Hoodia
Gordonii cactus native to the Kalahari Desert region of southern Africa and used
by indigenous San bushmen to stave off hunger during long hunting expeditions
is to be developed into a remedy to fight obesity.
The
six foot plant, called Hoodia, contains an active ingredient which research has
shown could reduce appetite by up to 2,000 calories a day. The obesity remedy
was originally patented by the South African Council for Scientific and Industrial
Research (CSIR), and licensed by British company Phytopharm. The pharmaceutical
giant Pfizer is now developing a pill based on the plant, also known as P57, which
they hope will banish food cravings and have a major impact on the six billion
euro global slimming aid market.
More
than 100 million people worldwide are thought to be at risk from conditions related
to obesity, such as heart disease and diabetes. Pfizer hopes that the obesity
remedy, which has already been tested on healthy volunteers in Britain, will be
available in pill form by 2007.
Phytopharm
and the CSIR came in for criticism when it was revealed that the two sides had
made financial arrangements for development of the drug without consulting the
San tribe, who's traditional knowledge led to the discovery of Hoodia's appetite-suppressing
properties.
The
explanation offered by Phytopharm chief executive Richard Dixey was that he thought
the nomadic people had died out. Since discovering that around 100,000 San still
populate regions of Angola, South Africa, Botswana, and Namibia, a deal has been
struck that will see the bushmen receive a proportion of the profits from the
sale of the drug hoodia.
The
very existence of the San tribe had been in question, with a dispersed population
and lack of opportunities creating the very real threat of extinction. Under the
new deal, it is hoped that millions of euro could be generated each year to fund
education programs, create jobs, and allow the San to buy land.
All
of which should ensure a healthy future for the tribe, as well as those set to
benefit from the new wonder drug. In one way or another, the survival of the San
owes much to the special properties of the obesity curing Hoodia plant.
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