TY - JOUR
T1 - Sceletium for managing anxiety, depression and cognitive impairment
T2 - A traditional herbal medicine in modern-day regulatory systems
AU - Brendler, Thomas
AU - Brinckmann, Josef A.
AU - Feiter, Ulrich
AU - Gericke, Nigel
AU - Lang, Lucy
AU - Pozharitskaya, Olga N.
AU - Shikov, Alexander N.
AU - Smith, Michael
AU - van Wyk, Ben Erik
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Bentham Science Publishers.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Modern-day regulatory systems governing conditions for how health products enter national markets constitute a barrier of access for traditional herbal medicines on an international level. Regulatory intentions are focused on ensuring that consumers are being provided with safe, efficacious and high-quality products that, however, collaterally limit opportunities for traditional herbal medicinal products, especially those that do not already have a long-standing tradition of use established in the respective national marketplaces. This case study investigates and compares how a Southern African herbal medicine with great potential as an anxiolytic and mild antidepressant-Mesembryanthemum tortuosum L. [syn. Sceletium tortuosum (L.) N.E.Br.] aerial parts-fares inter-nationally in today’s regulatory environments. It is argued that inadvertent regulatory favoritism combined with the lack of means for adequate protection of intellectual property may obstruct innovation by creating an almost insurmountable economical hurdle for successful product development and introduction of botanicals from developing countries into most of the world’s health product markets.
AB - Modern-day regulatory systems governing conditions for how health products enter national markets constitute a barrier of access for traditional herbal medicines on an international level. Regulatory intentions are focused on ensuring that consumers are being provided with safe, efficacious and high-quality products that, however, collaterally limit opportunities for traditional herbal medicinal products, especially those that do not already have a long-standing tradition of use established in the respective national marketplaces. This case study investigates and compares how a Southern African herbal medicine with great potential as an anxiolytic and mild antidepressant-Mesembryanthemum tortuosum L. [syn. Sceletium tortuosum (L.) N.E.Br.] aerial parts-fares inter-nationally in today’s regulatory environments. It is argued that inadvertent regulatory favoritism combined with the lack of means for adequate protection of intellectual property may obstruct innovation by creating an almost insurmountable economical hurdle for successful product development and introduction of botanicals from developing countries into most of the world’s health product markets.
KW - Anxiety
KW - Depression
KW - Mesembryanthemum tortuosum
KW - Regulations
KW - Sceletium
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85116958546&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2174/1570159X19666210215124737
DO - 10.2174/1570159X19666210215124737
M3 - Review article
C2 - 33588735
AN - SCOPUS:85116958546
SN - 1570-159X
VL - 19
SP - 1384
EP - 1400
JO - Current Neuropharmacology
JF - Current Neuropharmacology
IS - 9
ER -