Relations (1)

related 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts

Medicinal plants are the primary subject of study in ethnopharmacology, as evidenced by research into their use for treating diabetes [1] and their critical role in drug discovery [2], [3]. Furthermore, ethnopharmacology is identified as a key interdisciplinary approach for scientifically evaluating the therapeutic potential of medicinal plants [4].

Facts (4)

Sources
Ethnobotanical study of food plants used in traditional medicine in ... link.springer.com Springer 1 fact
referenceGang R, Matsabisa M, Okello D, and Kang Y studied the ethnomedicine and ethnopharmacology of medicinal plants used to treat diabetes mellitus in Uganda, published in 2023.
Medicinal plants: bioactive compounds, biological activities ... frontiersin.org Frontiers in Immunology 1 fact
claimSüntar (2020) emphasizes the importance of ethnopharmacological studies in the drug discovery process, specifically regarding the role of medicinal plants.
Medicinal plants meet modern biodiversity science - OUCI ouci.dntb.gov.ua Charles C. Davis, Patrick Choisy · Elsevier BV 1 fact
referenceSüntar (Phytochem. Rev., 2020) emphasizes the importance of ethnopharmacological studies in drug discovery and the role of medicinal plants.
Integrating Medicinal Plants and Science | PDF | Metabolomics scribd.com Scribd 1 fact
referenceThe review titled 'Integrating Medicinal Plants and Science' emphasizes the importance of an interdisciplinary approach to studying medicinal plants by integrating evolutionary ecology, molecular biology, and ethnopharmacology to enhance pharmacological discoveries and human health.