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Medicinal plants used by the folk medicinal practitioners of Bangladesh: a randomized survey in a village of Narayanganj district

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dc.contributor.author Karim, Md. Sajjadul
dc.contributor.author Rahman, Md. Mahfuzur
dc.contributor.author Shahid, Sadia Binta
dc.contributor.author Malek, Ishita
dc.contributor.author Rahman, Md. Atiqur
dc.contributor.author Jahan, Sharmin
dc.contributor.author Jahan, Farhana Israt
dc.contributor.author Rahmatullah, Mohammed
dc.date.accessioned 2018-09-13T06:26:17Z
dc.date.accessioned 2019-05-27T09:57:09Z
dc.date.available 2018-09-13T06:26:17Z
dc.date.available 2019-05-27T09:57:09Z
dc.date.issued 2011
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11948/3207
dc.description.abstract Folk medicinal practitioners play an important role in the primary health-care system of Bangladesh. They are known as Kavirajes and practice in villages, towns and cities of the country. The mainstay of their formulation is medicinal plants, which is either administered orally or topically in the form of decoctions, pastes, pills, juice or direct administration of whole plant or plant parts. The objective of the present study was to conduct a survey in a randomly chosen village, which lies between the two urban areas of Dhaka and Narayanganj in Narayanganj district of Bangladesh. Kasipur, the village where the survey was carried out had one Kaviraj who administered to the population’s need in various diseases. It was observed that the Kaviraj used 64 medicinal plants in his formulations. The plants were distributed into 41 families. The Asteraceae family contributed to the highest number of plants (6) followed by the Fabaceae family with 5 plants. The Apocynaceae, Lamiaceae, Rutaceae, Solanaceae and Zingiberaceae families contributed 3 plants per family. Leaves constituted the major plant part used, forming 47.1% of total uses. Leaves were followed by roots at 16.3% and fruits at 13.5%. Gastrointestinal disorders and skin diseases were the main ailments treated. Other than diabetes, the Kaviraj did not treat any complicated diseases. This was probably because since the village surveyed was between two urban areas, the village population had quite easy access to allopathic doctors and modern clinics in the urban areas. Despite the easy access to modern doctors, the village people relied on the Kaviraj for treatment of common ailments, suggesting that folk medicinal practitioners can still play a considerable role in the day to day care of health and treatment of common diseases, thus saving a patient from incurring substantial costs related to modern allopathic doctors and clinics. Full Text Link: http://www.aensiweb.net/AENSIWEB/aejsa/aejsa/2011/405-414.pdf en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher The American-Eurasian Network for Scientific Information (AENSI) en_US
dc.subject Medicinal plants en_US
dc.subject folk medicine en_US
dc.subject Narayanganj en_US
dc.subject Kaviraj en_US
dc.subject Bangladesh en_US
dc.title Medicinal plants used by the folk medicinal practitioners of Bangladesh: a randomized survey in a village of Narayanganj district en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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