Towards a transactional medicine approach to combating global emerging pathogens: the case of COVID-19

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Abstract

When the COVID-19 pandemic struck and China reported the first case to the World Health Organization in December 2019, there was no evidence-based treatment to combat it. With the catastrophic situation that followed, materialised by a considerable number of deaths, researchers, doctors, traditional healers, and governments of all nations committed themselves to find therapeutic solutions, including preventive and curative. There are effective treatments offered both by modern medicine and traditional medicine for COVID-19 today. However, other therapeutic proposals have not been approved due to the lack of effectiveness and scientific rigour during their development process. Proponents of modern medicine prefer biomedical therapies while in some countries, traditional treatments are used regularly because of their availability, affordability and satisfaction they bring to the population. In this paper, we propose a transactional medicine approach where the interaction between traditional and modern medicine produces a change. With this approach, the promoters of traditional medicine and those of modern medicine will be able to acquire knowledge through the experience produced by their encounters. Transactional medicine aims to be a model for decolonising medicine and recognising the value of both traditional and modern medicine in the fight against COVID-19 and other global emerging pathogens.

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APA

Senghor, A. S., Mbaye, M. S., Diop, R., Tosam, M. J., Kabou, P., Niang, A., & Okoye, G. (2023). Towards a transactional medicine approach to combating global emerging pathogens: the case of COVID-19. Global Public Health, 18(1). https://doi.org/10.1080/17441692.2023.2272710

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