David J. Owen, MLS,Ph.D. Kalmanovitz Library and CKM, UCSF

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Renaissance Period
Advertisements

A workshop on wild crafting or a story about the Shaker’s inspired utility of nature and Medicinal Herbalism, with a bit of contemporary herbal wisdom.
Architecture Project. Your project You are to research different classical types of houses. You will prepare a poster and paper. You will complete the.
CURRICULUM-BASED CLASSIFICATION CASE STUDY AT SOUTHWEST COLLEGE OF NATUROPATHIC MEDICINE LIBRARY Daniela Solomon.
Mosby items and derived items © 2008, 2002 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 1 Introduction to Respiratory Care Pharmacology.
Chapter One Introduction to the Bible and Its Influence.
Timeline of British History (or at least what you need to know for Senior English!)
Introduction to Pharmacology PHARM TECH. Pharmacology  Pharmacology is the science that deals with the study of therapeutic (beneficial) agents.  Knowledge.
PHARMACOLOGY oScience of drugs oGreek words= pharmakon (drug) and logos (study) oDeals with interaction of exogenously administered chemical molecules.
Herbal Remedies Looking at Herbal Remedies. Herbal Medicine through the Years Herbal medicine- also known as called botanical medicine or phytomedicine—refers.
Secondary Compounds and Medicinal Plants Spring 2012.
Legal considerations of drugs. Objectives Drug standards Pharmacopoeia Food, drug and cosmetic act.
Urticaceae The Nettle Family By Kathy Germann Urtica chamaedryoides.
Background Source 2 Q131 “The best gift from Allah to mankind is good health. Everyone should reach that goal by preserving it for now and the future.”
History of Medicine BSCI 493 February 27, A Brief History 2000 BC: Here, eat this root AD: That root is heathen. Here, say this prayer. 1850:
7 th Grade World History Spring What and When is the Renaissance? The Renaissance literally means “rebirth” and is the period that follows Europe’s.
Welcome to... A Game of X’s and O’s. Another Presentation © All rights Reserved
Medical Botany Introduction: History of Plant Use in Medicine.
History and Types of Complementary and Alternative Medicines
Mr. Larbi 1 Chapter 4 : MODERNITY & ENGLISH as a National Language Chapter 4 : MODERNITY & ENGLISH as a National Language.
History of Pharmacology. Its history likely began when a human first used a plant to relieve symptoms of disease. The Babylonian recorded the earliest.
PHG 415 Evidence-based herbal medicine. Standardization It is essential to provide the patient with high- quality botanical product. Standardization applies.
Officinal herbs The natural laboratory through knowledge–taste –history - culture.
History and Scope of Pharmacognosy
INTRODUCTION TO PHARMACOGNOSY
Course: Pharmacognosy-I Course Instructor: Nishat Jahan.
MANOJLOVIĆ J, KRAJNOVIĆ D UNIVERSITY OF BELGRADE – FACULTY OF PHARMACY BELGRADE,SERBIA THE ART OF PHARMACEUTICAL CARE INFLUENCE OF THE HABSBURG MONARCHY.
Test1 Here some text. Text 2 More text.
PRESENTED BY : MR. P. R. KODAPE.
LECTURE 3 Herbal Remedies
Lesson 3 What Historical Development Influenced Modern Ideas of Individual Rights?
Dark Ages and the Renaissance
Hypertension-Lipid Connection: Introduction
Image1 Field Data Collection Masterpieces of the non-Western book
Mr. Millhouse World History AP Hebron High School
Roots of the Scientific Revolution
Italian Renaissance – 1300 – 1550
Complementary and Alternative Medicine
Arima Mishra and Devaki Nambiar, India
סמים וסינפסות.
12. Ideas & the Human Experience
THE ENGLISH RENAISSANCE “…what a piece of work is a man…” (The Bard)
The Scientific Revolution
Introduction to Pharmacology: Drug Regulation and Approval Chapter 1
The Enlightenment.
Starter Quiz TASK: Please write down the title, and 1-9 in your margin on a new sheet of paper. 1. Why was drinking water often unsafe in the Middle ages?
Medical Education in the Clouds
The High and Late Middle Ages
KEY CONCEPT Humans rely on plants in many ways.
[type text here] [type text here] [type text here] [type text here]
Your text here Your text here Your text here Your text here Your text here Pooky.Pandas.
Learning Logs Take a few minutes and write on the following:
Homais Hannah Bumgarner.
Roots of the Scientific Revolution
Medical professionalism and the generation gap
Your text here Your text here Your text here Your text here
Intro to World History.
[type text here] [type text here] [type text here] [type text here]
Physicians by Blythe Coss.
From ‘Authority’ of the Ancients to Hands-on Experience
As Accessible as a Book on a Library Shelf
~Much of the Greek and Roman civilization was destroyed.
How did one learn about medicine and nature around 1500?
Dark Ages and the Renaissance
Roots of the Scientific Revolution
KEY CONCEPT Humans rely on plants in many ways.
Herbal Plants.
History of medicinal herbs, shrubs and trees.
Early Modern Drug-testing
Presentation transcript:

David J. Owen, MLS,Ph.D. Kalmanovitz Library and CKM, UCSF And Here’s To You, Mrs. Grieve: Thyme to Revisit Those Old Herbal Books David J. Owen, MLS,Ph.D. Kalmanovitz Library and CKM, UCSF David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004

Herbal Renaissance in US Resurgence of interest in 1970s Entered the mainstream in 1990s Problem of finding information Revisiting classic herbal texts David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004

David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004 Herbals A book containing the names and descriptions of herbs, or of plants in general, with their properties and virtues; a treatise on plants David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004

Prospecting for Drugs in Old Texts Dioscorides wrote about nettle (Urtica dioica) Used in Middle Ages as a diuretic Rediscovered in 1990s Investigated by German scientists David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004

Greco-Roman and Medieval Dioscorides Gerard’s Herbal Culpepper David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004

David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004 Dioscorides David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004

David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004 Gerard’s Herbal David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004

Culpepper:The English Physician (1652) David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004

David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004 Mrs. Maud Grieve F.R.H.S. A Modern Herbal (1936) First “modern” herbal in hundred years David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004

David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004 A Modern Herbal 1936 Medicinal and culinary herbs Traditional herbalism One of the top selling books on herbal harvesting and usage David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004

19th Century American Medical Movements and Botanicals Eclecticism David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004

David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004 Fyfe’s Materia Medica The Essentials of Modern Materia Medica and Therapeutics by John William Fyfe, M.D. (Eclectic Manual #6, 1903) David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004

Cubreth’s Material Medica and Pharmacology A Manual of Materia Medica and Pharmacology, by David M.R. Culbreth, Ph.G., M.D. (7th edition, 1927) All official drug plants in the United States Pharmacopoeia and the National Formulary up to 1927 David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004

King's American Dispensatory by Harvey Wickes Felter, M.D., and John Uri Lloyd, Phr. M., Ph. D., 1898 David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004

The American Materia Medica, Therapeutics and Pharmacognosy Finley Ellingwood, M.D David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004

David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004 Online History of Herbals http://www.med.virginia.edu/hs-library/historical/herb/menu.html SouthWest School of Botanical Medicine http://www.swsbm.com/HOMEPAGE/HomePage.html Henrietta’s Herbal Web Page http://www.ibiblio.org/herbmed/ Mrs. Grieve’s Modern Herbal http://www.botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/mgmh.html David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004

David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004 “Between tradition and modernity there is a bridge. When they are mutually isolated, tradition stagnates and modernity vaporizes; when in conjunction, modernity breathes life into tradition, while the later replies with depth and gravity.” Octavio Paz, Nobel Lecture, 1990 David J. Owen, UCSF, January 2004