Jump to content

Hamdard Pakistan: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:
{{EngvarB|date=September 2013}}
{{EngvarB|date=September 2013}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2013}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2013}}
{{Infobox company
{{more citations needed|date=January 2013}}
| name = Hamdard Pakistan
'''Hamdard Pakistan''', is a a [[unani]] medicine company which is based in [[Karachi]], Pakistan. It was established by [[Hakim Saeed]] as Hamdard Laboratories.
| trading_name =
| logo =
| type = [[Private company|Private]]
| founder = [[Hakim Saeed]]
| area_served = [[Pakistan]]
| key_people =
| industry = [[Unani]]
| products =
| foundation = {{Start date and age|1947}} <br/>[[Karachi]], Pakistan
| location = [[Karachi]], Pakistan
| homepage = {{URL|www.hamdard.com.pk}}
}}

'''Hamdard Pakistan''', is a Pakistani [[unani]] medicine company which is based in [[Karachi]], Pakistan. It was established by [[Hakim Saeed]] as Hamdard Laboratories.


==History==
==History==

Revision as of 15:30, 1 November 2019

Hamdard Pakistan
Company typePrivate
IndustryUnani
Founded1947; 77 years ago (1947)
Karachi, Pakistan
FounderHakim Saeed
HeadquartersKarachi, Pakistan
Area served
Pakistan
Websitewww.hamdard.com.pk

Hamdard Pakistan, is a Pakistani unani medicine company which is based in Karachi, Pakistan. It was established by Hakim Saeed as Hamdard Laboratories.

History

Hakim Abdul Majeed Nadeem Minnie Haberdashery (1883–1922) founded an organization called Hamdard Dawakhana in Delhi in 1906. At that time, it was a small clinic and herbal medicine shop. Abdul Majeed had come from a family that included many herbal doctors, and he joined the herbal pharmacy of the renowned Unani physician Hakim Ajmal Khan. As he developed his knowledge of medicine, he became a Hakim and decided to establish his own pharmacy and clinic, which he called Hamdard Dawakhana.

In 1940, Abdul's youngest son Hakim Mohammed Saeed joined Hamdard Dawakhana. By 1947, Hamdard became a prominent manufacturer of herbal products and medicines in the Indian subcontinent.

After the creation of Pakistan in 1947, Saeed, at the age of 29, migrated to Pakistan. The following year, he established Hamdard Laboratories Pakistan in Karachi on a modest scale. Saeed was able to make Hamdard the leading manufacturer of herbal medicines and products in Pakistan in six years.

In 1953, when Hamdard had become a big pharmaceutical company, Saeed declared it a Waqf.

Products

Hamdard Laboratories produces more than six hundred (600) Herbal Products.

Hamdard has a full range of medicines for digestive disorders of stomach and intestine, abdominal cramps, hyper-acidity etc., anemia, jaundice, purification of blood from impurities, liver ailments, female ailments like leucorrhoea, menstrual irregularities and for protection of pregnancy. Products are also available for naturally strengthening the nervous system and mental health, heart and other vital organs. Hormonal and sexual insufficiency in men, general debility, mental and physical exhaustion, rheumatism and joints diseases, skin diseases, common cold, and a wide range of other physical problems are addressed with Hamdard products.

Khamira Abresham Hakim Arshad Wala is a unique herbal medicine from Hamdard Pakistan which is effective in strengthening vital organs like heart, brain, and liver. Its positive Cardioprotective effect has been substantiated by various studies.[1]

Some of the company's most common products are Rooh Afza, Safi and Carmina.

Research and development

Hamdard Laboratories central structure is based in Karachi, consisting of fully automated pharmaceutical manufacturing and research units, manufacturing a wide spectrum of herbal products. Recently, a new industrial complex has been set up about 40 km from Karachi.

Apart from Karachi, manufacturing units operate in other Pakistani cities. In Lahore a factory produces syrups and medicines.

A factory at Peshawar makes syrups, extractive distillates, semi-solid and solid preparations.

References

  1. ^ Goyal, S; Siddiqui, MK; Siddiqui, KM; Arora, S; Mittal, R; Joshi, S; Arya, DS. "Cardioprotective effect of 'Khamira Abresham Hakim Arshad Wala' a unani formulation in isoproterenol-induced myocardial necrosis in rats". Exp Toxicol Pathol. 62: 61–74. doi:10.1016/j.etp.2009.02.115. PMID 19285846.