Alternative Information brought to you by discount drugs    

Going Back to the Basics: Revival of Traditional Treatment through Herbs


Herbal medicine has its origins in ancient cultures including those of the Egyptians, American Indians and Chinese. It involves the medicinal use of plants to treat disease and enhance general health and wellbeing.

There are over 750,000 plants on earth. Relatively speaking, only a very few of the healing herbs have been studied scientifically. And because modern pharmacology looks for one active ingredient and seeks to isolate it to the exclusion of all the others, most of the research that is done on plants continues to focus on identifying and isolating active ingredients, rather than studying the medicinal properties of whole plants.

Herbalists use the leaves, flowers, stems, berries, and roots of plants to prevent, relieve, and treat illness. From a "scientific" perspective, many herbal treatments are considered experimental. The reality is, however, that herbal medicine has a long and respected history. Many familiar medications of the twentieth century were developed from ancient healing traditions that treated health problems with specific plants. Today, science has isolated the medicinal properties of a large number of botanicals, and their healing components have been extracted and analyzed. Many plant components are now synthesized in large laboratories for use in pharmaceutical preparations. For example, vincristine (an antitumor drug), digitalis (a heart regulator), and ephedrine (a bronchodilator used to decrease respiratory congestion) were all originally discovered through research on plants.

Traditional Medicine can also have impact on infectious diseases. For example, the Chinese herbal remedy Artemisia annua, used in China for almost 2000 years has been found to be effective against resistant malaria and could create a breakthrough in preventing almost one million deaths annually, most of them children, from severe malaria.

In South Africa, the Medical Research Council is conducting studies on the efficacy of the plant Sutherlandia Microphylla in treating AIDS patients. Traditionally used as a tonic, this plant may increase energy, appetite and body mass in people living with HIV.

The efficacy of many medicinal plants has been validated by scientists abroad, from Europe to the Orient. Thanks to modern technology, science can now identify some of the specific properties and interactions of botanical constituents. With this scientific documentation, we now know why certain herbs are effective against certain conditions. Almost all of the current research validating herbal medicine has been done in Germany, Japan, China, Taiwan, and Russia. And for the most part, the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA), which is responsible for licensing all new drugs (or any substances for which medicinal properties are claimed) for use in the United States, does not recognize or accept findings from across the sea. Doctors and government agencies want to see American scientific studies before recognizing the effectiveness of a plant as medicine. Yet even though substantial research is being done in other countries, drug companies and laboratories in the United States so far have not chosen to put much money or resources into botanical research. The result is that herbal medicine does not have the same place of importance or level of acceptance in this country as it does in other countries

As we know all modern medicines are derived from plants. Though there are many websites in this matter but the website www.herbsandcures.com furnishes the information about herbs which is authentic and reliable.It contains information about more than 500 herbs and 5000 diseases. It provides you with all the necessary information about herbs for FREE without any monetary benifits.

It works for the betterment of mankind since it is created by a non profit organisation with no vested interests whatsoever.

In recent years, interest in herbal medicine has skyrocketed, leading to a greater scientific interest in the medicinal use of plants. Many international studies have shown that plants are capable of treating disease and improving health, often without any significant side effects and www.herbsandcures.com is publishing that information.

www.herbsandcures.com
No sales- no leads- only authentic information.

Varun Bihani is a website developer and has developed many web sites like:

http://www.chatfiles.com
http://www.searchwebtools.com
http://www.herbsandcures.com

He can be contacted at varunbihani@rediffmail.com


MORE RESOURCES:

'Alternative' Medicine Is Mainstream
Wall Street Journal - 10 hours ago
This is a watershed in the evolution of integrative medicine, a holistic approach to health care that uses the best of conventional and alternative ...
Integrative Medicine Hawaii Health Guide
all 3 news articles


Wall Street Journal Blogs

Exxon CEO doubts Obama's alternative energy goal
Reuters India, India - 20 hours ago
In a speech at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, Obama said he wanted the United States to double its output of alternative energy sources ...
Obama Team, Exxon Mobil Chief Trade Jabs on Energy Wall Street Journal
Exxon favors carbon tax over cap and trade for CO2 curbs MarketWatch
Exxon Mobil CEO prefers carbon tax Bizjournals.com
Forbes - WELT ONLINE
all 55 news articles


Newsweek

Obama vows to double US output of alternative energy
AFP - 16 hours ago
FAIRFAX, Virginia (AFP) — President-elect Barack Obama pledged Thursday to double US production of alternative energy in three years, as part of a raft of ...
Video: Obama tax cuts gets cool reception ReutersVideo
Obama plans alternative energy boost Energy Risk (subscription)
Obama: Double Alternative Energy In Just Three Years New Republic
Reuters - Petroleumworld.com
all 3,525 news articles


Photo Release -- U-Haul Launches U Car Share -- the Alternative to ...
MSNBC - 5 hours ago
8, 2009 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- U Car Share is expanding its growth as it partners with the city of Portland by launching the alternative to vehicle ownership. ...


Fannie Mae Tests 'Short Sales' as Alternative to Foreclosures
Wall Street Journal - 10 hours ago
In the nation's hardest-hit housing markets, where many borrowers owe more than their homes are worth, short sales are often the only alternative to sales ...


Times Online

‘There Is No Alternative’ Is No Answer
Forward, NY - 16 hours ago
But the idea of ein breira — there is no alternative — is easily transformed into a refuge for the intellectually lazy, a bankrupt alibi for all manner of ...
Video: UN supports Gaza ceasefire plan RussiaToday
Rami Almeghari: Hardships of Journalism from Gaza Alternative Information Center (AIC)
For Israel, 2006 Lessons but Old Pitfalls New York Times
The Nation. - Aljazeera.net
all 12,449 news articles


The best alternative medicine for children
CNN - 23 hours ago
Several alternative treatments have been shown to be safe and effective for kids, experts say. "We would both end up miserable," says Kruse-Field. ...


PhillyDeals: PhillyDeals: Finding alternatives in slowing market
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA - 7 hours ago
Now he's looking for alternative ways to make money from real estate as the market slows. Harden dropped out of Temple University in 1991 to fight at Don ...


Entropic Communications and Actiontec Debut Wired Home Networking ...
MSNBC - 9 hours ago
LAS VEGAS, Jan. 8, 2009 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- International CES Booth 25829 -- Entropic Communications, Inc. (Nasdaq:ENTR), a leading provider of silicon ...


Washington Post

Europe Looks to Alternative Sources for Energy
Wall Street Journal - Jan 7, 2009
By GUY CHAZAN As Europe counts the cost of Russia's latest gas shut-off, there are signs it could give a boost to alternative sources of gas that currently ...
Video: Ukraine is blackmailing us Putin RussiaToday
Delo Urging Europe to Look for Alternative to Russian Gas STA - Slovenska Tiskovna Agencija
A Gas Crisis in Europe Prompts Talk of Alternatives New York Times
TREND Information - guardian.co.uk
all 7,871 news articles

Alternative - Google News

home | site map
© 2006