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
Open this folder and view contentsAfrica
Open this folder and view contentsThe Americas
Close this folderEastern Mediterranean
View the documentAlgeria
View the documentCyprus
View the documentDjibouti
View the documentEgypt
View the documentIslamic Republic of Iran
View the documentJordan
View the documentKuwait
View the documentPakistan
View the documentSaudi Arabia
View the documentSudan
View the documentSyrian Arab Republic
View the documentUnited Arab Emirates
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
 

Syrian Arab Republic

Regulatory situation

No licences are issued to providers of herbal medicine; such practices are limited to specialists.

In 1997, the Ministry of Health issued decisions on the technical prerequisites necessary for the establishment of laboratories for herbal medicine. In 1998, the Ministry issued decisions on the manufacture and distribution of herbal medicines and on a system of controls. The manufacture of herbal medicines has been included in the national drug policy. Both public and private laboratories have been active in processing medicinal herbs, and the Ministry of Health has given preliminary approval for the establishment of laboratories that would manufacture herbal medicines. A file concerning the manufacturing of herbal medicines has been developed in preparation for their registration.

Three draft laws covering herbal medicine have been prepared. One concerns herbal medicines that would be used in primary health care.

Education and training

A syllabus on treatment with herbal medicines has been recommended for inclusion in the curricula of faculties of medicine.

A syllabus on medicinal plants and herbal medicines has been introduced into the curricula of pharmacy faculties and at health institutes for technical assistant pharmacists.

to previous section to next section
 

Last updated: May 3, 2013