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Doctor's Complete Guide to Healing Foods

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Offers proven herbal remedies for such common conditions as headaches, anxiety, fatigue, and allergies, explaining how to select and prepare healing herbs and listing interactions and other safety information. Original.

Mass Market Paperback

First published June 1, 1996

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About the author

David A. Kessler

15 books80 followers
(David Kessler is also the name of another author, a hospice expert who worked with Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, although David A. Kessler did co-author a book on elder care.)

David Aaron Kessler is an American pediatrician, lawyer, author, and administrator (both academic and governmental). He was the Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) from November 8, 1990 to February 28, 1997, and has subsequently held administrative and academic posts at Yale and the University of California at San Francisco.

More information is available at Wikipedia.

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Profile Image for Deborah.
91 reviews
October 25, 2012
I used to be into "natural remedies," much to the concern of my family. Cinnamon for cold hands/feet, tea tree oils, lavender, etc.
Then I had an "herbalist" recommend mugwort tea for my cramping and discomfort during menstruation.
My mother asked a family member, an RN, about mugwort. Her response caused my family to talk to me seriously about this odd phase I was going through. Mugwort has so many dangerous properties that it should NOT be taken internally. Mom and I went to the local bookstore and picked up this book. While I was still 50/50 on "natural" remedies, I did realize that and M.D. might actually know more about medicine than an herbalist, who has no such extensive medical training.
Now, almost 15 years later, I thank the authors of this book; they created a reference that steadied me back onto the road of Science-Based-Medicine without making me feel embarrased and hostile.
The first half of the book is Ailments and Conditions; this section addresses, in alphabetical order, many of the health conditions that some people might conceivably turn to alternate medications to treat. There are good descriptions of each condition, along with the "healing herb" most commonly usedto treat such conditions.
The second half is the list of "healing herbs." Scientific names and alternate names are indicated, along with notes of efficacy, if any, or dangers, if any.
Now, of course, we have the internet to cross-check these ever-evolving lists, but to a college student, this book may well have saved my life in the days before the internet was so widely accessible and health claims of "herbalists" so easily authenticatable.
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