BUCHAREST:
Bee venom to combat multiple sclerosis, pollen for indigestion, honey to
heal wounds -- the humble bee has been a key source of alternative
medicines since ancient times, and Romania is working to keep the
tradition of "apitherapy" alive.
The tradition goes
back to ancient Greece when Hippocrates applied honey to treat wounds,
and the Romans saw pollen as "life-giving".
In the past
of India, China and Egypt, a resinous substance collected by bees from
the buds of certain trees, known as "propolis", was popular as an
antiseptic.
"The hive is the oldest and healthiest
natural pharmacy," said Cristina Mateescu, director general of the
Institute for Apicultural Research and Development in Bucharest.
Today
in the wilderness of Romania's Carpathian mountains, honey bee products
are still a familiar part of traditional medicine.
"In my village, my great-grandmother was a healer and used products from beehives. She inspired me," Dr Mariana Stan told AFP.
Having
spent years as a conventional doctor, Stan now practises in Bucharest
as a "apitherapist" -- using bee products "which give slower but longer
lasting and more profound results".
In a country still
infused with folk culture, several families continue to use propolis
against sore throats, as well as honey and pollen to boost the immune
system.
- Apitherapy pioneer -
Every town in Romania has its "plafar" -- natural pharmacies selling products made from plants, honey, beeswax and propolis.
"Romania
is a pioneer of apitherapy, which it recognised very early as a
component of scientific medicine," said US professor Theodor Charbuliez,
head of the Apimondia Commission of Apitherapy, a group that brings
together thousands of practitioners from around the world.
Modules
on apitherapy have started to work their way into more conventional
medical classes and extracts from propolis developed by the Apicultural
institute into recognised medicines.
Founded in 1974, the institute employs 105 people who look after local bee colonies and sell around 30 approved products.
A new range even seeks to treat cats and dogs with bee-related products.
Bucharest also boasts an Apitherapy medical centre, the world's first, which opened in 1984.
Scepticism
remains among the regular medical community in the absence of
scientific studies about the effects of bee venom, but many users are
full of praise and welcome the cheap costs and environmentally friendly
approach.
Doina Postolachi comes twice a week to the medical centre to receive injections of bee venom, or "apitoxin".
The 34-year-old poet says the injections have allowed her to "rediscover hope" in her fight against multiple sclerosis.
"For
a year, I could no longer walk or get into my bath. My feet were stuck
to the ground. But today, the venom treatment has given me back strength
in my legs. I walk, I can take baths," she said.
She said she has never wanted any regular pharmaceutical treatments "which come with numerous side effects".
- Bees do wonders -
There has been mounting interest across the world in apitherapy.
In
2013, Washington University in the US city of St Louis published a
study on the efficacy of milittine, a toxin contained in bee venom, in
countering the AIDS virus.
In France, thousands of
patients have benefited from bandages treated with honey at the
abdominal surgery department of Limoges hospital.
Bee products are also infiltrating the cosmetics industry, used in skin-toning and anti-wrinkle creams.
Part of the appeal rests with the natural and organic image of bee products.
"In
Romania, we have the chance to maintain an unspoiled nature," said
Cornelia Dostetan, a member of the National Apitherapy Society.
Under
Communism, poverty meant that pesticides were rarely used and the
country has never shifted to large-scale monoculture forms of
agriculture. The result is that Romania retains a great diversity of
flora, said Dostetan.
Certified organic, the Romanian brand Apiland, a specialist in raw pollen, has launched its products in France and Italy.
According to the last agricultural census in 2010, Romania counted 42,000 beekeepers and more than 1.3 million colonies of bees.
Postolachi says she looks on the bees with "immense gratitude".
"These miniscule beings do wonders."