Anti-Fertility Plants of the Pacific

There is a growing appreciation of traditional medical systems as a source of considerable knowledge of the medicinal properties of plants. Traditional medicines have the potential to offer leads to identifying potentially valuable chemicals that can be developed into new and more effective drugs, including safer contraceptives.

The Pacific region is an excellent arena in which to search for such chemicals, because: the area contains plant species not found elsewhere; there is every indication that many of the plants used more generally in traditional Pacific medicine may be efficacious — of 74 plants surveyed in one study, 86 percent showed pharmacological activity; and in many Pacific traditions, knowledge of medicinal use is transmitted between generations as part of an inherited body of ethnomedical knowledge.

This book documents all the available information on plants that have been used traditionally for anti-fertility and fertility purposes in the Pacific region, and indicates which of these plants hold the most promise for providing new anti-fertility agents. It also records instances in which the plant has been used outside the region.

Bio

Alexandra Brewis Slade is a President's Professor in the School of Human Evolution and Social Change. As an anthropologist, she focuses on how health-related stigma shapes human biology, health and suffering. She is also concerned with such challenges as water insecurity, improving development project design and monitoring, and properly tailored anti-obesity efforts.


Anti-Fertility Plants of the Pacific book cover image
Date published
Publisher
CSIRO Publishing
ISBN
9780643100626

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