INVESTIGADORES
ACOSTA marina Eva
artículos
Título:
Urban medicinal plant use: Do migrant and non-migrant populations have similar hybridisation processes?
Autor/es:
LADIO, ANA H.; ACOSTA, MARINA
Revista:
JOURNAL OF ETHNOPHARMACOLOGY
Editorial:
ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
Referencias:
Año: 2019 vol. 234 p. 290 - 305
ISSN:
0378-8741
Resumen:
Ethnopharmacological relevance: Urban migrant herbal medicine is an important topic on a global scale. Throughbibliographical analysis of published studies we can get an overview of the different hybridisation processes atwork in cities around the world, the main medicinal plants used and the principal ailments treated. We analysedthe differential characteristics of urban ethnobotanical studies involving transnational migrant and non-migrantpopulations, in order to contribute useful information for the design of public health policies.Materials and methods: A systematic and integrative revision was conducted, leading to a final selection of 66primary sources, including studies with and without immigrants. In both cases, richness (S), considered as thesum of all species cited in the work, botanical families and reported ailments were recorded. Based on the workof Ladio and Albuquerque (2014) the main hybridisation processes identifiable in the literature were assessed.These were: fusion, relocation, re-combination of different species, their restructuring as medicinal targets,spatial segregation in usage, innovations found in the circulation and consumption of the plants, and the presenceof simultaneous coexistence of different symbolic universes in plant medical practices.Data Analysis: This was qualitative and quantitative, including both in-depth interpretative content analysis of thestudies and frequency analysis of numerical data, such as species richness, botanical families, ailments and thehybridisation processes detected. A multinomial logistic regression model was used to analyse whether the probabilityof medicinal plant hybridisation processes occurring was the same in literature with and without migrants.Results: A total of 522 medicinal species formed part of the main urban ethnobotany worldwide; the majoritywere cosmopolitan in distribution and belonged to the Asteriaceae and Lamiaceae families. Only 21% of thesespecies appeared in both migrant and non-migrant studies. Most were used for gastrointestinal and hepaticailments. Surprisingly, culture-related illnesses were not frequently mentioned, probably due to lack of recognitionand re-interpretation by authors. Logistic analysis showed that in the studies with migrants, relocationand restructuring of plant use were the most frequently identified processes, while in the studies involving onlynon-migrants fusion was 4 times more likely to be found than in studies with migrants.Conclusions: Our research on hybridisation processes shows that cities constitute an environment that fosters arapid exchange of practices and knowledge about the available species. Studies with migrants have shown thatthey reproduce traditional models in their use of plants, and so relocation and restructuring of their herbalmedicine are the principal processes. Health risks in this case are related to the difficulties faced by these groupsin obtaining their plants and reproducing their practices. In the case of fusion processes observed in non-migrants,who do not normally have a long history or much experience of plant use, errors or poisoning may resultfrom misuse. This information highlights the importance of considering these processes in health