Medicinal plants vs. pharmaceuticals; why are so many immigrants choosing plants instead. The NY Times in a recent investigative article found that many immigrants who grew up using plants with medicinal properties would choose to continue to use the plants. While many of these substances have not been properly scrutinized, it does not mean they are unsafe or ineffective. On the contrary, the use of so called neutraceuticals is growing and do not require a prescription from a doctor necessarily. Many pharmaceuticals require a prescription because they are not safe enough for broad uncontrolled use. While some pharmaceuticals are plant derived, most of them have huge markups in price that plant derived products do not. Do they know something we don’t? Even the Chinese use herbs and extracts to good effect. Many of us have heard that fresh aloe is good for wounds, but what about the many other plants that occur in nature? Check out this NY Times article Wary of Mainstream Medicine, Immigrants Seek Remedies From Home By RICHARD SCHIFFMAN On a recent afternoon, Ina Vandebroek was poking around the shelves of La 21 Division Botanica on the Grand Concourse in the Bronx. Its narrow aisles were crammed with thousands of votive candles, herbal potions and brightly colored plaster statues of saints. Dr. Vandebroek, a Belgian-born ethnobotanist, paused to gaze at herb-infused oils. The vials had names like Amor Prohibido (“Forbidden Love”), for those in search of adventure, and Conquistador, for the timid — both of them big sellers. Bendicion de Dinero Al Hogar (“A Blessing for Money in the House”), which comes in a spray, is also popular. But Dr. Vandebroek was not there to jump-start a flagging love life or curry the favor of spirits. La 21 Division is a regular stop for her, a mile or so from her laboratory at the New York Botanical Garden, where she is the assistant curator of economic botany. She is conducting a multiyear study of the folk remedies sold in New York’s botanicas, more than 100 emporiums that offer products for all that ails the body, mind and soul to a clientele mainly consisting of Latino and Caribbean immigrants. She is compiling guides in English and Spanish describing the plants and their uses. Her goal is to promote “culturally effective and sensitive health care” for a community that is chronically underserved by mainstream medicine. Read more