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2007 91´ó»ÆÑ¼SAEP Newsletter

A Report from the University of Missouri South African Education Program Committee

December 2007

91´ó»ÆÑ¼ South African Education Program Committee: Dr. Joel Glassman, Chair, 91´ó»ÆÑ¼SL; Dr. Robert Laudon, Missouri S&T; Dr. James K. Scott, 91´ó»ÆÑ¼C; Dr. Judith McCormick, 91´ó»ÆÑ¼KC; Mr. Michael Middleton, 91´ó»ÆÑ¼C; Dr. Minion KC Morrison, 91´ó»ÆÑ¼C; Dr. Lois Pierce, 91´ó»ÆÑ¼SL; Ms. Jeanie Hofer, Missouri S&T; Dr. Nicholas Peroff, 91´ó»ÆÑ¼KC; Dr. Daniel Stoll, 91´ó»ÆÑ¼KC; Dr. Gwen Turner, 91´ó»ÆÑ¼SL; Dr. Ralph Wilkerson, Missouri S&T; Professor Rodney Uphoff, 91´ó»ÆÑ¼/91´ó»ÆÑ¼C

Special Projects

Professor Persens with other members of the Senate International Relations Committee and Dr. Noble

Professor Jan Persens (left) and other members of UWC’s Senate International Relations Committee with 91´ó»ÆÑ¼â€™s Dr. Deborah Noble (2nd from right)

In December 2006, President Elson S. Floyd, impressed by the accomplishments and the promise of the 91´ó»ÆÑ¼/UWC partnership, decided to increase funding to the 91´ó»ÆÑ¼SAEP by $20,000 a year starting in FY 2007. The funding was to be used for new initiatives or special projects. The first such initiative being planned is a study abroad program to be held at UWC for a group of undergrads drawn from each of the 91´ó»ÆÑ¼ campuses. The 91´ó»ÆÑ¼ students will take two classes with UWC students during the UWC winter break period. The program will be jointly directed by a UWC and 91´ó»ÆÑ¼ professor. The goal is to launch the program in June 2009. This year, the Committee decided to use these special funds to support UWC students to participate in the geologic field mapping program offered by Missouri University of Science & Technology. In 2004, 91´ó»ÆÑ¼ students took a similar study abroad course at UWC and did field work around South Africa. It was a tremendous experience for both the 91´ó»ÆÑ¼ and UWC students who participated. Our hope is that outside funding can be secured to enable students from both schools to regularly attend these field camps.


2008 91´ó»ÆÑ¼/UWC Linkage Awards

The 91´ó»ÆÑ¼SAEP Committee met with Professor Jan Persens, UWC Director of International Relations on November 16, 2007 in Columbia to select participants for 2008. The committee authorized awards to six UWC faculty members and five 91´ó»ÆÑ¼ faculty members.

UWC faculty receiving 91´ó»ÆÑ¼SAEP awards (91´ó»ÆÑ¼ hosts in parentheses):

  • Kathleen Collins - Social Work (Lois Pierce, 91´ó»ÆÑ¼SL)
  • Lindiwe Khotseng – Advanced Materials Chemistry (Da-Ming Zhu, 91´ó»ÆÑ¼KC)
  • Cheryl Nikodem – Nursing (Jane Armer, 91´ó»ÆÑ¼C)
  • Pateka Ntshyntshe-Matshaya – Library (Sharon Bostick, 91´ó»ÆÑ¼KC)
  • Patricia Struthers & Jose Frantz – Physiotherapy (Richard Oliver, 91´ó»ÆÑ¼C)

91´ó»ÆÑ¼ faculty receiving 91´ó»ÆÑ¼SAEP awards (UWC hosts in parentheses):

  • Wayne Wanta – Journalism (Arnold de Beer & Francois de Villiers)
  • Delwyn Catley & Kathy Goggin – Psychology (Thandi Puoane)
  • Da-Ming Zhu – Physics (Lindiwe Khotseng)
  • Anthony Okafor – Mechanical & Aerospace Engr. (Vladimir Linkov)

2008 South African Partnerships Program

  • The 91´ó»ÆÑ¼SAEP Committee approved awards in September for the following South African Partnerships projects:
  • Patricia Kelly (91´ó»ÆÑ¼KC, Nursing) – Develop Master’s program to educate nurse practitioners at University of the Western Cape
  • Rob Paul (91´ó»ÆÑ¼SL, Psychology) – Study of brain involvement in HIV at University of the Western Cape and University of Cape Town
  • Patrick Westhoff (91´ó»ÆÑ¼C, FAPRI) – Development of models for the biofuels sector at University of Pretoria

TICIPS

International Team Studies South African Plant for HIV/AIDS

"It's just overwhelming. It feels like anything you do is a drop in a huge, huge bucket. But, you drop a drop, and it causes a ripple, and that causes a lot of change. Sometimes you have to be a drop, because that's all you've got."

So Kathleen Goggin, Ph.D., describes part of what draws her to co-lead a groundbreaking study of an African traditional medicine. A plant called Sutherlandia is being examined for its potential to help patients with HIV infection. The study is being cosponsored by NCCAM and NIH's Office of AIDS Research, Office of Dietary Supplements, and Fogarty International Center.

A group of contributors to the Sutherlands study

A group of contributors to the Sutherlandia study met in September 2007 in Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Left to right: Douglas Wilson, James Syce, Kevin Rudeen, Laurie Ben-yair, Tilly Pillay, Makhosi Msomi, Thulani Hlongwa, Baba Shange, Baba Thabethe, Elliot Makhathini, Bill Folk, Makhosi Xaba, Deborah Hayes, and Makhosi Dlamini. The photo’s setting is a shop for supplies for traditional inyanga healing. Courtesy of Kathleen Goggin.

According to the joint United Nations program on HIV/AIDS, or UNAIDS, about 33.2 million people worldwide have HIV infection. AIDS is among the leading causes of death worldwide.

South Africa is one of the countries that have been hardest hit by HIV/AIDS. While changes in South Africa have been taking place (including a new national strategic plan for AIDS) to help prevent transmission of the virus and to treat those who are infected, the challenges are large in scale. UNAIDS states that in South Africa by the end of 2006:

  • 91´ó»ÆÑ¼ 5½ million people (or one in nine) were living with HIV infection. Almost one-quarter million of them were children under 15 years old.
  • More than 360,000 people were taking antiretroviral therapy (ART).
  • For every person in South Africa who begins taking ART, three more become infected with HIV.

    Could a Plant Be Helpful?

    Working to create a ripple in the pandemic's bucket are an international team of Western-trained clinicians and researchers from both the United States and South Africa as well as South African

    traditional healers. The plant they are studying, Sutherlandia, is a member of the pea family, uniquely native to South Africa, and wild-growing in places there. Its scientific name is Lessertia frutescens; some of its popular names are Insisa, Unwele, Phetola, and cancer bush.

    Walk into any South African traditional medicine market, and there it is—alongside the other herbs, barks, pieces of wood, animal bones and teeth, and other products sold and traded for medicinal purposes. Sutherlandia is used to make traditional medicine believed to be helpful for many health problems—such as infections (including HIV), inflammation, depression, cancer, and stress effects—and as a wellness tonic. It is also available in South African drugstores and in some other countries such as the United States, where it is sold as a dietary supplement.

    This randomized, placebo-controlled study is looking at Sutherlandia's safety in a group of 124 volunteers who are at an early stage of HIV infection and do not qualify for government-sponsored ART. The researchers will also collect data that could shed light on the plant's usefulness in treating some of the symptoms of HIV infection. The participants who receive Sutherlandia will take by mouth a preparation made from ground leaves and specially formulated for the study. The study will be conducted at Edendale Hospital, a large county hospital located in Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, and affiliated with the Nelson R. Mandela School of Medicine.

    Jack Killen, M.D., Acting Deputy Director of NCCAM and Director of NCCAM's Office of International Health Research, said, "Many people are using this plant in South Africa, where it originated, and where traditional healers are commonly the first and/or the only medical care option." He added, "Not much is known yet about Sutherlandia

    scientifically, including whether and how it works.We hope to learn a good deal from this study about Sutherlandia specifically and about the best practices for rigorous research on traditional medicines more generally."

    Centers That Study Traditional/Indigenous Therapies

    The Sutherlandia study is a key project of one of NCCAM's Centers for International Research on CAM: The International Center for Indigenous Phytotherapy Studies (TICIPS) on HIV/AIDS, Secondary Infections, and Immune Modulation. This center is a partnership between many institutions:

  • South Africa
  • University of the Western Cape
  • University of Cape Town
  • University of KwaZulu-Natal
  • Medical Research Council of South Africa
  • United States
  • University of Missouri, Columbia
  • University of Missouri, Kansas City
  • Missouri Botanical Garden
  • Georgetown University
  • University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston

TICIPS also plans to study African wormwood (Artemisia afra), another traditional South African medicine, for its potential usefulness against tuberculosis and cervical cancer.

TICIPS and Study Leaders

Key personnel include William Folk, Ph.D., principal investigator and TICIPS co-director, who is professor of biochemistry at the University of Missouri, Columbia, and associate dean for research at its school of medicine. Quinton Johnson, Ph.D., is TICIPS co-director and director of the South African Herbal Science and Medicine Institute at the University of the Western Cape. Co-leaders of the Sutherlandia study are Kathleen Goggin, Ph.D., associate professor of psychology at the University of Missouri, Kansas City, and Douglas Wilson, M.B.Ch.B., F.C.P., head of the Department of Medicine at Edendale Hospital.

Nceba Gqaleni, Ph.D., is the Department of Science and Technology/National Research Foundation Research Chair on Indigenous Health Care Systems, Nelson R. Mandela School of Medicine, University of KwaZulu-Natal. James Syce, Ph.D., is professor of pharmacy at the University of the Western Cape.

NCCAM's international centers are designed to examine complementary, alternative, and traditional medical therapies in the environments where they originated and have the longest tradition of use. In South Africa, that environment is "one of the most botanically diverse and rich regions in the world," says Dr. Folk. South Africa has over 20,000 indigenous species of plants, several thousand of which are used for health purposes by traditional healers.

A Traditional System That Millions Rely Upon

South African traditional medicine dates back to ancient times. It has been recognized by the South African government as a key part of that country's health care system. It is estimated that in South Africa, there are about 200,000 traditional healers, and about 80 percent of the population (which numbers about 48 million, with 18 languages and many cultures) uses these healers for their primary health care.

African traditional medicine is too complex to describe fully in this article, but a few of its aspects include:

The approach is holistic, focusing on the whole person rather than on particular organs or disorders. Body, spirit, and environment are all taken into consideration.

Many traditional healers use rituals, herbs and other naturally derived medicines, divination (obtaining information through what is believed to be supernatural means), offerings, faith healing, and purgative approaches such as enemas and incisions.

The different types of traditional healers include inyangas, who are especially skilled in natural medicines; sangomas, spiritualists who counsel and heal through communication with ancestral spirits; traditional birth attendants; and traditional surgeons.

Western medicine is also available in South Africa, including at Edendale Hospital, but it can be challenging to obtain for many reasons, including distance (close to 50 percent of South Africa's population lives in nonurban areas) and a shortage of Western-trained doctors, nurses, and other health staff. In the district of Mount Frere, for example, there is one Western doctor for every 30,000 residents.

A Carefully Designed Research Collaboration

Traditional healers in South Africa are collaborating in research with allopathic team members at every stage of the Sutherlandia study—from developing the research questions through analyzing, interpreting, and sharing the results. This reflects not only a level of commitment but the use of, and training in, a research strategy called community-based participatory research.

Dr. Goggin says, "The traditional health providers are helping us in so many ways. They have helped give legitimacy to the study. They partnered with us in translation and in developing outcome measures.

They will be helping us with patient retention. Above all, they are willing to try. For 1,000 years, people have taken things from their traditional and indigenous medicine—stolen [them] and walked away. Our colleagues are trusting that we are not going to do that and we will work hand in hand." The study is designed to ensure compliance with U.S. and South African regulations on the conduct of research, financial disclosure, conflict of interest, and international property rights.

Adapting for Culture

Dr. Goggin recalls a key aspect of the study in which all the members of the team, as well as additional groups of traditional healers, offered their expertise to adapt tools for the study.

They were going to need quantifiable outcome measures—including for perceived stress, symptoms of depression, and quality of life, all of which have cultural associations. The U.S. researchers began with some standard scales and the 10 "good practice" steps developed by the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research. How would these translate in the context of Zulu South Africa?

Dr. Goggin says, "We did focus groups with traditional healers who are culturally Zulu and speak isiZulu. Many also speak English, but isiZulu is their primary language and the one they use when treating clients and seeing patients. They helped us to figure out what our measures should be."

She continues, "There was no easy translation for any of the items on the depression measure, for example. There's no single word for depression in isiZulu. So, when we talked about the concept of

depression, we asked, 'When someone is having a lot of worries and stress and is not feeling well, what is that called?' They came to consensus on a term, umoya uphansi.

"Then we asked, 'What would those people look like and be like?' And they came up with every single symptom of depression. We used the CES-D [one of the screening tests for depression, developed by the Center for Epidemiologic Studies, National Institute of Mental Health], which does not include an item on sexual dysfunction. The traditional healers added sexual dysfunction on their own."

When it came to a term for quality of life, the traditional healers agreed on izinga/iqophelo lempilo, which Dr. Goggin says means "spirit of life… It's very, very close to our concept, but they don't think of quality of life as a thing. It's something that somebody strives for at all times. Everyone would want 'quality of life.'"

There were many steps by the team members to review and revise questionnaires to be used in the study. For example, the versions of isiZulu spoken in two cities that are 45 minutes apart, Pietermaritzburg and Durban, turned out to be significantly different.

The Experience So Far

Dr. Goggin and her colleagues learned from talking to traditional healers, she says, that "Sutherlandia is a powerful part of their muthis [or mutis, traditional medicine formulas], and they use it often. They don't use Sutherlandia on its own, but in combinations with other herbs. It is believed to have an impact on gastrointestinal distress, especially in reducing nausea and increasing appetite. That may be true, at least from some of the early studies that have been done in animals and in our previous phase I study [on safety in healthy adults]. With increased eating, one often sees an increase in mood and in quality of life."

Although Sutherlandia is widely used, Dr. Folk says, previously there was no solid research evidence of its safety and effectiveness, including in HIV/AIDS. He notes there is some preliminary scientific evidence that this herb can help treat infections, such as bronchitis or the common cold—and also some laboratory evidence that Sutherlandia has "significant interactions" with ART drugs (in other words, taking them together could alter the effectiveness or side effects of ART).

Dr. Folk says that he has found it particularly rewarding so far "to assist in the development of the collaboration in research between traditional healers and physicians, which will undoubtedly improve care." Dr. Goggin appreciates "having had the opportunity to work with and learn from my colleagues in South Africa and being part of this historic trial." She adds that she finds South Africa to be "an amazing place. People there are generally just the most warm, open, and inviting people you'll ever meet."

Is Sutherlandia Safe?

The TICIPS team first carried out a small, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled safety study of Sutherlandia in a group of 25 healthy volunteers. Dr. Quinton Johnson and his colleagues found it to be well tolerated, with no clinically significant differences in side effects seen between the group who received the Sutherlandia and the group who received a placebo, except that the Sutherlandia group showed indications of an increase in appetite. They noted that in an earlier study in vervet monkeys,

Sutherlandia was given at nine times a typical dose and no adverse effects occurred. They suggested that Sutherlandia's potential benefits might be attributed to one or more of the following ingredients: D-pinitol (a simple sugar often found in legumes), GABA (gabba-amino butyric acid, an amino acid and a neurotransmitter), and L-canavanine (an amino acid).

There is very limited information about Sutherlandia's safety and side effects in the peer-reviewed literature. However, among the common points in two evidence-based reviews are that:

Sutherlandia has a long history in Africa of apparently safe use. Its known side effects include mild diarrhea, dry mouth, increased urination, and (in people who have wasting and weakness from disease) dizziness. There are indications that Sutherlandia interacts with ART. The safety of the ingredient L-canavanine is a controversial area. It may have an association with lupus and a lupus-like syndrome—a concern that appears to be based largely on a case report, and some laboratory and animal studies, on L-canavanine in another legume plant, alfalfa (Medicago sativa). One of the reviews cites a South African reference reporting rare instances of birth defects and induction of abortion from L-canavanine. In short, the safety of L-canavanine is controversial—more high-quality studies are needed.

Very little is known scientifically about the safety of D-pinitol and GABA.

MU/UWC Comparative Law Program At UWC

For the fourth year, the 91´ó»ÆÑ¼-Columbia School of Law joined with the law faculty at UWC to offer a comparative law program to American and UWC law students. The program was held at UWC from June 8 - July 15, 2007. MU Professor Jim Levin and UWC Professor Pierre de Vos directed the program attended by 30 American students and 20 UWC students. The students took courses in comparative constitutional law, criminal justice administration and alternative dispute resolution. In addition to Professors Levin and de Vos, MU Professor Kandice Johnson and UWC Professors Craig Bosch, Lovell Fernandez and Julia Sloth-Nielsen taught in the program.

UWC Law Fellowship

Two more fellowships were awarded to UWC law students to study at The University of Missouri School of Law. In August 2007, Ivan Rugema and Mogammod-Zain Satardien started their studies in the MU School of Law LLM in Dispute Resolution Program. These fellowships are supported by gifts to the MU School of Law from Fred White, Geoffrey Oelsner and Robert Lande. In May 2007, Lisa Draga became the first UWC student to earn her LLM after receiving the first such fellowship.

91´ó»ÆÑ¼ and UWC VIisitors in 2007

2007 91´ó»ÆÑ¼ visitors to South Africa include the following: Jane Armer, Nursing (91´ó»ÆÑ¼C); Dick Madsen, Statistics (91´ó»ÆÑ¼C); Thad Wilson, Nursing (91´ó»ÆÑ¼KC); Karen Piper, English (91´ó»ÆÑ¼C); Jim Levin, Kandice Johnson

& 25 law students, Law (91´ó»ÆÑ¼C); George McCall, Anthropology/Sociology (91´ó»ÆÑ¼SL); Adrienne Hoard, Art (91´ó»ÆÑ¼C); Bernard Feldman, Physics (91´ó»ÆÑ¼SL): Rodney Uphoff and Deborah Noble, Planning (91´ó»ÆÑ¼).

2007 UWC visitors to Missouri include: Elma Kortenbout, Nursing; Heike Becker, Anthropology & Sociology and Criminal Justice & Criminology; Harry Hausler, Life Sciences; James Lees, Life Sciences; Helen Duh, Management; Hester Julie, Nursing; Jan van Bever Donker, Math-Statistics & Computer Science; Jan Persens, Planning and Rubin Pillay, Management.


91´ó»ÆÑ¼/UWC Faculty Exchange Summary Update

Summary of exchange data, from 1986 to 2007


91´ó»ÆÑ¼KC student Daniel Pliske at Cape Town

Pictured: 91´ó»ÆÑ¼KC student Daniel Pliske enjoys the beauty of Cape Town during his semester at UWC.

Reviewed 2025-12-11