Herb: What Is It?
The word herb means a plant or plant part that is used to make
medicine, food flavors (spices), or aromatic oils for soaps and
fragrances. It is used in herbal medicine (also
known as botanical medicine or, in Europe, as phytotherapy or
phytomedicine). An herb can be a leaf, a flower, a stem, a seed, a root,
a fruit, bark, or any other plant part used for its medicinal, food
flavoring, or fragrant property.
Herbs have provided humankind with medicine from
the earliest beginnings of civilization. Throughout history, various
cultures have handed down their accumulated knowledge of the
medicinal use of herbs to successive generations. This vast body of
information serves as the basis for much of traditional medicine
today.
There are an estimated 250,000 to 500,000 plants
on the earth today (the number varies depending on whether
subspecies are included). Only about 5,000 of these have been
extensively studied for their medicinal applications. Norman R.
Farnsworth, Ph.D., Professor of
Pharmacology at the University of Illinois at Chicago, says that
this
illustrates the need for modern medicine and science to turn its
attention to the plant world once again to find new medicine that
might cure cancer, AIDS, diabetes, and many other diseases and
conditions. Considering
that 121 prescription drugs come from only ninety species of plants,
and that 74 percent of these were discovered following up native
folklore claims, a logical person
would have to say that there may still be more jackpots out there.