Participatory Ethnomedicinal Cancer Research with Fante-Akan Herbalists in Rural Ghana

  • Summer Ragosta Surfing Medicine International, P.O. Box 548, Waialua, Hawaii 96791.
  • Ivelyn Harris Rio Grande Valley Jamaica Maroons, Moore Town, Portland.
  • Ntim Gyakari Freelance Botanist and Technical Herbalist, P.O. Box 1457, Kumasi.
  • Emmanuel Otoo P.O. Box SP116, Salt Pond.
  • Alex Asase Botany Department, University of Ghana at Legon, P.O. Box LG 55, Legon.
Keywords: Ethnomedicine, Ghana, Collaborative research, Ethnopharmacopoeia, Cancer

Abstract

An ethnomedicinal study was initiated with herbalists in coastal Central Region Ghana to explore how cancer is defined, diagnosed, and treated within a traditional Fante-Akan context. The participatory, service-oriented investigation included international collaboration with herbalists and traditional plant experts. On-site meetings informed community leaders and members of project intent and methods, guided protocol, and gauged critical support. To provide immediate educational and economic opportunities, hands-on activities with villagers transferred academic and applied skills. Ethnographic interviews and voucher specimen collections were conducted with seven herbalists. Plant samples were dried and housed locally in a community herbarium cabinet constructed in Kormantse. Ten cancer ethnopharmacopoeia plants were identified, most of which are species considered native to tropical Africa. Fante Akan herbalists listed various types of cancers they treat with herbal remedies, along with ethnomedicinal descriptions of disease etiology, diagnoses, and treatments. The most common cancer type mentioned was “breast cancer.” Topical application was the most often cited method of administering remedies. Researchers established key contacts in the Kormantse, Salt Pond, and Elmina communities, and identified local and international research collaborators for a proposed interdisciplinary project focused on longitudinal case studies with herbalists, patients, and medical physicians.

Author Biographies

Summer Ragosta, Surfing Medicine International, P.O. Box 548, Waialua, Hawaii 96791.

Summer Ragosta resides in California where she cares for her family, teaches, conducts ethnobotany research, and leads charity development projects.

Ivelyn Harris, Rio Grande Valley Jamaica Maroons, Moore Town, Portland.
Ivelyn Harris resides in Rio Grande Valley Jamaica, practices Traditional Maroon Herbal Medicine, and wrote the book Healing Herbs of Jamaica.
Ntim Gyakari, Freelance Botanist and Technical Herbalist, P.O. Box 1457, Kumasi.
Ntim Gyakari is a botanist and technical herbalist in Kumasi, Ghana.
Emmanuel Otoo, P.O. Box SP116, Salt Pond.
Emmanuel Otoo is a parataxonomist, volunteer herbarium curator and research coordinator with Surfing Medicine International.
Alex Asase, Botany Department, University of Ghana at Legon, P.O. Box LG 55, Legon.
Alex Asase resides in Accra, Ghana, and spends time teaching and researching traditional West African uses of plants for medicine.

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Published
2015-07-21
How to Cite
Ragosta, S., Harris, I., Gyakari, N., Otoo, E., & Asase, A. (2015). Participatory Ethnomedicinal Cancer Research with Fante-Akan Herbalists in Rural Ghana. Ethnobiology Letters, 6(1), 66-79. https://doi.org/10.14237/ebl.6.1.2015.253
Section
Research Communications