ingestion of herbal decoctions and concoctions.The Digo community
has abundant ethnodiagnostic skills for malaria which forms the basis of their traditional
bioprospecting techniques. | en |