Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Study on the current use of four important medicinal plants of Lamiaceae in Bulgaria Cover

Study on the current use of four important medicinal plants of Lamiaceae in Bulgaria

Open Access
|Jan 2018

Abstract

In contemporary society various demographic factors lead to changes of people habits to use medicinal plants. A matter of interest is to establish how specific demographic features of people influence the use of herbs. The present survey aimed at determining the current trends regarding the use of four valuable medicinal Lamiaceae species in Bulgaria: thyme, mint, lemon balm and oregano. In the survey, 220 people were interviewed. Demographic profiles of the respondents were evaluated. Then the participants were questioned for the following item: “Do you use any of these herbs: thyme, mint, lemon balm and oregano.” In order to disclose correlations between demographic features of the participants and their answers cross-relationships were analyzed. The majority of respondents reported to use these plants. Mint and thyme were more commonly used herbs. We identified that age of respondents had sufficient influence on the answer to the questionary. Level of education and living regions had moderate impact on the use of relatively lesser utilized herbs – oregano and lemon balm. The analysis showed the persistence of traditional knowledge for these plants. At the same time, the results revealed better knowledge on medicinal plants in groups of better educated people and in urban population.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/asn-2015-0003 | Journal eISSN: 2603-347X | Journal ISSN: 2367-5144
Language: English
Page range: 23 - 30
Submitted on: Oct 30, 2014
Accepted on: Mar 11, 2015
Published on: Jan 24, 2018
Published by: Konstantin Preslavski University of Shumen
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2018 Zheni Nanova, Asya Dragoeva, Vanya Koleva, Nesho Chipev, Borislav Georgiev, Irina Yotova, Milen Ivanov, published by Konstantin Preslavski University of Shumen
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.