The World Health Organization (WHO) opened its first summit on traditional medicine yesterday, with the group saying it was seeking to collect evidence and data to allow for the safe use of such treatments.
Traditional medicines are a “first port of call for millions of people worldwide”, the UN health agency said, with the talks in India bringing together policymakers and academics to “mobilise political commitment and evidence-based action” towards them.
“WHO is working to build the evidence and data to inform policies, standards and regulations for the safe, cost-effective and equitable use of traditional medicine,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said.
Traditional medicine could bridge health-care “access gaps”, but was of value only if used “appropriately, effectively, and above all, safely, based on the latest scientific evidence”, Tedros warned.…