Where We Stand

We unite individuals from many views to work towards a shared goal. To get to the platform of patents and treatments; we work to transfer information from the old method of operation to laboratory-oriented research.

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How traditional methods are viable?

Yes. With the advent of scientific discovery, the entire human race has survived using the conventional techniques. The mosquito is the world's deadliest animal. It may seem unfathomable that something so tiny could kill such a large number of people.

Around 1 million people every year die as a result of mosquito bites, according to the World Health Organization. Malaria is the primary cause of most of these fatalities. According to the World Health Organization, there are between 300 and 500 million cases of malaria each year, and a kid dies from the disease every 30 seconds.

Professor Youyou Tu received the 2015 Nobel Prize in Medicine in recognition of her significant role in the discovery of artemisinin. Millions of lives have been saved thanks to artemisinin, one of China's major contributions to the world's healthcare challenges. She is the first Chinese person to win a Nobel Prize in medicine or physiology. Her studies on Chinese herbal medicine at the China Academy of Chinese Medical Science have prevented mosquito bites in 7, 25,000 persons annually all over the world. In the Academy of Traditional Chinese Medicine, she was employed. Malaria used to be a major cause of death in the southern provinces of China.

39-year-old Tu came up with the concept of screening Chinese herbs in 1969. She began by independently visiting local traditional Chinese medicine practitioners to learn more about the history of the Chinese medical classics. In a notebook titled "A Collection of Single Practical Prescriptions for Anti-Malaria," she compiled her research. Around 2,000 traditional Chinese dishes had been examined by her team. They used 200 botanicals to create 380 herbal extracts, which they then tested on mice. The sweet wormwood (Artemisia annua), which was used to treat "intermittent fevers," a defining feature of malaria, was the only substance that worked. A 1,600-year-old manuscript described its preparation.

As they initially extracted it with conventional boiling water, it was useless. Tu Youyou revealed that a successful anti-malarial compound could be extracted from the strategy using a low-temperature extraction method. She took inspiration from a source of conventional Chinese herbal medicine. The World Health Organization praised it highly. On October 5, 2015, she received the Nobel Prize in Medicine. She successfully carried out clinical tests on people.

This illustrates how conventional methods are effective at treating serious health problems all throughout the world. Even though it was only crude science at the time, it was advanced by early knowledge and manuscripts, saving millions of lives annually.

  1. The field of developing new drugs and vaccines will undergo a significant transformation as a result of our research.
  2. We have a long-range goal of setting a new standard for research to develop a fresh method of treating patients.
  3. We will collaborate and share expertise with different research facilities, governments, and civil society organisations all around the world.
Address

4, Nesanayanar Street, Military Line,
Palayamkottai
Tirunelveli District
Tamilnadu
South India-627002

Contacts

Email: admin@rheniusfoundation.org

Mobile: +91 94436 70311
Phone; +91 462 2580 915