Muslims and Herbal Medicine
This is a weekly post by Nidhal Guessoum (see his earlier posts here). Nidhal is an astrophysicist and Professor of Physics at American University of Sharjah and is the author of Islam's Quantum Question: Reconciling Muslim Tradition and Modern Science.
About a year and a half ago, I sent an article I had titled ‘The Placebo Secret: why alternative medical “treatments” work’ to The National; the editors published it but changed its title to “A case for alternative medicine in the mind”. In the article, I started by stressing how worldwide the belief in alternative/complementary medicine is, including but far from limited to the Arab-Muslim world. I then went on to report on studies regarding the effectiveness (to what extent and how) of alternative treatments.
Here’s a short excerpt from the article:
Today, more than yesterday, millions if not billions of humans everywhere resort to “alternative” medical treatments, which range from drinking special infusions to acupuncture, bloodletting, homeopathy, yoga, zen meditations, and of course chicken and other soups. Most people who use these treatments swear (honestly) that they work. And they do.
What? A hard-core scientist who says that “alternative” treatments like bloodletting, homeopathy, and chicken soups work for curing illnesses ranging from anemia and migraine to ulcers and high blood pressure? That is going to get me cited (approvingly and disapprovingly) in many places! But before I explain my views, I should add an important caveat: these treatments work for a while and only when one really believes they will work.
I then highlighted the research work and the excellent book pubished by R. Barker Bausell in 2007 by Oxford University Press: ‘Snake Oil Science: the truth about complementary and alternative medicine’. Bausell, a professor at the University of Maryland (UM), who for several years served as the director of research at the UM’s Center for Integrative Medicine, rigorously analyzed hundreds of experiments and reports on various alternative and “complementary” treatments, some of them published in international journals. Such treatments are used for practically every existing illness: asthma, depression, smoking and drug addictions, high cholesterol and heart disease, strokes, epilepsy, back pain, and many more. He looked at various factors (“trial size”, “statistical bias”, “induction” by the therapist, etc.) influencing the results of those treatments. Bausell then patiently and meticulously showed why researchers are now confident that what is at work here is the placebo effect. (The Medical Dictionary defines the placebo effect as: “A remarkable phenomenon in which a placebo -- a fake treatment, an inactive substance like sugar, distilled water, or saline solution -- can sometimes improve a patient's condition simply because the person has the expectation that it will be helpful.”)
In this post, I would like to highlight another phenomenon which is also worldwide, but it is largely prevalent in the Arab-Muslim world. I am referring to the strong preference shown by many people for herbal remedies, ranging from simplistic (“the black seed can heal from any disease”, more on this below) to quasi-scientific (“Bruise cardamom pods until partially open; remove cardamom seeds from their pods; gently bruise seeds or dry-fry over gentle heat to release their flavor [to] help relieve indigestion and gas”).
There is a huge tradition of “Islamic” herbal medicine, going back to Prophet Muhammad himself, to whom the above prescription about the “black seed” (al-habba al-sawda’ in Arabic, Fennel Flower or Black Cumin in English) is attributed. In fact there is a whole branch of folk medicine, and various books have been published, under the title “Prophetic Medicine” (Al-Tibb al-Nabawiy). And needless to say, there are countless websites dedicated to “Islamic herbal medicine”. A few years ago, the Aramco magazine (the beautiful National-Geographic-like magazine I had mentioned before) published a 10-page, lavish article titled “Natural Remedies of Arabia” in which twenty plants, vegetables, or fruits were presented along the following plan: “general description”, “how to use”, “remedies across Arabia”, and “did you know?”
What is one to make of such a social phenomenon, touching on science, at least some folk-style and traditional version of it, religion (a large collection of hadiths are brought to bear, and sometimes even the mere mention of a plant or fruit in the Qur’an is discussed at length), culture, and modernity/anti-modernity?
As far as the Arab-Muslim culture is concerned, I think there are here at least two major trends at play: a) the strong will to go back to “our original identity and tradition”, including in the field of medicine (and science in general, as in the case of I`jaz, the “miraculous scientific content of the Qur’an”); and b) the wish to break away from modern (read: western) ways of life, which are seen as artificial (medicines are manufactured chemicals, not natural herbs).
Let’s focus on the second trend, since the first one is a purely socio-religious one and is thus much more general than the present issue. It is difficult to argue strongly with people on this point because: first it is quite true that many (certainly not all, and perhaps not even the majority) of those herbs and fruits have tried-and-true medicinal value, and secondly we all know that most of our modern medicines have side effects and some of them even addictive characteristics.
Ah, but one must be careful with generalizations and selective emphasis, and that’s where I think the problem lies with the above traditionalist views. Indeed, one must first stress that herbs and fruits can be good for the treatment of this or that ailment, but they rarely if ever have the wide spectrum of benefits that they are often given (recall the blanket statement about the black seed); secondly, many of those (natural) plants have side effects too, sometimes very negative effects, especially when combined without care; and thirdly, modern medicines are often merely extracts from herbs, where the scientific methods (systematic trials, rigorous experiments) have been applied to distill (literally and figuratively) the plant into its essential (molecular) beneficial nugget.
Let me insist on the fact that “natural remedies” often produce negative effects, a point which is rarely realized or appreciated by the naturalists. A few months ago, newspapers reported that Europe [is going] to ban hundreds of herbal remedies, on the basis of safety concerns. Indeed, starting May 1, 2011, hundreds of herbal medicinal products will be banned unless licensed or prescribed by “a registered herbal practitioner to comply with an EU directive passed in 2004” ; opponents have stated that such directives will be near-impossible and very costly to satisfy, which points to the wide gap between traditional and scientific standards.
To sum up, I believe this is a very interesting topic because it raises various issues connecting science (systematic studies) with tradition, sociology, trends and attitudes regarding modernity, western products and lifestyles, etc. I’ll be interested to hear people’s views on all these aspects of the subject.
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