Is it feed a cold and starve a fever, or the other way around? Or maybe the optimal treatments are rest and exercise, but for which? Zinc helps stop colds, but is it good for the flu? How much vitamin C is enough? If I don’t have a neti pot, how do I irrigate my sinuses? Do all the herbs for colds work for flu, or vice versa, or do they work at all?
Excerpted from the author’s 3000-page reference guide Healing without Medication, this book is a concise guide to the natural remedies that work for colds and flu. It’s intended to help you find the simplest and fastest effective treatment for these common conditions, without spending a fortune at the pharmacy of doing a lot of running around when you are feeling sick. Nothing in this book is intended to keep you from seeing a doctor, but if you are handling a cold or flu on your own, as most of us do, everything in this book is intended to help you get over it more quickly. This book only covers the basics of natural therapy in 5000 words, but it describes effective natural treatments that are easy to obtain that you can expect to work.
Excerpted from the author’s 3000-page reference guide Healing without Medication, this book is a concise guide to the natural remedies that work for colds and flu. It’s intended to help you find the simplest and fastest effective treatment for these common conditions, without spending a fortune at the pharmacy of doing a lot of running around when you are feeling sick. Nothing in this book is intended to keep you from seeing a doctor, but if you are handling a cold or flu on your own, as most of us do, everything in this book is intended to help you get over it more quickly. This book only covers the basics of natural therapy in 5000 words, but it describes effective natural treatments that are easy to obtain that you can expect to work.