Emmitsburg Osteopathic Primary Care Center
121-123 West Main Street, Rear Entrance
P.O. Box 1219
Emmitsburg, MD 21727
301-447-3310

Home Up

                               

Natural Medicine Supplements 
 

Natural medicine is a wonderful field of medicine that has encouraged us to rediscover some of the health benefits in food, plants, herbs that we have available to us without a medical prescription. 

Natural medicine can help motivate us to eat with the idea providing our bodies with real food that will give us long term resiliency, strength and health.  This is a great alternative to flogging the body with quick energy supplements and/or consolation eating.  There are many foods and supplements that can enhance our health.  I try to choose from those we can obtain easily and are not too pricey. 

For the most part our bodies are self- repairing. Good dietary habits, exercise, proper sleep allows us to go forward in health and resilience.  However, often we let ourselves get run-down. Stress, sleep deprivation, exhaustion and maybe a few pet bad habits contribute and yes, genetics and predisposing chronic illnesses all contribute to bad health moments and conditions. When we notice that we are not mending the usual way we may seek medical help.  Usually medical intervention shortens the duration of an illness, or minimizes the impact of the illness so we can get our school and work responsibilities done with only modest aggravation. 

All medical interventions, “natural” and manufactured, can be a help in some circumstances and can be a poison in others.  This is to be respected. Happily, more and more people have become active in their own health care.  More information is available on the web, in books and in the everyday newspapers and magazines that we read. However, not all that is published is correct, or able to withstand the test of time. Some “information” is just dangerous. 

Initially modern medicine ran away from home remedies when arsenic and mercury were used to treat viruses and branding cauterization was used to treat some sexually transmitted diseases. As expected, we overcorrected ourselves and abandoned much that was good in food and herb supplements.  For a while, there was a tendency to abandon modern medicine and put all faith in Natural remedies only. Today, the pendulum is swinging more toward a healthy blend of old and new.  
I do not think it is wise to arbitrarily abandon one approach for another.  Some illnesses can only be treated effectively with synthetic or highly purified and precisely quantified prescription medicines. A person without insulin must have insulin replacement.  When the body can no longer provide enough thyroid, replacement is needed. Blood pressures need to be well controlled to reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke. Anti-viral medication really has prolonged the lives of those suffering from slow acting, but lethal viruses. This short list is only a tiny, but obvious sampling of the benefits of modern medicine.   
 
Some natural remedies have become my favorites: 

Omega 3 Fish Oil 1000mg has been shown to help with heart, lung, brain and kidney health.  Omega 3 has recently been used to assist reducing post partum depression, enhancing fetal brain development (special prescription version for this or use OTC plant-based DHA products like Expecta) and attention deficit disorder.  For heart disease at least two gelcaps two times daily with food are advised.  Freezing the capsules before ingesting helps reduce the reflux aftertaste that often happens.  For those on Coumadin, it is wise to take the omega 3 fish oil an hour after the coumadin, to allow complete absorption of the Coumadin.  Also of note, omega 3 fish oil is also a blood thinner and easy bruising can be expected.  Just as with aspirin, NSAIDS, Coumadin, Ginkoba, omega 3 fish oil must be stopped prior to any surgery. 

For facial and other skin infections, I have become partial to washing with baby shampoo instead of bar soap.  The pH balance on this is credited for inhibiting bacterial, yeast, viral growth.  Baby shampoo helps reduce chronic eye irritation when the face is washed with the shampoo.
 

A wound care plastic surgeon specialist that has assisted my patients with their open wounds has guided me to cleanse these would with full strength lavage with Suave hair conditioner and then using the prescribed washes and dressings. He advises me that this simple $1.50 product is effective against 8 different resistant bacterial, viral and fungal invaders.  I have had great benefit from also expanding the use to including seeping skin infections such as leg cellulitis.  I usually first wash with baby shampoo followed by the Suave hair conditioner, then apply either a topical antifungal or antibacterial depending on the presentation. 

For pesky poison ivy and oak I am partial to applying Fels Naptha soap (found in the laundry department in the grocery store and cost, just about $1.00) Use cool water to lather on, let set 10 minutes and then use cool water to wash the Fels Naptha off.  Always apply first to a small test site to see if the soap is well tolerated.
 

For helping to ward off a cold, I encourage a couple of tablespoons of whole oregano put into the famous chicken soup or on a wholesome salad.  Oregano oil and whole oregano is credited with fighting off staph and strep infections.  While not the whole answer, this is certainly a welcome assist.  I have an immune booster meal that I make using mushrooms, minced onion and garlic, oregano and peppers and a dash of capsaicin sautéed to perfection and eaten immediately.  I use weak green tea, lemon and honey and a dash of ginger or honey in the tea to wash down this delicious therapy. 

Do not try anything that you could be allergic to.  Ask your doctor if it is safe for you to try these suggestions. 

Bonita J. Portier, D.O.