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6 answers

Melaleuca oil (Tea Tree)

2006-06-11 12:10:43 · answer #1 · answered by Know it all 5 · 0 1

Homeopathy:-
Homeopathy treats the person not the disease so you have to give details about yourself just the name of the disorder or disease is not enough to prescribe correctly for you. Just the name of the disease is like just the tip of the Iceberg so to say !
You see the disease can be anything and one can give it any name but what and how you feel due to it is on what a Homeopath will base your treatment on.
Please give details about yourself and history, medical and your own with all possible modalities like Food Drink Time Season or whatever makes you feel better or worse and how would you define what you are going through in your own words.
Post detail so your question can be answered correctly !
Take Care and God Bless !

2006-06-10 19:59:50 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Homeopathic remedies are prescribed by symptoms rather than conditions, as each case of a particular illness can manifest differently in different people. However, to make it quicker to find the symptoms related to MRSA, the symptoms experienced by a previous vistor to our homeopathic remedy finder have been grouped, by them, under the name of MRSA. There may be symptoms not related to MRSA, and this may not be an exhaustive list of symptoms.

there is a test you can take on this site: http://www.abchomeopathy.com/c.php/96

http://www.hpathy.com/health/bbc-aroma-therapy.asp

Aromatherapy oils 'kill superbug'

-- Tuesday, 21 December, 2004, BBC



Essential oils could kill the deadly MRSA hospital 'superbug', scientists have claimed.

University of Manchester researchers found three of the oils, usually used in aromatherapy, destroyed MRSA and E.coli bacteria in two minutes.


They suggest the oils could be blended into soaps and shampoos which could be used in hospitals to stop the spread of the superbug. Hospital-acquired infections, such as MRSA, kill an estimated 5,000 a year in the UK.

The Manchester study was triggered when complementary medicine specialists at Christie Cancer Hospital asked university researchers to test essential oils.

Dr Peter Warn, who carried out the research, said: "When I tested the oils in the lab, absolutely nothing grew. Rather than stimulating bacteria and fungi, the oils killed them off."
The essential oils tested were Patchouli, tea tree, geranium, lavender essential oils and Citricidal trade mark (grapefruit seed extract).

The team tested 40 essential oils against 10 of the most infectious agents found in hospitals, including MRSA (methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus).

Two of the oils were found to kill MRSA and E.coli almost instantly, while a third was found to act over a longer period of time.

Dr Warn says the essential oils could be used to create much more pleasant inhalation therapies - which he said were likely to have a much higher success rate than the current treatment, which is only effective in around 50% of cases."

Dr Warn said: "We believe that our discovery could revolutionise the fight to combat MRSA and other superbugs."

But he said the team now needed around £30,000 in order to continue its research.

Jacqui Stringer, clinical leader of complementary therapies at Christie Hospital in Manchester, instigated the oils research.
# # #
She said: "Our research shows a very practical application which could be of enormous benefit to the NHS and its patients.

"The reason essential oils are so effective is because they are made up of a complex mixture of chemical compounds which the MRSA and other superbug bacteria finds difficult to resist."

The Department of Health evaluates products which are claimed to prevent or treat HAIs before it permits them to be used across the NHS.


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Article sent by Alan Schumukler

The above was challenging to find. Everytime I clicked on a link-it would bring up a link to a pharmaceuitcal company.

Good luck.

2006-06-10 19:51:12 · answer #3 · answered by amandasmama 4 · 0 0

No, not really...that is Methycillin Resistant Staph and is the second worse type of staph...You will have to be admitted to the hospital most likely and get an IV drip of Vancomycin...good luck with that, that's not too good

2006-06-10 19:45:04 · answer #4 · answered by lfelpstigerfan05 3 · 0 0

No, see an infectious disease Dr or you risk infecting your family and friends. Even if you have no symptoms as a carrier you can infect others who are not as healthy as you might be.

2006-06-10 19:46:52 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No, and you shouldn't try it!!! I almost went blind as a child from that particular staph. You need to see a physician for high powered antibiotics immediately. Take them AS SCHEDULED.

2006-06-10 19:42:19 · answer #6 · answered by cyanne2ak 7 · 0 0

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