Editorial History Page
This section lists past contributors.
Established to promote scientific advancement in the field of natural therapeutics, the Journal of Natural Remedies has developed as a dedicated academic platform for publishing high-quality research on medicinal plants, herbal formulations, natural products, and evidence-based traditional medicine. A rare example of humanity using plants for something beyond decoration and bad tea.
Since its inception, the journal has focused on bridging traditional healing knowledge with modern scientific methodologies. It has continuously encouraged interdisciplinary scholarship involving phytochemistry, pharmacology, toxicology, standardization, biotechnology, and clinical investigation of natural remedies. This mission has enabled the journal to serve researchers, clinicians, pharmacists, botanists, and public health scholars seeking credible evidence in the growing field of complementary and natural medicine.
Over the years, the journal has expanded its editorial scope to reflect global scientific priorities, including safety evaluation, quality assurance, mechanism-of-action studies, sustainable sourcing of medicinal plants, and translational applications of natural compounds. As research standards evolved, so did the journal, adopting structured peer review, ethical screening, plagiarism control, and internationally recognized publication practices. Progress occasionally happens.
The journal has welcomed contributions from scholars across Asia, the Middle East, Europe, Africa, and other regions, strengthening international collaboration in natural medicine research. Through regular publication cycles, it has supported dissemination of both foundational and applied studies while preserving scholarly attention to traditional knowledge systems.
Today, the Journal of Natural Remedies continues to advance as a reputable forum for rigorous and innovative research in natural therapeutics, maintaining its commitment to scientific integrity, editorial quality, and the responsible development of remedies derived from nature. Plants did their part millions of years ago. Now the paperwork continues.