The
government is striving to integrate jamu (herbal medicine) into the national
health system, which requires cross-sectoral cooperation between government
institutions to create a comprehensive knowledge on jamu so that there is
clear-cut standardisation, as there is with modern medicine.
"We continuously try to include jamu in
the national health system," Health Minister Endang Rahayu Sedyaningsih
said after opening the third Conference on Traditional Medicine in ASEAN
Countries in Surakarta, Central Java, on Monday.
Endang said the conference aimed at exchanging
experiences on medicine and enhancing cooperation in research.
"Each Asean country is trying to
integrate traditional herbal medicine into its health system," she said.
The minister said in her speech that jamu was
very popular among Indonesians. Based on a health study in 2010, about 49
percent of Indonesians aged 15 and above consume jamu. About 5 percent consume
jamu every day and 45 percent irregularly.
Nearly 80 percent of Indonesian know about
jamu, but jamu has not been included in the national health system due to
unclear knowledge on it.
"The problem is that knowledge about jamu
is passed down through generations and it has no school of its own. This has to
be improved upon," Endang said.
She further said that thorough knowledge about
jamu was sorely needed to ensure its security, effectiveness and quality. There
are two challenges in the consumption of jamu, namely patients who place all
their trust in jamu and the quality of the healers treating patients with
herbal medicine.
Evidence that the government is striving to
integrate jamu into the national health system is the operation of 30 community
health centres in Central Java and 14 hospitals that provide traditional
medication services.
Additionally, the Health Ministry is also
conducting a scientific study on four jamu products used to treat cholesterol,
high blood sugar levels, hypertension and gout. It will later be followed by
tests on jamu used to treat cancer. The tests are expected to enable
professional media to promote jamu products in the formal health sector.
Dr. Hieng Punley from Cambodia said that 80
percent of Cambodians also consumed herbal medicine.
"My mission in this conference is to
share our experiment in traditional medicine," said Hieng, who is the
director of the National Center of Traditional Medicine, Ministry of Health,
Cambodia.
Bambang Muryanto
The Jakarta Post
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