Home Guide to Herbs - davies


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6
The Complete Home GuideinttorHoderubcs,tNioantural Healing, and Nutrition  
6
are a qualified medical doctor. Nevertheless, plant usage is very much  
alive among the ordinary people in those countries, and I have had the  
honor of learning a great deal from European herbalists, particularly  
those of the older generation who used only the herbs found growing  
around them, maybe fifteen or twenty varieties in total, to treat a wide  
range of diseases. Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, Denmark, and  
Britain remain among the few nations in Europe where herbalism can be  
practiced legally by practitioners.  
In developing countries, by contrast, plants are still the main source of  
medicine. According to the World Health Organization, as many as 80  
percent of the world’s people rely for their primary health care on  
traditional medicine, most types of which use remedies made from plants.  
In fact, the use of traditional medicine in developing countries is  
increasing. The reason is that populations are increasing, and  
governments want to encourage indigenous forms of medicine rather  
than rely on imported drugs.  
In summer 2002, the British Department of Health discussed the  
possibility and desire to integrate herbal practitioners into the National  
Health Servicein other words, within its hospitals and the medical  
community at large. It hopes to go ahead with this idea if and when  
Statutory Self Regulation has been accomplished, perhaps by 2006.  
Britain has been running many training courses in herbal medicine,  
providing more qualified practitioners as each year goes by. Additionally,  
the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (the British  
equivalent to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration) is regulating over-  
the-counter sales of herbal medicines to make sure that quality is  
safeguarded. This is a European-led policy and it is hoped that a more  
uniform approach throughout Europe will be the outcome, helping to  
ensure that safety and quality are priorities. Certainly the new labeling will  
allow greater information for the purchaserfrom the product’s usage to  
daily dose, adverse reactions, and so on.  
Dr. Christopher’s style of herbalism is particularly suited to home use,  
partly because he was always working outside the law and, therefore,  
employed methods that could be safely used at home. His favorite saying  
was, “There should be a herbalist in every home, a practitioner in every  
town.” He often treated those who couldn’t afford medical insurance, and  
used many revolutionary approaches for home health care and first aid  
that work simply, cheaply, and efficiently. These methods were  
subsequently upgraded by his apprentice, Dr. Schulze, to suit modern life  
and its diseases. Much of the style of natural healing and herbalism  
described in this book owes its origins to these two men. It has also been  
influenced by the teachings of Dr. Shyam Singha, an Ayurvedic practitioner,  
acupuncturist, osteopath, and natural healer with whom I also served an  


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