Re: ban on homeopathy for animals, but not humans!
Posted: Thu Apr 12, 2012 2:05 pm
Oooh you are awful......... 
The urban guide to becoming self sufficient'ish
https://selfsufficientish.com/forum/
the.fee.fairy wrote:Can't see Youtube - Can someone give me the edited highlights please?
I looked at that article about the taiwanese cancer rates - It is quite scary! I'm going to have a nose around a TCM pharmacy and see if they sell a lot of that particular plant/herb. I have to admit - TCM pharmacies smell so much nicer than Boots!! They have a lovely earthy herby smell to them.
I've been treated using UTCM (Untraditional Chinese Medicine - TCM made into tablets instead of drinking horrible teas), and it was mighty successful. It was used in conjunction with antibiotics (tonsillitis) and cleared it up really really quickly. If it had been the UK they would have expected me to be better in 5 days, here they wanted me back in 3 to make sure it had gone. I don't know what was in the UTCM - I've probably got the box somewhere, but whatever it was was for stopping pain, and it worked.
What I've noticed a lot with the TCM practitioners now is that they all like IVs. If someone has anything wrong, they like to hook them up to a drip. I think (not a chemist, can't read the labels) that the IVs are mostly fluids and vitamins. They do work really well though. I was treated a couple of years ago for H1N1, and I thought I was going to die! They gave me two bottles of the special stuff and a bottle of saline, an injection in the backside and handfuls of tablets - both TCM and non-TCM. After 24 hours I had to go back and have another bottled of saline and a bottle of the special stuff, and more tablets. But, after 3 days I was well enough to go back to work. I don't know what was in the special stuff, but it made me sweat like mad. My sister had H1N1 at the same time and she was given tamiflu, but suffered for 10 days or so. I understand that bodies are different, but I definitely believe in the special stuff!
So...if allopathic is the wrong term, can someone tell me the right term please? I don't want to use 'western' or 'normal' because neither of those seem like the right thing to use either. I do apologise if anyone was offended by the term i used, it's the only one i know!
Well, the usual terms would be "modern medicine", "scientific medicine" or "evidence-based medicine"... I favour "real medicine" myself.the.fee.fairy wrote:So...if allopathic is the wrong term, can someone tell me the right term please? I don't want to use 'western' or 'normal' because neither of those seem like the right thing to use either. I do apologise if anyone was offended by the term i used, it's the only one i know!
It's a very well-known Mitchell & Webb sketch - there's a transcript here: Homeopathic A&E.the.fee.fairy wrote:Can't see Youtube - Can someone give me the edited highlights please?
Don't have much choice when you can't breathe enough to ask questions, and your fever is reaching hospitalisation levels...demi wrote:
OMG i wouldnt touch any of that Chinese medicine stuff! its not regulated at all. Ben Goldacre took samples from different practitioners and tested them to see what was in them. he found a whole load of toxic substances such as lead and arsenic, along with pharmaceutical drugs which are in there to give the illusion that the 'medicine' is really working.
the same principle applies to homoeopathy, its not regulated at all and there could potentially be anything in those sugar pills they sell.
cant you see its just a scam to get your money! and a potentially dangerous one at that!
Well, it would hardly be newsworthy if "98% of TCM samples were shown to contain pure herbal extracts of significant therapeutic value" would it?the.fee.fairy wrote: I think to be honest, it depends on WHERE the samples were taken. Many of the practitioners overseas who sell TCM because it's fashionable do rip their customers off. Remember - I live in China, the home of TCM. The practitioners here don't get a chance to rip people off... If their medicine causes any deaths, they say hello to a firing squad.
i think all have there good point and badthe.fee.fairy wrote:All medicine - modern, traditional & preventative - should be considered complimentary