Legal Status of Traditional Medicine and Complementary/Alternative Medicine: A Worldwide Review
(2001; 200 pages) Voir le document au format PDF
Table des matières
Afficher le documentAcknowledgements
Afficher le documentForeword
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuIntroduction
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuAfrica
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuThe Americas
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuEastern Mediterranean
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuEurope
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuSouth-East Asia
Fermer ce répertoireWestern Pacific
Afficher le documentAustralia
Afficher le documentCambodia
Afficher le documentChina
Afficher le documentHong Kong Special Administrative Region of China
Afficher le documentFiji
Afficher le documentJapan
Afficher le documentKiribati
Afficher le documentLao People's Democratic Republic
Afficher le documentMalaysia
Afficher le documentMongolia
Afficher le documentNew Zealand
Afficher le documentPapua New Guinea
Afficher le documentPhilippines
Afficher le documentRepublic of Korea
Afficher le documentSamoa
Afficher le documentSingapore
Afficher le documentSolomon Islands
Afficher le documentVanuatu
Afficher le documentViet Nam
Afficher le documentReferences
Ouvrir ce répertoire et afficher son contenuAnnex I. The European Union
 

Cambodia

Background information

The Ministry of Health has established the Centre for Traditional Medicine, which is limited to basic work in a few botanical medicines and has little input into pharmaceutical issues. Much of the knowledge available on botanical specimens is based on their use in neighbouring countries. Shops throughout the country sell traditional medicines from around the world.

Regulatory situation

A law on the organization of traditional therapeutics and traditional pharmacopoeia was enacted in 1964 (214). This law defines traditional therapeutics as treatment and care using traditional methods, excluding surgical and obstetrical procedures, dental surgery, and electrical, chemical, or bacteriological methods of therapy and analysis. To practice, traditional medicine practitioners must be at least 25 years old, have completed a three-year apprenticeship, and possess a licence issued by the Minister of Health. Traditional medicine may not be practised on the premises of allopathic health care establishments (215).

The National Drug Policy (216), developed with technical collaboration from the World Health Organization, is intended to increase the importance of traditional medicine and encourage traditional medical practice as a complement to allopathic medicine. The Policy states that fundamental and applied research on traditional remedies will be pursued and diseases that can be treated effectively with traditional medicines will be identified. The Law on the Management of Pharmaceuticals was adopted on 9 May 1996 (216), replacing relevant existing legislation. Following the adoption of this law by the National Assembly, a draft decree pertaining to the manufacture, importation, exportation, and supply of traditional medicines was submitted by the Ministry of Health to the Council of Ministers.

Education and training

There is no officially recognized curriculum incorporating the use of traditional medicines.

vers la section précédente vers la section suivante
 

Dernière mise à jour: le 3 mai 2013