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Book ChapterDOI

Informant Consensus: A New Approach for Identifying Potentially Effective Medicinal Plants

Robert T. Trotter, +1 more
- pp 91-112
TLDR
In this article, the authors argue that intra-and intergroup similarities in the use of medicinal plants have arisen and persist because particular remedies produce reactions that are both predictable and considered to be desirable.
Abstract
The anthropological study of medicinal botany has numerous objectives, one of which is to identify ethnomedically important species that warrant chemical analysis and testing for biological activity. This chapter suggests that intra- and intergroup similarities in the use of medicinal plants have arisen and persist because particular remedies produce reactions that are both predictable and considered to be desirable. It argues that ethnomedical systems contain an anticipated, and perhaps even predictable, level of variation in the use of available remedies. Anthropologists and other researchers have used a variety of approaches to identify potentially effective plant based remedies. However, most of these approaches necessitate investigations that range over broad geographic regions, through extensive periods of time, or across multiple cultures. Patterning in the use of medicinal plants, whether seen among Mexican Americans or other societies, reflects a fundamental human condition—adaptation to a complex web of socioenvironmeiital challenges including, of course, sickness and the maintenance of health.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Medicinal plants in Mexico: healers' consensus and cultural importance.

TL;DR: The use of medicinal plants in four indigenous groups of Mexican Indians, Maya, Nahua, Zapotec and - for comparative purposes - Mixe is examined, indicating that there exist well-defined criteria specific for each culture which lead to the selection of a plant as a medicine.
Journal ArticleDOI

The useful plants of Tambopata, Peru: I. Statistical hypotheses tests with a new quantitative technique

TL;DR: In this article, the importance of over 600 species of woody plants to non-indigenous mestizo people in Tambopata, Amazonian Peru has been evaluated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cultural Importance Indices: A Comparative Analysis Based on the Useful Wild Plants of Southern Cantabria (Northern Spain)1

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared four indices based on informant consensus to assess the cultural significance of plant species and found a positive and significant correlation between the number of uses (NU) and the frequency of citation (FC) of the species and concluded that the more versatile a plant, the more widespread its usefulness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Medicinal plants of the Meinit ethnic group of Ethiopia: an ethnobotanical study.

TL;DR: Acculturation of the young generation has been found to be the major treat to the continuation of traditional medical knowledge and practice in the study area and efforts should be made to incorporate traditional medicine in school curricula so that younger people could appreciate its usefulness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ethnobotany and its role in drug development

TL;DR: The results of various projects on Mexican Indian ethnobotany and some of the subsequent pharmacological and phytochemical studies are summarized and it is indicated that there exist well‐defined criteria specific for each culture, which lead to the selection of a plant as a medicine.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A method of computing the effectiveness of an insecticide

TL;DR: In order to make experimental studies comparable and statistically meaningful, the article recommends the following formula: per cent control = 100(X - Y)/X, which eliminates errors due to deaths in the control sample which were not due to the insecticide.
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