Your Daily Dose of Health

Covering all aspects of the wellness wheel

Swine Flu Homeopathic Remedy

April 28, 2009 News | Comments (0) Tyler @ 12:35 pm

We are up against another flu outbreak. Some say it may be a pandemic. And more are saying that there will need to be a major vacanation session in the United States as well as the world. What other choice do we have? I found an interesteing article entitled: Important for Swine Flu Epidemic: Homeopathy Successfully Treated Flu Epidemic of 1918. 

It answers these questions:

Was homeopathy successful in treating the flu epidemic of 1918?

What homeopathic remedies were used to successfully treat the Spanish flu in 1918?

Homeopathy was 98% successful in treating the Spanish flu epidemic in 1918?

How do they know that a virus caused the flu epidemic of 1918, when the first virus was not isolated until 1933?

Did the flu strain that caused the 1918 flu ever return?

Is homeopathy successful in treating the modern flu?

What can I do to prevent the flu?

 

Of course if a person gets the flu, they will not know if it is “Swine Flu” or not. Treat all flu as a symptom of something out of wack in the body, or as a way for your body telling you there is something wrong.  Rest, don’t go out in public.

As far as homeopathic remedies for the swine flu, good council I recieved was to have Baptisia, and follow it up with Arsenicum. 

Remember, this is advice from one friend to another. Maybe sure you cunslut a local homeopath for more information.

Responding to commments.

March 26, 2009 News | Comments Off Tyler @ 10:41 am

Thank everyone for visiting my site. I want to get to everyone who has asked questions, but I am dealing with a massive amount of Blog Spam. I hope I can get through it soon.

 

Tyler

Chocolate May Prevent Cancer, Heart Disease

September 3, 2008 News | Comments (0) Tyler @ 8:46 pm

I got this from www.beanofthegods.com.

Chocolate May Prevent Cancer, Heart Disease

By Kim Tong-hyung
Staff Reporter

Eating chocolate may lead to tooth decay and bulging waistlines, (a note form Bean of the gods-Remember, this opinion deals with proccessed chocolate, not the cacao seed) but could also prevent cancer and heart disease.

A team of researchers led by Konkuk University scientist Lee Ki-won and Seoul National University’s Lee Hyong-joo said Wednesday they had found evidence that a chemical substance in cacao plants, used for making cocoa and chocolates, may have a role in suppressing heart diseases and cancer.

The study was published in the recent editions of peer journals Cardiovascular Research and Journal of Biological Chemistry.

To read the complete article click here

Repost: Mercury teeth fillings may harm some: FDA

June 6, 2008 News | Comments (3) Tyler @ 7:47 am

Before you read, I recieved this with an interesting question from a friend; “Mercury Is Okay For Vaccines But Not For Dental Fillings?”

Read on… 

Mercury teeth fillings may harm some: FDA
Wed Jun 4, 2008 8:26pm EDT

http://www. reuters. com/article/healthNews/idUSN0439217520080605?feedType=RSS&feedName=healthNews&sp=true

By Susan Heavey

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Silver-colored metal dental fillings contain mercury that may cause health problems in pregnant women, children and fetuses, the Food and Drug Administration said on Wednesday after settling a related lawsuit.

As part of the settlement with several consumer advocacy groups, the FDA agreed to alert consumers about the potential risks on its website and to issue a more specific rule next year for fillings that contain mercury, FDA spokeswoman Peper Long said.

Millions of Americans have the fillings, or amalgams, to patch cavities in their teeth.

“Dental amalgams contain mercury, which may have neurotoxic effects on the nervous systems of developing children and fetuses,” the FDA said in a notice on its Web site.

“Pregnant women and persons who may have a health condition that makes them more sensitive to mercury exposure, including individuals with existing high levels of mercury bioburden, should not avoid seeking dental care, but should discuss options with their health practitioner,” the agency said.

The FDA said it did not recommend that people who currently have mercury fillings get them removed.

The FDA must issue the new rules in July 2009, Long said.

Such a rule could impact makers of metal fillings, which include Dentsply International Inc and Danaher Corp unit Kerr.

The new rule will give the agency “special controls (that) can provide reasonable assurance of the safety and effectiveness of the product,” Long said.

The lawsuit settlement was reached on Monday with several advocacy groups, including Moms Against Mercury, which had sought to have mercury fillings removed from the U.S. market.

While the FDA previously said various studies showed no harm from mercury fillings, some consumer groups contend the fillings can trigger a range of health problems such as multiple sclerosis and Alzheimer’s disease. In 2006, an FDA advisory panel of outside experts said most people would not be harmed by them, but said the agency needed more information.

Mercury has been linked to brain and kidney damage at certain levels. Amalgams contain half mercury and half a combination of other metals.

Charles Brown, a lawyer for one of the groups called Consumers for Dental Choice, said the agency’s move represented an about-face. “Gone, gone, gone are all of FDA’s claims that no science exists that amalgam is unsafe,” he said in a statement.

J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. analyst Ipsita Smolinski said the FDA is not likely to outright ban the fillings next year but will probably call for restrictions.

“We do believe that the agency will ask for the label to indicate that mercury is an ingredient in the filling, and that special populations should be exempt from such fillings, such as: nursing women, pregnant women, young children, and immunocompromised individuals,” Smolinski wrote in a research note on Wednesday.

Fewer patients have been opting for mercury fillings in recent years, instead choosing lighter options such as tooth-colored resin composites.

Only 30 percent of fillings given to patients were mercury-filled ones as of 2003, according to the American Dental Association (ADA). Other options include glass cement and porcelain as well as other metals such as gold, but they cost more and are less durable, the group has said.

National Physical Fitness and Sports Month

May 20, 2008 News | Comments (0) Tyler @ 12:23 pm

Sunday May 6, 2007

National Physical Fitness and Sports MonthMay is National Physical Fitness and Sports Month and it is a great time to think about and actually get your child more physically active and interested in sports, both to help combat childhood obesity and to simply keep your child more fit and healthy.Although a lot of experts have been pushing free play lately, getting your younger child involved in youth sports, such as soccer, t-ball, flag football, or gymnastics, etc., can help build motor skills, encourage a healthy lifestyle and continued physical activity as they get older, and help your kids make new friends.

(more…)

Chef wants to outlaw out-of-season vegetables

May 12, 2008 News | Comments (0) Tyler @ 2:06 pm

Fri May 9, 2008 1:26pm EDT

LONDON (Reuters) – Celebrity British chef Gordon Ramsay said restaurants should be fined if they serve out-of-season fruit and vegetables.

“I don’t want to see asparagus in the middle of December. I don’t want to see strawberries from Kenya in the middle of March. I want to see it home-grown,” he said after raising his concerns with Prime Minister Gordon Brown.

“Fruit and veg should be seasonal. Chefs should be fined if they don’t have ingredients in season on their menu,” he told the BBC on Friday.

Ramsay, whose London restaurants include Petrus and The Savoy Grill, said Britain had become a nation of lazy eaters who followed trends and fads rather than substance.

“There should be stringent laws, licensing laws, to make sure produce is only used in season and season only,” he added.

(Reporting by Paul Majendie, Editing by Jeremy Lovell)

Nanotech Exposed in Grocery Store Aisles

March 15, 2008 News | Comments (0) Tyler @ 10:33 am

Nanotech Exposed in Grocery Store Aisles

March 11, 2008

For Immediate Release
For more information contact:
Nick Berning, 202-222-0748
Ian Illuminato, 202-222-0735

Report finds Miller Light, Cadbury and other brands have toxic risks

WASHINGTON, D.C.—Untested nanotechnology is being used in more than 100 food products, food packaging and contact materials currently on the shelf, without warning or new FDA testing, according to a report released today by Friends of the Earth.

The report, Out of the Laboratory and onto Our Plates: Nanotechnology in Food and Agriculture, found nanomaterials in popular products and packaging including Miller Light beer, Cadbury Chocolate packaging and ToddlerHealth, a nutritional drink powder for infants sold extensively at health food stores including WholeFoods.

“Nanotech food was put on our plates without FDA testing for consumer safety,” said Ian Illuminato, Friends of the Earth Health and Environment Campaigner. “Consumers have a right to know if they are taste-testing a dangerous new technology.”

Existing regulations require no new testing or labeling for nanomaterials when they are created from existing approved chemicals, despite major differences in potential toxicity. The report reveals toxicity risks of nanomaterials such as organ damage and decreased immune system response.

“Nanotechnology can be very dangerous when used in food,” said report co-author Dr Rye Senjen. “Early scientific evidence indicates that some nanomaterials produce free radicals which destroy or mutate DNA and can cause damage to the liver and kidneys.”

Report co-author Georgia Miller, Friends of the Earth Australia Nanotechnology Project Coordinator, said many of the world’s largest food companies, including Heinz, Nestle, Unilever and Kraft are currently using and testing nanotechnology for food processing and packaging. Without increased federal oversight, these companies could begin sale of these products whenever they choose.

“There is no legal requirement for manufacturers to label their products that contain nanomaterials, or to conduct new safety tests,” said Miller. “This gives manufacturers the ability to force-feed untested technology to consumers without their consent.”

Nanotechnology, the manipulation of matter at the scale of atoms and molecules, is now used to manufacture nutritional supplements, flavor and colors additives, food packaging, cling wrap and containers, and chemicals used in agriculture.

“Friends of the Earth calls on the FDA to stop the sale of all nano food, packaging, and agricultural chemicals until strong scientific regulations are enacted to ensure consumer safety and until ingredients are labeled,” said Illuminato.

The report, released internationally today in the U.S., Europe and Australia details more than a hundred nano food, food packaging and food contact products now on sale internationally. The Australian government has already welcomed the report and announced that it will begin exploring regulation of nano food and nano agriculture as a result of the report. The full report can be found at www. foe. org.

Friends of the Earth is the U.S. voice of an influential, international network of grassroots groups in 70 countries. Since 1969, Friends of the Earth has been at the forefront of high-profile efforts to create a more healthy, just world. One of its current campaigns focuses on combating the spread of nanotechnology without regulation and oversight.

http://action. foe. org/pressRelease. jsp?press_release_KEY=343

Article in Denver Post about ND bill in Colorado

March 6, 2008 News | Comments (4) Tyler @ 3:51 pm
 
  Denver & the west ”Naturopathic doctors” face oversightAny state regulation is opposed by mainstream physicians, who say it lends too much credence to the field.By Tim HooverThe Denver PostArticle Last Updated: 03/05/2008 11:15:49 PM MSTNaturopathic doctor Rena A. Bloom works with natural remedies at Denver Naturopathic Clinic. (RJ Sangosti, The Denver Post)Everything looked above board when Centennial residents Dave and Laura Flanagan took their 18-year-old son, Sean, who was dying of cancer and had six months to live, to see a “naturopathic doctor” in 2003.Laura Flanagan said a friend had told her about the man, Brian O’Connell, and when she went to his website, he seemed to be a legitimate health care provider.”It had a picture of him in a lab coat with a stethoscope around his neck,” Laura Flanagan said, adding that O’Connell had multiple diplomas and certificates on his office wall. As they later learned, he had no formal medical training, and he had naturopathic diplomas from correspondence schools.After undergoing treatment at Brian O’Connell’s hands, which involved passing vials of Sean’s blood under ultraviolet light and reinjecting it into his body, the teen was dead just 10 days later. O’Connell was later arrested for practicing medicine without a license in cases involving other patients, and then charged with negligent homicide in Sean’s death.He is serving a 13-year sentence, and his insurance company reached a financial settlement with the Flanagans.Supporters of a bill that would regulate “naturopaths” in Colorado say cases such as the Flanagans’ show the need for the state oversight.”I feel there may be other people like O’Connell out there now,” said Rep. Jeanne Labuda, D-Denver. “They’re going to end up doing serious harm to someone because they’re going to go beyond the scope of what they’re trained to do.”Efforts to regulate naturopaths have failed in Colorado before, but proponents say there is more support among lawmakers this year. The House Health and Human Services Committee is expected to vote on Labuda’s bill, House Bill 1064, today.Naturopathy emphasizes natural, non-pharmaceutical treatments to illnesses and rests on the belief that the treatments help the body heal itself. Typical treatments may involve dietary supplements and herbal medicationsJacob J. Schor works with patient Barbara Swain at the Denver Naturopathic Clinic. ( RJ Sangosti, The Denver Post )And vitamins, but the scope of treatments under naturopathy and those who call themselves naturopaths is much broader and not uniform.Fifteen states and the District of Columbia now regulate and/or license naturopaths, including Arizona, Kansas and Utah.Labuda’s bill would create a registration system for naturopaths who have received four-year degrees in naturopathic medicine and who have been licensed to practice in another state. Only a handful of schools that offer degrees in naturopathic medicine exist, and Labuda’s bill would essentially require Colorado to recognize the naturopathic medicine licenses issued in other states.The bill also would prohibit anyone who doesn’t have such a four-year degree from calling themselves a naturopath or a naturopathic doctor. Labuda said that would provide the public some protection because it would be easy to determine who is a credentialed naturopath.The Colorado Medical Society, which represents about 7,000 physicians, has resisted the effort, with some of its more stridently opposed members saying that naturopathy is not based on science and that naturopaths should not call themselves doctors.Even recognizing the licenses of other states elevates naturopathy to a level of respect it doesn’t deserve, some physicians say.”Many of the treatments they use are traditional but not scientific,” said Dr. Mark Johnson, director of the Jefferson County Health Department and a physician who testified against the bill for the medical society.In an attempted compromise, the bill specifically says that naturopaths could not call themselves “physicians,” but could use the term “doctor.” The medical society is still reviewing the current version of the bill.Degreed naturopaths say the opposition from the medical society is not surprising.”All of the alternative (health care) fields have run up against the medical society,” said Deidre Koloski, a degreed naturopath and president of the Colorado Association of Naturopathic Physicians, which supports the bill.Koloski said degreed naturopaths are credentialed by colleges with federal accreditation and must pass a licensing test to practice.”What we are asking for would definitely prevent people from calling themselves naturopaths without training,” Koloski said.Non-degreed naturopaths oppose the bill, in some cases making the same arguments as the medical society.”Education and training of naturopathic physicians as primary care providers is substandard,” Boyd Landry, executive director of the Coalition for Natural Health, testified before the House Health and Human Services Committee.”After four years of medical school, graduates are ineligible for licensure and must enter residency programs that last from three to five years,” Landry said. “By comparison, would-be NP’s are eligible for licensure, and thus primary care provider status, after simply completing a four-year program.”Despite her experience, Laura Flanagan said she sees value in natural remedie but the field needs regulation.”You have to have a license to cut hair. You have to have a license to be a dog groomer. These people who are doing possibly life-threatening things to people are not regulated,” she said.Tim Hoover: 303-954-1626 or thoover@denverpost.com
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