Legal Status of Traditional Medicine and Complementary/Alternative Medicine: A Worldwide Review
(2001; 200 pages) View the PDF document
Table of Contents
View the documentAcknowledgements
View the documentForeword
Open this folder and view contentsIntroduction
Close this folderAfrica
View the documentAngola
View the documentBenin
View the documentBotswana
View the documentBurkina Faso
View the documentBurundi
View the documentCameroon
View the documentCape Verde
View the documentCentral African Republic
View the documentChad
View the documentComoros
View the documentCongo
View the documentCôte d'Ivoire
View the documentDemocratic Republic of the Congo
View the documentEquatorial Guinea
View the documentEthiopia
View the documentGabon
View the documentGambia
View the documentGhana
View the documentGuinea
View the documentGuinea-Bissau
View the documentKenya
View the documentLesotho
View the documentLiberia
View the documentMadagascar
View the documentMalawi
View the documentMali
View the documentMauritania
View the documentMauritius
View the documentMozambique
View the documentNamibia
View the documentNiger
View the documentNigeria
View the documentRwanda
View the documentSao Tome and Principe
View the documentSenegal
View the documentSeychelles
View the documentSierra Leone
View the documentSouth Africa
View the documentSwaziland
View the documentTogo
View the documentUganda
View the documentUnited Republic of Tanzania
View the documentZambia
View the documentZimbabwe
Open this folder and view contentsThe Americas
Open this folder and view contentsEastern Mediterranean
Open this folder and view contentsEurope
Open this folder and view contentsSouth-East Asia
Open this folder and view contentsWestern Pacific
View the documentReferences
Open this folder and view contentsAnnex I. The European Union
 

United Republic of Tanzania

Background information

Traditional medicine has been practised separately from allopathic medicine since the colonial period. The practice of traditional medicine is threatened by a lack of written documentation on traditional medical practices, which has made its promotion difficult, and by a decline in biodiversity, including traditional medicinal resources, in certain localities. There has also been a decline in the number of practitioners of traditional medicine (70).

Beginning in the 1990s, complementary/alternative systems of health care have emerged in Tanzania. These new medical options include magnetic therapy, homeopathic medicine, massage, and traditional Chinese, Korean, and Indian medicines.

Regulatory situation

The Medical Practitioners and Dentists Ordinance (71), which was constituted before Tanzania's independence and is still in operation, holds exemplary status for traditional practitioners. Chapter 92.20 (72) states the following:

Nothing contained in this ordinance shall be construed to prohibit or prevent the practice of systems of therapeutics according to native methods by persons recognized by the community to which they belong to be duly trained in such practice.

Provided that nothing in this section shall be construed to authorize any person to practise native systems of therapeutics except amongst the community to which he belongs, or the performance of an act on the part of any persons practising any such system which is dangerous to life.

In an effort to promote and standardize traditional medicine, the Government established the Traditional Medicine Research Unit in 1974 as part of the University of Dar es Salaam and the Muhimbili Medical Centre (73). In 1985, the Government of Tanzania was in the process of developing a law to register and license traditional practitioners.

In 1989, governance of traditional health services was shifted from the ministry responsible for culture to the Ministry of Health, which has established a Traditional Health Services Unit (70). This Unit is working to unify traditional health practitioners and mobilize them to form their own association. The Unit is also involved in the formation of a traditional medicine policy, the overall goal of which is to improve the health status of the people through the use of effective and safe elements of traditional health care. Traditional health services are officially recognized in the National Health Policy of 1990 (73).

Education and training

There has been no attempt to introduce or incorporate traditional medicine into the training curricula of allopathic medical students.

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Last updated: May 3, 2013