Home Guide to Herbs - davies


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The Complete Home Guide tiomHmerubns,itNyatural Healing, and Nutrition  
123  
Immune System Treatments  
assisting a fever with immune herbs and  
natural healing methods  
Fever is generally nature’s way of getting rid of unwanted toxins, making  
it a healthy sign; the high temperature and consequent sweating burn and  
kill unwanted attackers. There are situations, however, in which it can be  
dangerous. Fevers in children and old people should be monitored, while  
in babies and those who are already chronically sick, good professional  
advice should be sought.  
To help a fever in general, aim to keep your temperature up, but not  
too highabove 102°F but below 104°F. Make sure the fever is “wet” and  
not “dry.” To keep the fever wet, drink hot real fruit juices such as apple  
juice with a stick of cinnamon and a pinch of pepper, or fresh lemon in  
hot water. Herb teas are ideal, too. Good ones for fever are yarrow leaf,  
red raspberry leaf, catnip leaf, peppermint leaf, elder flower, and boneset  
leaf. Drink as much as possible. Red raspberry leaf and boneset leaf not  
only help the sweating process but also provide calcium, which is lost in  
enormous amounts during sweating. Additionally, these herbs act to  
cleanse and clear the bloodstream and lymph system, which is a vital  
process. If you need a break from hot drinks, take sips of noncarbonated  
distilled, filtered, or mineral water, which must be at room temperature;  
you don’t want to bring your temperature down.  
Take five to ten drops of echinacea root tincture hourly along with five  
drops of barberry root bark tincture. If the bowels have not opened  
recently, have an enema, because constipation can push a fever up very  
high. An enema in certain fever situations can actually save a life, being  
the only thing that will bring a dangerously high temperature of 106°F or  
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07°F down a few degrees. Ensure that the bowels keep moving.  
If your temperature is too high, get into a bath at a temperature of  
8.6°F for approximately half an hour. If you feel low and exhausted, add  
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one half-cup cider vinegar, two tablespoons Epsom salts, and five drops  
rosemary essential oil to your bath. Once you have dried off, use a skin  
brush, then go back to bed immediately and cover up well.  
Use your thermometer frequently to keep gauging how you’re doing.  
Once you’ve broken the fever, have another bath, this time finishing with  
a cold shower. Change all nightclothes, bed linen, and so on. Keep  
drinking the fluids you drank during the fever to maintain the  
detoxification process and to build up the lost calcium. This is a vital  
convalescent procedure. Also ensure that you consume appropriate liquid  
nutrients to maintain the healing process.  


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131 132 133 134 135

Quick Jump
1 79 159 238 317