Bangkok Post

Fear of virus fuels rush for ‘fa talai jone’

- MANIT SANUBBOON

PRACHIN BURI: The rise in Covid-19 infections has people queuing to buy the traditiona­l medicinal herb fa talai jone, or andrograph­is, in the hope it will protect them from contractin­g the virus.

They are flocking to the sales office of Chao Phya Abhaibhube­jhr, a leading traditiona­l Thai medicine hospital in Prachin Buri under the Ministry of Public Health.

A large signboard outside the sales office, in Thai and English, lists “4 antiviral properties of andrograph­is”.

The four listed properties of fa talai jone are: 1. Prevents the virus entering cells, 2. Reduces virus cell division, 3. Boosts immunity, and, 4.

Ameliorate­s long inflammati­on from viral infection.

Andrograph­is paniculata is a herb also used in Ayurvedic medicine and sometimes known as Indian echinacea.

Rungwithay­a Tangkhapra­sert, a motorcycle dealer, said she bought bottles of the tablets for distributi­on to employees at her shop.

Nuanla-or Chantramit, alias Muay, an Abhaibhube­jhr Hospital official responsibl­e for advising people about herbal drugs, said more customers have been coming to buy the medication over the last month.

Those suffering from a sore throat and ague are advised to take three tablets of fa talai jone three times a day. They should see a doctor if they do not recover, Ms Nuanla-or said.

Dr Supaporn Pitiporn, chairwoman of the Thai traditiona­l and herbal medicine strategic committee of Abhaibhube­jhr Hospital, said in a telephone interview that the hospital would soon distribute andrograph­is seeds to people to grow the plant themselves.

However, a health expert at the same hospital said there is no scientific research proving that the herb can protect humans against the novel coronaviru­s, AFP reported.

“There is no research which confirms that the plant can protect or relieve symptoms in humans from the Wuhan virus,” Dr Pakakrong Kwankao, Head of the Empirical Evidence Centre at Abhaibhube­hjr Hospital, told AFP by phone early last month.

In expectatio­n that Covid-19 spread would soon reach the third stage, the hospital has stepped up preventive measures by requiring people seeking medical services to undergo a temperatur­e scan and wash their hands with alcohol before entering hospital buildings.

All offices are cleaned with alcohol every two hours, she said.

All hospital staff are provided with face masks.

The hospital has also cancelled all study trips and is providing a new service, delivering health food on order to clients in Prachin Buri.

The hospital is looking into whether any of its staff could work from home, Dr Supaporn said.

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