EXPANDING interest in traditional Chinese medicine in the United States is fostering a potentially lucrative new niche market for farmers who plant the varieties of herbs, flowers and trees sought by practitioners in the United States.
While almost all practitioners still rely on imports from China, dwindling wild stands there, as well as quality and safety concerns, could drive up demand for herbs grown in the United States. Several states have set up “growing groups” to help farmers establish trial stands of the most popular plants.
“As a farmer, I love the idea of growing something no one else is growing, something that’s good for people,” said Rebekah Rice of Delmar, near Albany, who is among 30 members of a New York growing group.
Jean Giblette, a researcher who has established New York’s group, said it could also be a moneymaker. She estimates the market for domestically grown medicinal plants to be US$200 million to US$300 million a year.
Traditional Chinese medicine is gaining mainstream acceptance in the United States. There are 30,000 licensed practitioners across the country — 46 states issue licenses, often requiring a master’s degree and continuing education credits. In 2014, the Cleveland Clinic opened one of the first hospital-based Chinese herbal therapy clinics in the country.
Jamie Starkey, a licensed practitioner of acupuncture and traditional Chinese medicine at the Cleveland Clinic’s Center for Integrative Medicine, said quality, authenticity and purity are important concerns with herbal products.
“If growers in the United States can produce a highest quality product that is identical to species from China, without contamination from heavy metals or pesticides, I think it’s a great opportunity for farmers,” Starkey said.
Over 300 plants are commonly used in traditional Chinese medicine. Giblette and Peg Schafer, an herb grower in Petaluma, California, compiled a list of marketable species for U.S. farmers. They include angelica dahurica, a flowering perennial whose root is used to relieve pain and inflammation, aster tataricus, a relative of garden asters said to have anti-bacterial properties, mentha haplocalyx, a mint used for stomach ailments and salvia miltiorrhiza, a type of sage whose roots are used for treatment of cardiovascular diseases. (SD-Agencies)
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