national health service
national health service with http://www.takeyourmeds.info

national health service

Take Your Meds

News for 18-Apr-25

Source: MedicineNet Kids Health General
Health Tip: Help Toddlers Develop Stronger Hands

Source: MedicineNet Kids Health General
Growth Charts

Source: MedicineNet Kids Health General
Child Deaths Highlight Choking Dangers Posed by Grapes

Source: MedicineNet Kids Health General
Used Safely, Donor Breast Milk Can Help Preemie Babies

Source: MedicineNet Kids Health General
Teens May Not Heed Health Warnings on Cigars

Source: MedicineNet Kids Health General
Health Tip: If Your Child is Cyberbullied

Source: MedicineNet Kids Health General
Baby Crib Ads Show Unsafe Practices, Study Says

Source: MedicineNet Kids Health General
Rest May Not Be Best for Kids After Concussion

Source: MedicineNet Kids Health General
Some Kids' Genes Might Make Food Ads More Tempting

Source: MedicineNet Kids Health General
Teen Violence Can Be Contagious, Study Contends

Search the Web
national health service
puget sound medical supplies
success
sanofi synthelabo
pharmaceutical recruiters
daiichi pharmaceutical
wyatt''s
novo nordisk
pharmaceutical index
pfizer''s

The Best national health service website

All the national health service information you need to know about is right here. Presented and researched by http://www.takeyourmeds.info. We've searched the information super highway far and wide to provide you with the best national health service site on the internet today. The links below will assist you in your efforts to find the information that you are looking for about
national health service.

national health service
national health service, , national health service, , national health service,
http://www.medmeet.com/
CLICK HERE RIGHT NOW

national health service

Take Your Meds
Most people skip taking their medication at certain times, this is bad for your health. Look to Take Your Meds on time and
Take Your Meds

Have you ever been to a website looking for information on national health service where everyone seems to be speaking any language but yours? Well, that's how many people feel when they surf the Internet. national health service business and technical websites are often so full of jargon that they may as well be speaking a foreign language to their customers.

The fact is that visitors don't come to your site for a little light reading but for real information about national health service. They scan web pages for the information they want regarding national health service, but they do not read every word carefully. We have done the initial work for you and know that this site is your answer.

Yarrow Tea (Achillea Millefolium)

 by: Simon Mitchell

An amazing tea that can help with colds and flu, and also help you see in pure colour. Yarrow has an ancient history. The generic name comes from Achilles who, according to legend, saved the lives of his warriors by healing their wounds with yarrow leaves. Crushed and rolled in the hands the plant provides a temporary styptic to check blood flow. Millefolium means 'thousand leaves' which were reputed to help with binding a wound and helping a scab to form. One of this astringent herb's ancient names is 'Soldier's Woundwort', along with 'Carpenter's Weed', 'Staunchweed' and others that show its popularity and prolonged use over many centuries.

The herb tea has also been used in the past for stimulating appetite, helping stomach cramps, flatulence, gastritis, enteritis, gallbladder and liver problems and internal haemorrhage - particularly of the lungs. It's effect is described as 'diaphoretic', causing the dilation of surface capillaries and helping poor circulation. The promotion of sweating can be useful for fevers and colds. Yarrow mixed with Elderflower and Peppermint (sometimes Boneset) is an old remedy for colds. A decoction of yarrow has been used for all sorts of external wounds and sores from chapped skin or sore nipples. In China Yarrow is still considered to have sacred properties, readers of the I Ching will often use Yarrow stalks in their studies.

There is one danger to overuse of yarrow internally: prolonged use of this tea may render the skin sensitive to exposure to light. It is this 'side effect' that shows that Yarrow tea has some mild psychotropic effect. A couple of cups of this tea and you may notice a shift in the colour and intensity of light around you. For artists or photographers this photosensitiser can sometimes provide a useful shift in perception. However, another name attributed to Yarrow is 'Devil's Plaything' - one suspects that this name was given to several herbs used by the witches or 'Wise Women' who were systematically exterminated in the middle-ages in Europe.

Yarrow leaves have also been used in tobacco or snuff mixtures and a decoction rubbed into the head is said to delay balding. To make Yarrow tea add two or three fresh or dried leaves per person to boiling water and leave to infuse for 5 minutes or so. Sweeten this with honey if you like. Some people like it with a slice of lemon to give this tisane a clean edge.

Thanks to C. Esplan, D. Hoffman, J. Lust, R. Phillips

About The Author

Simon Mitchell


From an ebook called 'Wild Food' underway at simonthescribe. If you wish to republish this article (only with resource info. intact) you will find excellent quality pictures to accompany it at http://www.simonthescribe.co.uk/yarrow.html

Google

http://www.medmeet.com/
Fantasy Baseball Online | Law Meet | Broadcast On the Net | Medical Newscast | Fantasy Football Update

fantasy-sports-directory   Talk On The Net   Present On The Net