The Nigerian National Mirror Committee on African Traditional Medicines (ATM), has commenced work on 20 new proposals for development into draft standards to enrich the stock of available standards in Nigeria in particular and the African continent at large.

This disclosure was part of the resolutions at the 8th meeting of the Mirror Committee, hosted by the Raw Materials, Research and Development Council (RMRDC), in Abuja, recently and chaired by Prof. Maurice Iwu, erudite pharmacognosist.

According to the Director General, Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), Osita Aboloma, the new work items were arrived at following justifications provided by the proposers on the need to adopt them for further deliberations towards eventual elaboration into draft standards.

The draft standards, according to him, will then be submitted to the Technical Harmonisation Committee of the African Organisation for Standardisation (ARSO) for further deliberations towards approval as African standards. Member countries of ARSO, including Nigeria, would then domesticate the standards through adoption, he said.

Represented by Dr. (Mrs.) Omolara Okunlola, Group Head, Food Technology, the SON Chief Executive listed some of the new work items as including coconut (leaves, medicinal oils, stem bark {shells}, fruit and water), alligator pepper, African white wood and lemon grass, among others.

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He commended members of the committee on their efforts towards the development of the six approved standards on ATM by the Standards Council, for use in Nigeria last year.

Other resolutions of the committee, according to Okunlola, include that the Subcommittee on Communication/Engagement should work with SON to create public awareness on the six approved standards on ATM for voluntary patronage and uptake in Nigeria and that SON and NAFDAC should bring up inspection guidelines for certification of the herbal products, especially the Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) and Good Agricultural and Collection Practice (GACP).

The secretariat was also directed to circulate the ARSO template for medicinal plant standards and an electronic copy of an ARSO approved standard to guide members in the development of the initial draft of the 20 new work items.

The meeting was attended by experts of the Committee drawn from the Academia, Research Institutes, Regulatory Agencies, Professional Associations in health care delivery and the Private sector, including Small and Medium Enterprises (SME) practitioners.