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Medicinal Herb Research
on the Internet
NOTE: The inclusion of a site in this list is not intended as an
endorsement of a company or a product. The purpose of this list is to
provide a representative selection of the various types of sites with
herbal information which are available on the internet.
These sites provide substantive information on medicinal herbs and
include links to other sites.
- Dr. Duke's Phytochemical
and Ethnobotanical Databases (USDA Agricultural Research
Service) An important source for scientific information on specific
herbs including the chemicals present in a particular herb.
- Ethnomedicinals The
author of this website, Anthony Torkelson, is also the author of the
multi-volume work, The Cross Name Index to Medicinal Plants,
published by CRC Press. This is a wonderful site-obviously a labor
of love.
- Henriette's Herbal
Homepage A nice site, another labor of love. Provides useful
information on medicinal and culinary herbs as well as links to
other sites, plant pictures, and a plant name database.
- Herbal Hall Bills
itself as "Possibly the Internet's most complete library for Herbs".
Has a search feature powered by HotBot.
-
Herbal Materia Medica Offers succinct information on specific
herbs.
- HerbNet Sponsored by The
Herb Growing and Marketing Network, this claims to be "the most
comprehensive site on the Web for those seeking information on
herbs, herb products and remedies, herb publications . . . in fact
everything herbal."
- Medicinal Herb
Garden at University of Washington Search for herbs by botanical
or common names, and then click on one of three links (AGIS Ethnobot,
AGIS Medicinal Plants of North America, or Medlline Citations via
PubMed) for more in-depth information. The link to Medline citations
is particularly useful.
-
Modern Herbal hypertext version of the 1931, 860 page work by
Mrs. M. Grieve. Includes a plant and herb index, word search of the
text, index of recipes and index of poisons.
- Planetary Herbology
Site of Dr. Michael Tierra, founding member of the American
Herbalists Guild. Includes access to "Planet Herbs Online", a chat
room. Also check out the online articles.
- Southwest School of
Botanical Medicine This incredible site is
the brainchild of Michael Moore, Director of the Southwest School of
Botanical Medicine in Brisbee, Arizona. This site is another which
seems to end up on everyone's list of the best herbal sites.
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Use one of these sites to gain access to many other herbal links.
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These are interesting sites but are limited in their usefulness due
to membership requirements, fees for information, etc.:
- American Botanical Council
"Educating the public on the use of herbs and phytomedicinals".
While this is an attractive site, there is little that is free here.
HerbalGram, a journal of the ABC, is available only by subscription.
However, one interesting feature allows one to preview one of the
German Commission E monographs.
- American Herbal
Pharmacopoeia The purpose of AHP is to produce authoritative
herbal monographs which are available for purchase.
- The Herb Research Foundation
Based in Boulder, Colorado, a membership ($35/year) nonprofit
research and education organization which focuses on herbs and
medicinal plants. Also, little free information here. Nonmembers can
purchase information packets (for example an Echinacea packet is
available for $7) or pay for a custom research service. It does
provide 14 recommended links.
- The Herb Society (UK)
Another membership organization. Useful for the featured Endangered
Herb of the Month and nice links to other sites.
- PhytoNet A
significant site, but requires registration. Covers information
resources for phytomedicines and herbal drugs; maintained by the
Centre for Complementary Health Studies, University of Exeter. Also
tracks herbal adverse drug reactions.
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- American Dietetic
Association National Center for Nutrition and Dietetics (NCND)
of the ADA was established to provide an "easily accessible,
objective source of scientifically-based food and nutrition
information. To find information on herbs or herbal medicines use
the site search function.
- Center for Nutrition Policy
and Promotion (USDA) the purpose of this site is to provide to
the public, nutrition information that is based on sound research
and analysis. Click on "Library of Files" and then search by topic.
- Center for Science in the
Public Interest "A nonprofit education and advocacy
organization that focuses on improving the safety and nutritional
quality of our food supply..." Includes access to the online
publication, Nutrition Action Healthletter.
- Food and
Drug Administration (US) Information on dietary supplements is
included at this site.
- Food and Nutrition
Information Center (USDA National Agriculture Library)
From this site one can "access all of FNIC's resource lists and
databases, as well as many other food and nutrition related links."
Use the site search feature to search for herbs and herbal medicine
information. (Links to Food Composition databases are useful for
research on other topics.
- Food and Nutrition
Service - (USDA) The purpose of the FNS is to provide to the
public "information about food, a healthful diet and nutrition
education in a manner that supports American agriculture and
inspires public confidence." Use the site search feature to search
for herbs or herbal medicine.
- Mayo Clinic Health Oasis
A comprehensive medical information site which includes the
full-text of articles on herbal medicine. Use the site search
feature to locate articles.
- National Center for
Complementary and Alternative Medicine - The NCCAM was
established in 1998 to conduct and support basic and applied
research and training and disseminates information on complementary
and alternative medicine to practitioners and the public. Use the
site search feature to find information on herbs or herbal medicine.
- National Council Against Health
Fraud (National Council for Reliable Health Information) Search
for the term "herbal" to get a long list of publications dealing
with herbal medicine.
- National Institutes of Health (US)
A site search on the word "herbal" yields well over 300 citations.
- National Library of Medicine
(US) A wonderful source of all kinds of medical information. For
information on herbal medicine use the "MedlinePlus" option.
- Office of
Dietary Supplements (National Institute of Health) this
web site provides information about the Office, its origins,
programs and activities and scientific resources." A new service
provides access to the database IBIDS (International Bibliographic
Information on Dietary Supplements) which contains citations for
scientific articles on dietary supplements.
- Quackwatch This site
serves as a watchdog for all kinds of medical fraud or
misrepresentation. Search for "herb" or "herbal" for a long list of
articles.
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-
AGRICOLA - Major agricultural database of the National
Agriculture Library. Covers literature on herbs, particularly
growing them.
- IBIDS -
(International Bibliographic Information on Dietary Supplements). A
database, maintained by the NIH and USDA , which indexes published
scientific literature on dietary supplements from 1986 to present.
- Native American Ethnobotany
Database - Foods, drugs, dyes, and fibers of Native
Americans. A project of Dan Moerman, Professor of
Anthropology, University of Michigan-Dearborn.
- PubMed (public
version of Medline, medical database of the US National Library of
Medicine).
NOTE: In addition to the free databases listed above, Colorado
State University faculty staff and students may access
subscription databases via the Libraries' databases page at
http://lib.colostate.edu/databases/
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These sites cover several areas of alternative medicine including
herbal medicine. If herbal medicine is not listed as a topic on the
homepage, then generally perform a site search.
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This is a miscellaneous group of sites that provides information on
herbs and health and medical information in general.
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