Monday 7 July 2014
Royal College of Physicians
11 St Andrews Place
Regent’s Park
London
NW1 4LE
Registration: from 1.30pm.
Talks and discussions: 2pm to 5pm.
Tropical plants in European medicine, by Mark Nesbitt
After
a glimpse of the unexpectedly long history of import of medicinal
plants from the tropics, this talk will focus on the 18th and 19th
centuries. Drawing on examples from Kew’s archives and botanical
collections, it will look at how European travellers learnt about what
were (to them) novel remedies, how this information and sometimes the
plants were disseminated, and the place of medicines from the tropics in
British pharmacopoeias.
Medicines from plants - the rise and fall of the Pharmacopoeias and Herbals, by Henry Oakeley
The
16th and 17th centuries were the heyday of the great herbals and the
start of the pharmacopoeias, both fuelled by the advent of printing.
Physicians and apothecaries were expected to know the identity and uses
of plants, and differed mainly in that physicians saw diagnosis of an
illness was their prerogative, and that of making up medicines was the
realm of the apothecaries. Through these two centuries physicians moved
away from botany (which became a discipline in its own right) and began
to uncover the real basis for illness; the apothecaries became
manufacturers and dispensers. This lecture covers the nature of illness
and its treatment with plants; and the rise and fall of the
pharmacopoeia and the herbal; with reference to the contemporary
literature.
Plant-based medicine in women’s health, by Michael de Swiet
From
time immemorial, mankind has used plants in attempts to increase or
decrease fertility, to expedite childbirth and to relieve symptoms
relating to the female genital tract. Modern pathophysiological concepts
can start to separate those plants that might have been genuinely
beneficial from those that were too toxic to justify their use and from
those that were no more than placebos.
Garden tour: will be taking place in between the lecture with a coffee break.
Cost: The lectures are open to all and are free to RCP fellows, members and their guests; £10 per general public; £6 per students.
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