Sustainable drugs and global health care

Each day, Earth's finite resources are being depleted for energy, for material goods, for transportation, for housing, and for drugs. As we evolve scientifically and technologically, and as the population of the world rapidly approaches 7 billion and beyond, among the many issues with which we...

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Main Author: Geoffrey A. Cordell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sociedade Brasileira de Química 2009-01-01
Series:Química Nova
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-40422009000500047
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spelling doaj-3bc64412b564448cb73108bf2d9c22c12020-11-24T20:54:54ZengSociedade Brasileira de QuímicaQuímica Nova0100-40421678-70642009-01-013251356136410.1590/S0100-40422009000500047Sustainable drugs and global health careGeoffrey A. CordellEach day, Earth's finite resources are being depleted for energy, for material goods, for transportation, for housing, and for drugs. As we evolve scientifically and technologically, and as the population of the world rapidly approaches 7 billion and beyond, among the many issues with which we are faced is the continued availability of drugs for future global health care. Medicinal agents are primarily derived from two sources, synthetic and natural, or in some cases, as semi-synthetic compounds, a mixture of the two. For the developed world, efforts have been initiated to make drug production "greener", with milder reagents, shorter reaction times, and more efficient processing, thereby using less energy, and reactions which are more atom efficient, and generate fewer by-products. However, most of the world's population uses plants, in either crude or extract form, for their primary health care. There is relatively little discussion as yet, about the long term effects of the current, non-sustainable harvesting methods for medicinal plants from the wild, which are depleting these critical resources without concurrent initiatives to commercialize their cultivation. To meet future public health care needs, a paradigm shift is required in order to adopt new approaches using contemporary technology which will result in drugs being regarded as a sustainable commodity, irrespective of their source. In this presentation, several approaches to enhancing and sustaining the availability of drugs, both synthetic and natural, will be discussed, including the use of vegetables as chemical reagents, and the deployment of integrated strategies involving information systems, biotechnology, nanotechnology, and detection techniques for the development of medicinal plants with enhanced levels of bioactive agents.http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-40422009000500047synthetic drugsmedicinal plantsgreen chemistry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Geoffrey A. Cordell
spellingShingle Geoffrey A. Cordell
Sustainable drugs and global health care
Química Nova
synthetic drugs
medicinal plants
green chemistry
author_facet Geoffrey A. Cordell
author_sort Geoffrey A. Cordell
title Sustainable drugs and global health care
title_short Sustainable drugs and global health care
title_full Sustainable drugs and global health care
title_fullStr Sustainable drugs and global health care
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable drugs and global health care
title_sort sustainable drugs and global health care
publisher Sociedade Brasileira de Química
series Química Nova
issn 0100-4042
1678-7064
publishDate 2009-01-01
description Each day, Earth's finite resources are being depleted for energy, for material goods, for transportation, for housing, and for drugs. As we evolve scientifically and technologically, and as the population of the world rapidly approaches 7 billion and beyond, among the many issues with which we are faced is the continued availability of drugs for future global health care. Medicinal agents are primarily derived from two sources, synthetic and natural, or in some cases, as semi-synthetic compounds, a mixture of the two. For the developed world, efforts have been initiated to make drug production "greener", with milder reagents, shorter reaction times, and more efficient processing, thereby using less energy, and reactions which are more atom efficient, and generate fewer by-products. However, most of the world's population uses plants, in either crude or extract form, for their primary health care. There is relatively little discussion as yet, about the long term effects of the current, non-sustainable harvesting methods for medicinal plants from the wild, which are depleting these critical resources without concurrent initiatives to commercialize their cultivation. To meet future public health care needs, a paradigm shift is required in order to adopt new approaches using contemporary technology which will result in drugs being regarded as a sustainable commodity, irrespective of their source. In this presentation, several approaches to enhancing and sustaining the availability of drugs, both synthetic and natural, will be discussed, including the use of vegetables as chemical reagents, and the deployment of integrated strategies involving information systems, biotechnology, nanotechnology, and detection techniques for the development of medicinal plants with enhanced levels of bioactive agents.
topic synthetic drugs
medicinal plants
green chemistry
url http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-40422009000500047
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