Coles and Woolworths to pull magazine urging readers to ‘protect yourself from Wi-Fi and 5G’ – mUmBRELLA*

Woolworths and Coles have agreed to remove an alternative medicine magazine from shelves which promotes a feature on protecting yourself from Wi-Fi and 5G, healing your spine without surgery and healing diabetes.

The tagline of the bi-monthly title, What Doctors Dont Tell You, is helping you make better health choices, but 2GB host Ben Fordham slammed it as dangerous misinformation which is produced by lunatics who link vaccines to autism and downplay the dangers of coronavirus, urging Australias two biggest supermarkets to stop selling the magazine.

Weve been speaking about the dangerous nutter [My Kitchen Rules judge] Pete Evans and his cuckoo theories about machines with recipes for coronavirus [Evans was fined $25,000 last week over the claims]. Well now Ive got some serious questions for the major supermarkets to answer, Fordham said on his drive-time program yesterday afternoon.

Because if you go into Coles or Woolworths today, youll find a magazine for sale at the checkout. Its called What Doctors Dont Tell You and its filled with dangerous misinformation and dodgy health advice.

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What is Coles and Woolies doing allowing these nut-cases to spread this dangerous stuff at their checkouts?

At the time Fordham spoke on air, he said neither supermarket had agreed to pull the title, but soon thereafter, both Coles and Woolworths committed to removing What Doctors Dont Tell You from shelves, and encouraged their customers to follow expert medical advice.

Coles said the magazine was ranged as part of a two-week trial of new magazine titles under an arrangement with our supplier.

Coles does not endorse the content of the magazine and it is now being removed from sale and will not be part of our range going forward, a spokesperson said.

Coles encourages all Australians to follow the advice of government health authorities on all health matters including COVID-19.

Mumbrella understands Woolworths was stocking What Doctors Dont Tell You in the aisle of around 100 supermarkets. A spokesperson said it appreciates customers concern and has informed the supplier well be removing the magazine from sale.

As always, we would encourage our customers to seek and follow expert medical advice, the spokesperson added.

The What Doctors Dont Tell You website states that Since 1989, WDDTY has provided thousands of resources on how to beat asthma, arthritis, depression and many other chronic conditions. It began as a newsletter, and now claims to be the largest magazine of its kind in the UK, sold in 14 countries worldwide.

Fordham

UNSW associate professor of medical science, Dr Darren Saunders, told Fordham that the story on Wi-Fi and 5G part of a conspiracy theory falsely claiming that 5G caused the COVID-19 pandemic was of particular concern.

These kind of magazines, theres a trick to them Theres very science-y sounding words and they kind of use that as a hook to drag you in to all of the conspiracy stuff and the dangerous advice around vaccines, Dr Saunders said.

The stuff thats on the cover here around Wi-Fi and 5G. Weve seen some really dangerous stuff being circulated in the last two weeks around coronavirus. And, in fact, when you dig into the magazine, the guy that wrote that article has been spreading that conspiracy around coronavirus and 5G.

That sort of stuff, in the current climate, is just nuts.

Mumbrella has contacted What Doctors Dont Tell You for comment.

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Coles and Woolworths to pull magazine urging readers to 'protect yourself from Wi-Fi and 5G' - mUmBRELLA*

The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Recap: Regrets Only – Vulture

So far we have spent two episodes talking about the fact that Teddi Mellencamp, a grown woman and accountability coach, cannot reasonably draft a text message. This has been the central conflict of the story, and I find it to be a conflict that is so easily solved that I dont want to spend that much time talking about it.

It all boils down to this: Teddi texted everyone that she is having a retreat and she would like them to come. She then said, Come when you want. I dont care if you come or not, but maybe it would be nice. The entire problem here is that Teddi refuses to make her intentions clear. If she wants them there, she should say, I would like for you to come, not qualify it with, Maybe you wont be into it, to shield herself from some of her co-workers not wanting to join her at her retreat. To make it worse, when they ask her questions about it, she can provide no clarity whatsoever. When should we be there? Whenever we want. What should we bring? I dont know. Stuff? Should we even bother at this point? I dont know, and I dont really care.

I would find all of this incredibly frustrating. If you want me to attend something just tell me when and where and I will be there. I have literally never turned down an invitation, and that includes to take a Scientology e-meter test in the 42nd Street subway station. I really dont like Sutton, but I cant say that I blame her for being confused by Teddis wishy-washy responses to all of her questions.

All of this stuff comes up at dinner with Teddi, Lisa, and Sutton, and its clear that Teddi and Sutton dont really like each other. Teddi says that she is very direct as a person and thats what she wants from a friend, not someone who is going to kiss her ass. In her defense, Sutton is like a dog with a bone with this thing about the retreat. She keeps bringing it up and panting for an answer. Just chill out a bit, Sutton. Relax and dont try so hard and maybe it will happen.

The difference between her and Garcelle, the other new addition to the cast, is stark. You can see it when everyone arrives at Kyles house for dinner. First of all, everyone is dressed like theyre going to Elton Johns birthday party, and it is a lot of fashion on display. Kyle is wearing a white shirt with marabou around the sleeves, which is a little Carol Channing, but cute. Teddi even looks cute wearing a silver lam 70s disco dress. Dorit looks chic even though she has a giant chain in her hair and is carrying the $1,860 Perrin Paris clutch that Sutton gave out in the gift bags at her store opening. (How did she afford that? Did you see how many shots there were in this episode of that ugly clutch that looks like a boxing glove humping a piano bench? She deffo got those for free.)

Erika and Lisa arrive together in matching fabulosity, with Erika in balloon sleeves and latex pants and Rinna in a zebra pantsuit with bell-bottoms bigger than one of Harry Hamlins pie plates. Rachel Zoe just sent it over today! Denise, fresh from surgery, is wearing a Champagne-and-gold cocktail dress that she makes look effortless. Then theres Sutton, the only person wearing a color, in an ill-fitting Dolce & Gabbana red dress with the reliquary of the Virgin Mary on the front and other religious-looking embellishments. It looks like a pillow you would find in the discount bin at Pier One. When asked if its couture she says, No, its just ready to wear, and Teddi, who still looks better than Sutton, says, Whats ready to wear? The dismissive downward glare of Erika Jayne at that moment is enough to flip the jet stream off its course.

As Sutton stands around uptight and everyone strains to find a topic of conversation, Garcelle struts in, wearing a white mens shirt tucked into a billowing tulle skirt that is a blacker version of Carrie Bradshaws infamous tutu. Immediately everyone lights up and accepts her and wants to talk about her outfit and play with her. She is everything Sutton wants to be and cant figure out.

Then, when everyone is sitting down to dinner, Sutton is put out because there arent place cards and she doesnt know where to sit. As everyone is taking their seats, Sutton goes up to Kyle at the head of the table and is like, Kyle, where should I sit? I dont know where to sit and Im feeling very uncomfortable. Just sit anywhere! This isnt musical chairs. There are enough seats for everyone. Find the empty chair and smother it with your ready-to-wear monstrosity. Sutton says that she is very well mannered, but if she was that well mannered, she wouldnt have made her host and all the other guests uncomfortable with her actions. If she was well mannered she would have found a place, sat down next to anyone and said, Hello, Im Sutton, and introduced a flaccid hand to the person sitting on either side of her; its not that hard.

The problem with Sutton, and there are many, is that she is trying to force her idea of how things should be handled on the group as a whole rather than figuring out how the group works and inserting herself into it. When Garcelle asks if Mauricio will be getting some that night because Kyle just returned home from months away, Sutton says loudly, That is not dinner-table conversation. Um, does she know who is at this dinner table? Has she seen an Erika Jayne video? Does she know that Lisa Rinna has a whole chapter in her book about blow-job techniques? In this group, that is dinner-table conversation, and her trying to put the kibosh on it is making her look worse than them talking about BJs over the soup course.

Next, Lisa introduces an idiotic game where everyone goes around the table and says what their first impression of the person next to them was and what they think of that person now. When someone asks the particulars, Mauricio says, Were skipping the guys. He wants no part of productions reindeer games. I agree with Sutton, this game is dumb. Its like, I thought you were beautiful at first and now I think youre even more beautiful. As everyone is being so nice Mauricio says, You are all so sweet. These are not the girls I know, which introduces a montage of all of the wineglass-smashing fights weve seen over the years.

I would now like to play a game, and it is called, How many edibles did Mauricio eat before this dinner party? Ill guess three. Maybe four? First hes hanging out in just his towel [insert Eartha Kitt growl here] in the living room and cant even remember that there is a dinner party happening in his home in the next 60 minutes. Then he opts out of the game and makes fun of the women from the far side of the table. Then, when Aaron goes on his tirade about Western medicine, Mauricio is like, Yeah, man. Thats so true, man, at the end of the table like Aaron is talking about his time touring with the Dead.

Aarons speech. Okay. Phew. Um. Yeah. Im not really sure how to address this. It kicks off when Kyle says, Aaron, other than training arms every day, were not really sure what you do. The answer should have been something like, I run a clinic for alternative medicine, or something summing up his entire business in a few sentences. Easy. To the point. Instead, Aaron launches into a monologue that starts with, Everything you know about medicine is wrong. Its like the first sentence of a whiteboard YouTube video that is 43 minutes long.

I am not going to attack the contents of Aarons speech. I couldnt really tell what he was talking about and I have a feeling that, as long as it seemed on television, it went on even longer in person. Its hard to gauge exactly what he meant by the spliced segments about how there is room in an atom and we can smash it with sound but we cant cure diseases, or about how cancer is a bodys best friend. I dont know what was going on. He had obviously been drinking, and he might have had a little bit of Mauricios edible. I cant say. I have no clue. I cant put this into context other than to say that he should have noticed he lost the audience and just stopped talking.

Whats really odd is what he and Denise have to say about it. She tells him to speak very carefully. In the preview of the season, this comment seemed to be used in relation to Denises relationship with Brandi Glanville (say her name three times and she shall appear), so Im a little sad that it was actually uttered in a totally different context. Denise says that Aaron is followed all the time because his methods of healing are better than those promoted by big corporations that make money off traditional medicine. This seems, I dont know, far-fetched. It reminds me of Randy and Evi Quaid, a Hollywood couple that fell into a group paranoid delusion that they were being pursued. Its all rather odd. But then someone brings up the sex of Teddis baby, and everything seems to snap back to normal.

Then the party starts to disband, and everyone hangs around doing shots of Fireball in Kyles living room. Things eventually get very rowdy and Kyle Richards dependably pulls out her only party trick: doing the splits. But did you notice that, as she gets closer and closer to the ground, she doesnt quite make it? She has to sort of cheat to get down to the carpet, and it made me very sad. The passage of time gets us all. Limbs straighten, joints freeze, tendons clench, suppleness leaks out of the body like nectar through a sieve, and all we will have at the end of it are awkward dinner parties saved by so many shots of indigestible fire.

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The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Recap: Regrets Only - Vulture

The Scramble to Redeem The S-Blob – Discovery Institute

My own medical profession, as I have described at Evolution News before, is at the forefront in a struggle against a plague. Heroic doctors and nurses risk their lives daily. Somewhere far back behind the front line, meanwhile, there is a policy-making Blob.

In the context of foreign policy, cynics refer to The Blob. The Blob is the foreign policy of experts and hangers-on, and it takes on a life of its own.

The scientific profession has a Blob as well, consisting of myriad scientific experts in government and academia, with their accompanying bureaucrats and other pilot fish. The Science Blob (hereafter The S-Blob) is in a panic. The COVID-19 pandemic has cast a very unwelcome spotlight on The S-Blob, and more than anything else, Blobs hate light. This pandemic is unmasking the incompetence of the scientific establishment, particularly the failure of the massive public health bureaucracy. The West is facing hundreds of thousands of deaths and economic and societal collapse because scientists who are trained and paid to protect us from pandemics failed to protect us from this pandemic.

As the Wall Street Journal and others report, U.S. intelligence is investigating whether COVID-19 originated from scientific incompetence in a Wuhan research lab. Denials aside, it spread to the local populace with historic loss of life, and was spread to the world by a Chinese scientific and political establishment that covered up the emerging pandemic and allowed international flights to leave Wuhan while restricting flights within China. The World Health Organization covered up the local epidemic long enough to permit it to become a pandemic. The American Centers for Disease Control ignored the clear evidence that Americans were at risk and apparently made no effort to seal our borders until months after the epidemic in China began and spread to Europe. American public health officials since then have thrown our nation into a virtual depression (with unemployment levels not seen since the 1930s) and have shown astonishing incompetence. Our response to this entirely preventable pandemic was hindered by a lack of rudimentary credible science (e.g., quickly changing statements about whether masks are to be recommended). Never in this century has the nature of the S-Blob been so starkly on display.

Blobs are slow. They feed voraciously (on your money) and excrete voraciously (e.g., evolutionary biology). Blobs need tenders to protect them, and the S-Blob depends heavily on its Internet tenders. Yale neuroscientist Steven Novella is one such tender. Novella has made a career out of making excuses for the S-Blob. Novella is, as you might imagine, in a frenzy as of late. As we all face death and economic and societal ruin thanks to the S-Blob, Novella gets to the root of the problem, in his view, and lays out the blame:

This is difficult to quantify, but what is happening is that we are allowing to thrive a multi-billion dollar industry funneling money to charlatans, quacks, con-artists, pseudoscientists Do you think they are just taking their money and staying quiet? No. They are using some of those billions to lobby and funnel taxpayer money into promoting their snake oil. This multi-billion dollar industry is also engaged in a massive advertising campaign, which amounts to a disinformation campaign, for their brand They have spent decades misinforming the public about the relative significance of various health risks and benefits, the nature of disease, and the trustworthiness of scientists and experts So we have allowed a system to fester in our society that infiltrates scientific and professional institutions with pseudoscience and rank nonsense, forces government expenditure on fake medicine Part of our pandemic preparedness has to be scientific hygiene we need to keep pseudoscience out of our medical institutions.

Lest you misunderstand, Novella isnt talking about The S-Blob. Hes talking about what he sees as the real root of our national crisis Reiki:

The implication is we should just let people use their Reiki or magic potions if it makes them feel like they are doing something, as long as the treatment is not directly physically harmful. As you can see,I have been addressing it for years, including the fact that I will have to address it for years

With this COVID pandemic, Novellas multi-year quest to protect the public from Reiki, an alternative medicine technique, is finally coming to fruition, just when we need it.

The S-Blob is increasingly under justifiable scrutiny for the most catastrophic scientific fiasco of the 21st century. Its defenders are spewing chaff like theres no tomorrow. They will assiduously protect the homefolk from homeopaths, Orthodox Jews, Christians in parking lots, lone surfers, and all the usual suspects. This pandemic will keep the likes of Novella busy for the foreseeable future theres a lot of Blob-butt to cover. A S-Blob tenders job is never done, as long as there are excuses to peddle and accountability to shirk.

Photo: COVID-19 test kit, by U.S. Centers for Disease Control / Public domain.

Originally posted here:

The Scramble to Redeem The S-Blob - Discovery Institute

Ding-dong over COVID-19 cure – Daily Sun

Chika Abanobi

The recent public approval and recommendation by President Andry Rajoelina of Madagascar, of COVID-Organics, a herbal medicine produced by his countrys Madagascar Institute of Applied Research (IMRA), which specialises in the study of medicinal plants, has prompted a renewed call on government, state and federal, by practitioners of alternative medicine in Nigeria, to accord similar recognition to Nigerian herbal solutions especially in the fight against COVID-19.

Leading the pack are: Dr. Benjamin Amodu, lead phytochemical researcher, African Alternative Medicine, Hospital, Abuja; Dr. Andrew Abue, Associate Professor of Anatomy and Anthropology, Department of Anatomical Sciences, College of Health Sciences, University of Abuja, and Dr. Darlington Akukwu of College of Medicine and Health Sciences, Imo State University, Owerri. The three medical practitioners claimed to have jointly produced a range of herbal supplements (names withheld), which, when properly combined, are capable of curing COVID-19, in the absence of any officially recognized and approved vaccine.

Though IMRAs COVID-Organics has not been tested internationally, it made quite a sight when President Rajoelina got on the state television, and after gulping some dose of it, in full glare of teeming viewers, lifted up the bottle and said: This herbal tea gives results in seven days. We can change the history of the entire world. Two people have now been cured by this treatment.

The letter of introduction

That is the kind of encouragement that Dr. Amodu, et al said they expected to receive from government and its agencies for coming up with those range of medical products but they were a bit disappointed when it was not forthcoming.

I contacted Nigerian medical authorities in regards to my solution, said Amodu who, apart from other medical qualifications, trained under Elizabeth Kafaru of blessed memory. Ten daysafter the virus broke out and a call was made out to scientists in regards to a solution for this pandemic. I wrote the minister ofscience and technology on the solutionI provide.

The letter dated February 8, 2020, and, a copy which is in the possession ofSaturday Sun, partly read: We are a Nigerian research organization working in the specific areas of communicable and non-communicable diseases. Our research effort in these areas has produced very good result so far as our NAFDAC-listed products have been found effective on a number of viral diseases like HIV, Hepatitis ABCD and E, Ebola, Lassa and Dengue Fevers. When Ebola broke out, we tested our p+3 on HV medication to see their effect or CD8, which is a specific sign of an effectiveness on the Haemorrhagic fevers, with our three patients initial CD4 and CD5 taken, after three months of the product uses, the parameters were taken, with profound increases in CD4 count and CD8 count, in fact the increases in the CD8 which is specific for the haemorrhagic fever were greater than those of the CD4.

In this specific case, our time-effective throat cancer food supplements will attack the throat effect of the coronavirus, prevent and disallow further degeneration into pneumonia and lung diseases. Our Texas University certified lung cancer curewill prevent the pneumonia or lung diseases thereby stopping the virus. It can be used by everybody for prevention and the disease management. I wish to present the products as soon as the Minister gives me a date to do so.

The Madagascar miracle and view from Nigeria

But the alternative medicine advocate regrets that till today, he and his colleagues have not been invited to showcase their products. And, he wishes that things were the same here as in Madagascar where the government stood solidly behind their researchers.The pandemic is said to have affected 128 people in that country, but there is no record of death, allegedly thanks to the COVID-Organics, the herbal mixture prepared from Artemisia, known as sweet wormwood. A traditional plant with proven efficacy in treating malaria, it is also said to be good in boosting the immune systems. Ms Cornet-Vernet, founder and vice president of Madagascars La Maison de lArtemisia claimed that China used extracts from like plant to combat COVID-19.

We may ask Madagascar to send us planeload of the herbs to treat COVID-19, Boss Mustapha, the Secretary to the Federal Government and Chairman, Presidential Task Force on COVID-19, said, while briefing the media on Tuesday, April 28, 2020. I want to assure you that whatever is happening in the world, we are mindful of it and we are keeping tab.

Acknowledging what he sees as a medical breakthrough in the fight against the pandemic, he said: I was reading of the experiences in Madagascar of why everybody is drinking some solutions that have been prepared. This morning, I was sharing with my wife, and I told her that probably I would request that Mr. President allow us import a planeload for a trial because we are all navigating an unchartered cause. Nobody has ever been on this road. So, every attempt to find solution that would bring succour to our people, be rest assured that this task force is very responsible and we would do everything to ensure that we get what will benefit our people, what will help them in the processes that we find ourselves today.

What government is doing about alternative medicine

Please, look not as far as Madagascar, to find solution that would bring succour to our people, the researching trio beg Mustapha.Their polyherbal formulations contain anti-inflammatory properties that hinder the alveolar inflammatory reactions in the lungs, Dr. Abue said. They also have anti-oxidative properties. They have the ability of stimulating antibodies to contain the virus as well as retard and stop the duplication of the virus. This combination has abundant zinc and ascorbic acid that will aid the epithelial cells in the lungs thus enhancing the oxygen carrying capacity of the red blood cells to all vital organs including the lungs. This way, the multiple organ failure that leads to death through the disease is avoided.

These herbal supplements combination with their very desirable qualities should be given a chance in the treatment of COVID-19, Akukwu appealed.

At a press briefing on April 7, 2020, the Nigerian Minister of Health, Dr. Osagie Ehanire, said that government is prepared to consider herbal medicine in the fight against coronavirus. According to him, the Federal government will investigate and give all interested herbalists the opportunity to produce and clinically test medicine targeted at the disease.

He explained that the federal government, through the Ministry of Health, is studying the claims by the alternative medicine practitioners in the country, of finding cure for COVID-19. He added that he has received several letters from them and noted that inasmuch as he is not disputing their claims he had referred their letters to the relevant department in his ministry.

His words: We have a department for alternative medicine in the ministry and we have series of letters from traditional medical practitioners who have written to me that they have the cure for coronavirus. Well, I have not disputed it so I have referred such letters to the department of traditional medicine and I am waiting for them to give me a feedback on what they have discovered from the people. We will look at every assertion and claim. Some people say they have herbs and some others say they have concoctions. It is only those who are serious that the department will look into their claims and we will not throw away any suggestion. The efficacy and efficiency of these medicines have to be proven first before it can be recommended for people to take.

Spurious claims from across the world

Across the world, there had been claims as to what works and what does not, since the onset of the pandemic. In Sri Lanka, some people claimed that a particular herbal drink was capable of remedying all infectious diseases that can affect humans, including COVID-19 but a certain Dr.Karunathilake, a senior researcher at thecountrysColombo UniversityInstitute of Indigenous Medicine debunked the claim and warned of its long-term harmful effect that is capable of triggering other diseases.

In Venezuela, a recipe consisting of ingredients likelemon grass,ginger, black pepper, lemon and honey, and purported to prevent and cure colds was enthusiastically promoted bya member of theVenezuelan Constituent Assemblyas a cure for COVID-19 but this was quickly debunked by medical experts.

Sometime ago, a claim circulated on Facebook in English, French, Spanish, and Portuguese, that drinking lemon in warm water canincrease Vitamin C levels and help to prevent both COVID-19 and cancer. But Henry Chenal, Director of the Integrated Bioclinical Research Centre (CIRBA), Abidjan, Ivory Coast and World Health Organisation (WHO) said that inasmuch as taking lemons and consuming fresh fruit and vegetables are good, there is no evidence that drinking lemon in warm water protects against COVID-19.

The same thing applies to consuming garlic, tumeric or large amount of boiled ginger. At some point in Philippines, they were rumoured on Facebook to cure or protect against COVID-19. But Dr. Mark Kristoffer Pasayan, a fellow at the Philippine Society for Microbiology and Infectious Diseases and WHO said there is no iota of evidence in those claims.

Dont consume any mixtures claiming to be COVID-19 vaccine, the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) recently warned in a bulk text message it sent to Nigerians. There is no approved drug or vaccine for COVID-19. These substances can cause harm.

Amodu, et al alternative medicine

Dr. Amodu does not see their products as belonging to the same category with the aforementioned cases. He believes that, like the much-touted Madagascars COVID-Organics, their antimalarial supplements can handle the prevention and cure for COVID-19, and we are proposing the four combinations which are all NAFDAC (National Agency for Food and Drug Administration Control)-listed.

COVID 19 patients are expected to take them all, he explains because it is a combo and there are various body systems involved and these four combinations work hand-in-hand. For instance, from the herbal combination, it starts working from the throat to treating pneumonia to fibrosis, and the issue of the immune system which the combination will take care of.These herbal combinations have been on the shelf for over 10 years.

One of them, he boasts beat chloroquine andpyrimethaminein apresentation at United Nations (UN). It was tested as a vaccine when compared with pyrimethamine and it is curative. [It] was tested againstchloroquine and had 97% success against p.falciparum the causative agent of malaria and has since beenpeer-reviewed by theIndian journal.

Talking about journal, the three researchers have just taken their case beyond Nigeria to a wider scientific community by sending a joint paper to the world-acclaimedIOSR Journal for Dental and Medical Sciences(published by the International Organisation of Scientific Research, IOSR). The journal publishes papers of the highest scientific merit and widest possible scope work in all areas related to medical and dental science. Citing their products as a case study, the three wrote on whyAfrican alternative medicine should be used to curb COVID-19

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Ding-dong over COVID-19 cure - Daily Sun

Face It: The Indian Government Is Peddling Pseudoscience – The Wire

When it was announced in late March that Prince Charles, heir to the British throne, was well on his way to recovering from COVID-19, there was some celebration 4,000 miles away in India, a former British colony. But it was not colonial nostalgia that brought on the cheer, so much as the declaration a few days later by an Indian government minister that the Prince of Wales had been cured using Ayurveda a blend of, among other things, herbal medicine, breathing exercises, and meditation.

At an April 2 press conference, Shripad Naik, Indias minister for alternative medicines, declared that the treatments supposed success validates our age-old practice. The British government swiftly issued a statement rejecting his claim. This information is incorrect. The Prince of Wales followed the medical advice of the National Health Service in the UK and nothing more, a spokesperson said the following day.

But this hasnt deterred Naiks Ministry of Ayurveda, Yoga & Naturopathy, Unani, Siddha, and Homeopathy or AYUSH for short from promoting Indian alternative medicines as treatments for COVID-19. Established in 2014, the goal of AYUSH is to develop and popularise these treatments, many of which have their historical roots in India. Ayurveda, for example, has been practiced in India for thousands of years.

Now, Naik said, the ministry aims to confirm that Prince Charles was cured using a combination of Ayurveda and the pseudoscience known as homeopathy, which has its roots in Germany, so that the treatment can be rolled out to the masses. This is in stark contrast to the position of mainstream medicine, which has not yet confirmed any evidence-based medicine for COVID-19, and is still highly cautious of giving experimental drugs to patients.

Many experts say that statements like Naiks are false and dangerous, particularly now that the country is struggling to control the spread of the novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, among its 1.35 billion people. With a lack of testing and a shortage of physicians, many experts feel the Indian government is failing its people by directing attention and resources to unsubstantiated and unscientific practices especially when these practices themselves can be harmful.

And yet for many, the actions of the right-wing Indian government dont come as a surprise. Aside from the popularity of alternative medicine in India generally, the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is known for supporting Hindutva, a form of nationalism that seeks to transform India from being a secular nation into an openly Hindu one. This partly plays out in the field of health, where alternative therapies that have their roots in India, such as Ayurveda, are considered more Hindu or Indian than modern medicine. Supporting them becomes an opportunity to push forward this nationalist agenda.

In the early days of the epidemic, AYUSH heavily promoted therapies that lack an evidence base, said Sumaiya Shaikh, a neuroscientist based at the Center for Social and Affective Neuroscience at Linkping University Hospital in Sweden. Shaikh is also editor of science at Alt News, an Indian website that works to expose misinformation.

Examples of treatments pushed by AYUSH included a homeopathic medicine containing diluted arsenic, an Ayurvedic drug developed by the ministry to treat malaria, and dietary changes including drinking warm water, putting sesame oil inside the nose, or consuming holy basil, ginger, cloves, and turmeric. The ministry suggested these interventions could prevent people from developing COVID-19 as well as treat its symptoms.

There was some amount of criticism to that, said Shaikh. And so in response, the ministry provided a list of scientific evidence to bolster its claims. Aside from the fact that homeopathy has been repeatedly shown to have no biological effects, Shaikh said that when she and her team reviewed the list, the only actual research they could find was one analysis that examined the the same homeopathic treatment in bovines with gastric infections. Despite this, the ministrys promotion of the therapy increased demand in many Indian states.

This isnt the first time the ministry has faced criticism for promoting unscientific claims or backing research derived from religious myths and beliefs. One of its repeated focuses has been cow urine, which is believed by many Hindus to have healing properties given the sacred nature of cows in Hinduism. The urine has been touted as a treatment for many illnesses, including diabetes, epilepsy, and AIDS. Naik himself has made several comments in parliament about how cow urine can cure cancer. In reality, its use can be dangerous.

In fact, so widespread is the belief in cow urine that on March 17, an activist working for the BJP in Kolkata organised a gomutra (cow urine) party to ward off COVID-19. He believed that drinking the urine would protect them from the disease. Unfortunately, one of the volunteers fell seriously ill after ingesting the urine.

The Ministry of AYUSHs research portal carries papers on the uses of panchagavya, the five products derived from a cow, of which urine is one, supporting its use as a medical product. However, Ipsita Mohanty, who co-wrote a paper listed there titled Diversified Uses of Cow Urine, said in an email that she couldnt definitively answer whether cow urine fights off COVID-19, as it has not been proven by independent researchers.

This reflects how AYUSH researchers and doctors seek validation, explained Shaikh. If a paper gets published anywhere doesnt matter what type of journal it is or how bad the statistics are they take it as scientific proof, she said, adding that the alternative medicine community also has a lot of journals of its own. These are regulated and edited by the same people who are published in them, Shaikh said.

Despite being an advocate of cow urine, Mohanty urges doctors to not spread misinformation. It is misleading to spread the rumour about something so important when more than half of our world is engulfed by Covid-19, she said. There is no vaccine nor any treatment for it. At this point, promoting cow urine against Covid-19 can be very fatal, as people might resort to it for treatment as their only hope.

The Ministry of AYUSH did not respond to requests for comments from Undark.

Practitioners of such therapies get their clientele from two distinct groups, said Aniket Sule, a science education researcher and astronomer at the Homi Bhabha Center for Science Education. He is part of a steadily growing rationalist movement in India that is encouraging dialogue and critical thinking to counter misinformation, including within the realm of alternative medicine.

The first group Sule identified is patients from impoverished communities and remote villages, who dont have access to doctors prescribing modern medicines. The other set of clients is the affluent and educated class in the cities, who have read half-baked internet posts and develop strong skepticism towards modern medicines, he said.

Pushing such a narrative to gullible masses is akin to actively spreading misinformation, and senior functionaries of government should take strict action against such baseless propaganda, he urged.

The ministry has faced some institutional backlash. The Press Council of India, the statutory body responsible for maintaining good media standards, has issued an order asking print media to stop publicity and advertisements of AYUSH-related claims for COVID-19 treatments.

But despite that, the Ministry of AYUSH continues not only to receive political backing but also a large share of the annual health budget. From 2019 to 2020, the Indian government allotted approximately $250 million for study and promotion of alternative medicines, a 15 percent increase from the previous year. According to Shaikh, only the defence ministry saw a larger proportional increase to its budget last year.

Indian scientists fighting disinformation say there is an underlying nationalist agenda to this move. Certain radical groups affiliated with the government have dreams of spreading Hindu values beyond Indias borders to create an Akhand Bharat, or consolidated Hindu nation, which would include annexing a large part of the Indian subcontinent. One of these is Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, a militant organisation that has a long history of promoting Hindutva. Its leader recently said that Ayurveda is part of Indias soft power in the South Asian region, said Shaikh.

Since coming to power in 2014, Indias current government (BJP) has increasingly backed divisive policies that consolidate the power of the majoritarian Hindu population. Overall, this government has made virtue out of extreme and thoughtless nationalism. Increased support to all these questionable therapies is a natural byproduct of that, Sule said, adding there is also a distinct motivation among many people who believe in these claims. There are people who are so completely blinded by glorious ancient India that they willingly walk into any trap if it is presented as this is what our great ancestors did, he said.

Sule also thinks that AYUSH exists, in part, to protect commercial interests. There are nearly 800,000 practitioners of alternative medicine in India, he said, and over 650 colleges teaching related courses. The Ayurveda industry alone in India is worth $4.4 billion and is expected to grow by 16 percent in the next five years.

Shaikh, Sule and others have been critical of the Ministry of AYUSH for years, exposing and unmasking its questionable research and dubious medical advice. It is very dangerous, especially now. We are the only country that has a parallel ministry for alternative systems, Shaikh said. Why not just have the one ministry and then have everything under it? Use whatever herbs you want, but run them through appropriate trials, and if they work then they should be in the mainstream and everybody should benefit from them, she said.

Shaikh doesnt call for closing the ministry but insists the way it works needs to change.

Dont start with a belief system, start with the hypothesis, she advised. Dont start with the basis that this drug is going to work. Start with realising that we dont know and we want to find out. That is unbiased research.

This article was originally published on Undark. Read the original article.

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Face It: The Indian Government Is Peddling Pseudoscience - The Wire

Dr. Andrew Campbell selected as Top Medical Consultant of the Year by the International Association of Top Professionals (IAOTP) – Life Pulse Health

UNITED STATES 05-01-2020 (PRDistribution.com) Dr. Andrew W. Campbell, Medical Clinician, Director, Officer, Advisor and Medical Consultant, also Editor-in Chief of several journals and research studies, was recently selected as Top Medical Consultant of the Year for 2020 by the International Association of Top Professionals (IAOTP) for his outstanding leadership, dedication and commitment to the healthcare profession.

Inclusion with the International Association of Top Professionals is an honor in itself, only a few members in each discipline are chosen for this distinction. These special honorees are distinguished based on their professional accomplishments, academic achievements, leadership abilities, longevity in the field, other affiliations and contributions to their communities. All honorees are invited to attend the IAOTPs annual award gala at the end of this year for a night to honor their achievements. http://www.iaotp.com/award-gala

With having over 45 years of professional experience as a renowned Medical Clinician, Dr. Campbell has certainly proven himself as an expert in the field of integrative health and traditional medicine. Dr. Campbell is a dynamic, results-driven leader who has demonstrated success by treating the most complex patients and having extensive experience with testing for molds and mycotoxins from environmental and toxic exposures. He is fluent in Arabic, Hungarian, French, Spanish and English.Dr. Campbell has effectively worked alongside medical professionals from other cultures in Central and South America, Western and Eastern Europe and the Middle East.Dr. Campbells impressive repertoire of roles have included Medical Director at the Medical Center for Immune and Toxic Disorders, Medical Consultant for Cyrex Laboratories, Medical Advisor to Cell Systems Corp, Medical Director at The Wellness Center, Medical Advisor BCM Direct, Medical Advisor at Natural Health and Physicians Exclusive. Currently, he serves as the Medical Director of MymycoLab, a laboratory testing mycotoxins in serum, and he is the Medical Director for Zenix Laboratory in Mexico.Dr. Campbells areas of expertise include his treatment of thousands of patients with complex medical conditions from toxic exposures, specifically molds and mycotoxins, Lyme Disease, pesticides, household solvents, silicone breast implants, industrial chemicals and more. He has aided many patients with allergies, immune disorders and immune deficiencies. Dr. Campbells clinical interests include genomics, microbiome and neurotoxicity.Before embarking on his professional career path, Dr. Campbell graduated from a Swiss Preparatory School at age 14 and first in his class. His next accomplishment, he completed his College studies in the United States within 3 years. Dr. Campbell obtained his Medical Degree in Mexico, then trained at the Orlando Regional Medical Center in Florida. He furthered his education at the Medical College of Georgia. Upon moving to Texas, he began serving as the Medical Director at the Medical Center for Immune and Toxic Disorders for over 20 years. Over the course of his professional career, Dr. Campbell has held various leadership positions in Hospitals all throughout the Houston area.Stephanie Cirami, President of IAOTP stated, Choosing Dr. Campbell for this honor was an easy decision for our panel to make. Dr. Campbell has tremendous foresight, extensive knowledge and is brilliant at what he does. His accomplishments are very impressive and his colleagues describe him as a great listener, who will find a solution. We are truly honored to have him as our Top Medical Consultant of the Year and we are looking forward to meeting him at the Annual Awards Gala.Throughout his illustrious career, Dr. Campbell has received numerous awards, accolades and has been recognized worldwide for his outstanding leadership and commitment to the profession. This year he is being considered for a Front Cover feature and article in TIP (Top Industry Professionals) Magazine and will also be considered for IAOTPs prestigious Lifetime Achievement Award. He will be honored at IAOTPs 2020 Annual Awards Gala, being held at the magnificent Plaza Hotel in New York City for his selection as Top Medical Consultant of the Year. In past years, Dr. Campbell has been recognized as one of the Top 100 Health Professionals in Clinical Immunology and Toxicology, as an International Health Professional of the Year for his Outstanding Contributions to Clinical Toxicology and was named countless times by Marquis Whos Who as an expert in Medicine and Healthcare, and Science and Engineering across America and throughout the World.Aside from his successful career, Dr. Campbell is a sought-after lecturer and speaker, nationally and internationally at medical conferences for over 25 years and for Oxford University. He has published over 90 studies of his findings in peer-reviewed medical journals and medical textbook chapters. Dr. Campbell has also served as Editor-in-Chief, Co-Editor, Associate Editor and on the Editorial Board of several Medical Journals including Integrative Medicine, A Clinicians Journal, International Journal for Complimentary and Alternative Medicine, Research in Medical and Engineering Sciences, Biomedical Journal of Scientific and Technical Research, Advances in Mind-Body Medicine and Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine.As a highly regarded medical consultant, Dr. Campbell has become well-known and been featured on a number of television shows which include 20/20, the Montel Williams Show, and 24-Hour Investigative News. He has been interviewed by ABC, CBS and NBC and its affiliates throughout the United States and can be viewed on several television programs in both Canada and Mexico.Being an active member within his community for many years, Dr. Campbell is a Founder and also the Medical Director at the St. Vianney Clinic for the Indigent. He is experienced in obtaining licenses and import permits for medical supplements and medical equipment into Mexico and Latin American Countries. In the United States, he lends his expertise in medical management and clinical program developments and also in several foreign countries. He has conducted a number of clinical trials as the principle investigator for supplement companies in the U.S. and he is conducting these in other countries to reduce costs.Looking back, Dr. Campbell attributes his success to his hard work ethic, his love for education and science, and to every skillful medical professional he has had the honor of working alongside throughout his entire career. When not working, he enjoys traveling and spending time with his family. For the future, he hopes to continue making breakthroughs in medicine and helping his patients achieve optimal health.For more information on Dr. Campbell please visit:https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrew-w-campbell-m-d-7983a025/About IAOTPThe International Association of Top Professionals (IAOTP) is an international boutique networking organization who handpicks the worlds finest, most prestigious top professionals from different industries. These top professionals are given an opportunity to collaborate, share their ideas, be keynote speakers and to help influence others in their fields. This organization is not a membership that anyone can join. You have to be asked by the President or be nominated by a distinguished honorary member after a brief interview.IAOTPs experts have given thousands of top prestigious professionals around the world, the recognition and credibility that they deserve and have helped in building their branding empires. IAOTP prides itself to be a one of a kind boutique networking organization that hand picks only the best of the best and creates a networking platform that connects and brings these top professionals to one place.For more information on IAOTP please visit: http://www.iaotp.com

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Dr. Andrew Campbell selected as Top Medical Consultant of the Year by the International Association of Top Professionals (IAOTP) - Life Pulse Health

COVID-19 and the prospect of Traditional Medicine – P.M. News

By Shola Agbeyangi

In the beginning, many did not really care about it. They waved it away as a Chinese problem. But somehow, it has become a global concern and everyone is now in its awe. That, indeed, is the story of Coronavirus a.k.a. COVID-19.

Take it or leave it, the deadly virus is the latest threat to human survival. Both the rich and the poor are vulnerable to the pandemic. It knows no barrier.

Globally, as at Monday, April 27th, the lethal plague has led to the death of 207,971, with more than 3,016, 633 infected persons in over 158 countries.

This shows the massive impact the virus is having on the world. It has found a base on every continent except for Antarctica. Thousands of flight has been cancelled, music and sporting activities postponed and in some cases entirely cancelled. Some nations have been on lockdown for weeks, yet, respite seems out of sight.

Since February 24th when Nigeria recorded her index case, the figure of infected persons has risen to 1, 273 with 40 fatalities.

Lagos, being a cosmopolitan city, is the epicenter of the coronavirus in Nigeria with 731 infected persons. Cheeringly, the State also has the highest number of recovery rate of 128. The State government has been working tirelessly to curtail the virus from spreading, as it has intensified tracing of people that were exposed to infected persons in addition to other measures.

Now that orthodox medicine practitioners across the world are working overtime to discover the potent vaccine for the evil virus, is, perhaps, the most auspicious time for traditional medicine experts to stand up and be counted.

Over the years, the practice of traditional medicine has experienced slow progress in Nigeria for diverse reasons. However, things are gradually changing as the practice is now receiving an appreciable level of attention from both the Federal and the State Governments, as well as other stakeholders.

According to the World Health Organisation, WHO, a considerable number of people in Sub-Saharan Africa rely on traditional or alternative medicine to meet their primary healthcare needs. This is equally true in other places where alternative medicine usage is prevalent. The high number of people that opt for traditional medicine underscores the need to accord more prominence to it as it is being done with orthodox medicine.

The fact that about 70 per cent of the people globally use alternate medicine, at one time or the other, makes the field very crucial in the drive to ensure delivery of qualitative healthcare.

According to Nigerias Minister of Health, Dr. Osagie Ehanire, Nigeria spends over $1bn annually on medical treatment. Of course, this figure is mind-blowing. Sadly, the cure being sought overseas could be received locally if due diligence is done.

Nigerians, no doubt, are confronted with myriad of health challenges and it is in recognition of this and the need to take pragmatic steps towards addressing the situation that President Muhammadu Buhari launched the Second National Strategic Health Development Plan (NSHDP) and the Basic Healthcare Provision Fund (BHCPF) last year.

Similarly, the Lagos State government had been promoting the attainment of universal healthcare delivery system in the country as evident in the State governments massive investments in human and infrastructural facilities in the health sector.One of the steps taken by the State government was the launch of Lagos State Health Scheme (LSHS), a statewide mandatory health insurance initiative aimed at ensuring that residents have access to quality, affordable health services. This covers treatment of common adult and childhood ailments, maternal and child services, preventive healthcare services, selected non communicable diseases and surgeries.

Also, the Lagos State government has inaugurated the Traditional Medicine Board Research Group for the State Traditional Medicine Board to help address the issue of efficacy of herbal products, coupled with standardization arising from dosage administration as well as multi-various claims associated with the effects of herbal products in the management of health challenges.

Currently, there are over six thousand (6,000) registered Alternative Medicine Practitioners in Lagos State. This comprises Traditional Birth Attendants, Bone Setters, Ifa Diviners, Faith Based Birth Attendants and Healers and General Practitioners, popularly known as Eleweomo. These alternative medicine practitioners offer a wide range of services in the healthcare delivery system in the State such as child and maternal care, treatment of diseases and other form of health challenges, orthopedic treatments, amongst a host of others.

Consequently, in Lagos, traditional medicine practitioners represent a largely untapped resource base and unharnessed sector in the healthcare delivery system. This is the same sector from which countries like China, India and Turkey make billions of dollars, which is far above the budget size of many countries in West Africa. Now, the question is: Why do we continue deluding ourselves that traditional medicine is inferior and unconventional?

Without a doubt, if their activities are properly monitored and well-streamlined, traditional medicine practitioners could assist in no small measure in helping to provide the needed healthcare services to the teeming population of the State.Currently, a good number of people patronize alternative medicine practitioners for reasons ranging from belief system, affordability and potency.

There is no denying the fact that a certain level of conflict of interest exist between both the orthodox and traditional medicine practitioners. It is, however, important that they both know their limitations and be modest enough to seek each others help where necessary. The former should not deride the professional competence of the latter and vice versa.

Significantly, traditional medicine practitioners must not delve into areas that solely require the professional-know-how of medical doctors. Also, members of the public should desist from taking or mixing herbs arbitrarily. Regardless of the efficacy of any medicine, abuse portends a greater risk.

The acceptance of the above reality will help the healthcare system harness the immense benefits of alternative medicine in the delivery of universal healthcare.

One way the State government can help provide the needed impetus to traditional medicine is to offer financial and technical supports for its practitioners. That is the trend in India, China and other nations where the sector thrives. This is principally why the practice of traditional medicine has become a huge money-spinner and a potential source of employment in those countries.

On a final note, in order to fully optimize the potentials of traditional medicine in our clime, especially in primary health care delivery, all stakeholders must genuinely work together to develop inventory and documentation of various medicinal plants and herbs used in treating common diseases. This is the way it is being done in other climes. Ours must not be an exception.

Agbeyangi is Public Affairs Officer, Lagos State Traditional Medicine Board.

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COVID-19 and the prospect of Traditional Medicine - P.M. News

Promoting Ghanaian Herbal Medicine (GHM) in the Fight against the Covid-19 Pandemic – Myjoyonline.com

A deadly infectious disease of unknown etiology earlier referred to as Wuhan pneumonia was reported in Wuhan city of the Peoples Republic of China in December 2019, and by January 7, 2020, it was confirmed as a new type of coronavirus called Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2).

In February, 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) named the pneumonia as Coronavirus Disease 2019 (Covid-19). The sudden and rapid unexpected spread of Covid-19 from China to several other countries compelled the WHO to officially declare a global pandemic on March 11, 2020. People infected with SARS-CoV-2 usually show respiratory symptoms of cough, fever and lung damage, and other related two conditions such as fatigue, myalgia and diarrhea.

As of April 29, 2020, a total of 1,671 cases of SARS-CoV-2 infections had been confirmed and reported in Ghana, and over 3,100,000 cases across the globe. The reported cases continue to rise because of the rapid spread of SARS-CoV-2 via human-to-human transmission. The SARS-CoV-2 is an enveloped single stranded RNA-type beta-coronavirus and its genome sequences shared 79.5% sequence identity to severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronaviruses (SARS-CoV) [1].

The Covid-19 can be diagnosed by either laboratory testing (real-time Reverse Transcription Polymerase Chain Reaction, rRT-PCR; Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, ELIZA) or chest computed tomography scan (CT scan), but sadly, as of now, there are no approved specific antiviral drugs or vaccines available for its treatment or prevention. The general case management/treatment and prevention plans globally involve supportive care, hygienic practices, lifestyle modification and healthy diet.

The present clinical protocols for Covid-19 treatment in Ghana are solely orthodox and are yet to fully incorporate Ghanaian Herbal Medicine (GHM) regimen. It is expected that in the wake of Covid-19 pandemic, mandatory institutions, such as the Centre for Plant Medicine Research (CPMR), Traditional and Alternative Medicines Directorate (TAMD), Ghana, Food and Drugs Authority (FDA), Ghana Federation of Traditional Medicine (GHAFTRAM) and medicinal plants and natural product drug discovery experts in research institutions across Ghana would team up to develop a concerted framework and suitable natural product remedies towards integration of GHM into both current and future therapeutic options for the management/treatment of Covid-19.

Ghana is endowed with experienced and accomplished researchers in medicinal plant and natural product resources across universities and research institutes. In addition, the country has a rich diversity of medicinal plants with a large group of herbal and folk medicine practitioners.

Therefore, collaborative effort in harnessing the diverse expertise, scientific knowledge and anecdotal reports of the teams earlier mentioned can provide the required synergies to make strides in the discovery and development of plant medicine against Covid-19. It is considered that the time to act is now!

Ethnobotanical and pharmacological studies on some indigenous medicinal plants (Paullinia pinnata, Solanum torvum, Alstonia boonei, Sutherlandia frutescens, Celtis mildbraedii, Acacia kameruneensis) have effectively been used to treat a plethora of viral infections such as common cold, pneumonia, measles, small pox, hepatitis and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in Ghana [2-5].

Unfortunately, the clinical application of these potential antiviral medicinal plants has not been sufficiently explored partly due to lack of standardized product development and reasonable scientific data on traditional formulations to support safety and efficacy in humans. However, studies have demonstrated that the aforementioned medicinal plants are capable of preventing or destroying viral replication.

The objective of this write up therefore is to sensitize a national discourse on the development and use of standardized herbal medicines as complementary therapy in public health diseases including Covid-19. For this purpose, the experience of China (home of traditional medicine) in the development of traditional medical practice and the therapeutic benefits of herbal medicines can inform a national strategic agenda towards the effective integration of GHM into the health delivery system.

As earlier mentioned, the main treatment protocol for Covid-19 has been a supportive care package, which includes the combination of broad-spectrum antibiotics, antivirals, corticosteroids and convalescent plasma [6]. HIV protease inhibitors such as ritonavir and lopinavir have also been used, and very often in combination with other appropriate antibiotics to treat Covid-19 patients [7, 8].

Nucleoside analog, favipiravir (T-705) has demonstrated to effectively inhibit the activity of RNA polymerase of RNA viruses such as influenza [9]. A recent report revealed that favipiravir had significant in vitro anti-SARS-CoV-2 activity [10], but the in vivo effect remains elusive. It has been reported that remdesivir may be the most promising antiviral drug for treating Covid-19 since it has both in vitro and in vivo antiviral activity against a wide array of RNA viruses including SARS, Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) [11], and Ebola virus, and could decrease viral loads and pathology of lungs in animal models [12].

Currently, it is under clinical trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of intravenous remdesivir for patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection. Similarly, host-targeted small molecules approved for other human diseases may modulate the virus-host interactions of SARS-CoV-2. Recently, hydroxychloroquine/chloroquine, a potential broad-spectrum antiviral drug [13,14], demonstrated anti-SARS-CoV-2 activity [10], however, a preliminary study on its use on Covid-19 patients in the US revealed 16.4% higher death rate than in control patients [15].

The aforementioned data support the assertion by the World Health Organization (WHO) that there is currently no specific recommended medicine for the prevention or treatment of Covid-19. In this regard, there is a great opportunity for Ghana to explore the immense potential of GHM as a complementary therapy for Covid-19 patients. There is no gainsaying the fact that some Ghanaians might have started using GHM as treatment option for complaints consistent with Covid-19 symptoms with some success.

It is therefore time for researchers, herbal medical practitioners, regulators, other relevant scientists, the private sector and policy makers to come on board to valorize medicinal plant research and plant resources in order to find local solutions with global impact for treatment of Covid-19 in Ghana. This clarion call is underpinned by the success story of medicinal plant products utilization in the treatment of Covid-19 in China [16].

The Chinese have been pacesetters in the use of natural products in treating deadly coronavirus diseases such as SARS, MERS and Covid-19. The Health Commission in 26 provinces of China has officially declared that Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) should be used in combination with conventional medicine therapies for Covid-19 patients [16]. In February 2020, the National Health Commission (NHC) of China also reported that 60,107 confirmed Covid-19 patients (85.20% of total confirmed cases) had been treated with TCM [17].

As of March 1, 2020, a total of 303 ongoing clinical trials aimed at evaluating the efficacy and safety of treatments for Covid-19 patients had been launched in China with 50 of the trials (16.5%) assessing TCM [16]. According to the report of the National Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine, by February 5, 2020, over two-hundred (214) Covid-19 patients had been treated with a polyherbal formulation (Qing Fei Pai Du Tang) in Shanxi, Hebei, Heilongjiang and Shaanxi Provinces with excellent efficacy ( 90%) [18].

Over the years, natural products continue to provide antiviral agents that selectively kill the pathogenic organism in the presence of other living organisms. There are sufficient biochemical differences that exist between the metabolism of bacterial and mammalian cells that enable selectivity to be achieved, leading to the early development of antibacterial agents, which were safe for clinical application. However, viruses, despite their apparent simplicity, present a challenging situation in anti-viral drug design efforts due to their replicative cycle.

In this replicative cycle, viruses become physically and functionally incorporated into the host cells. Consequently, it becomes very difficult to distinguish unique biochemical features of the pathogen from the host cell to serve as drug targets for selective activity. The competitive advantage in using antiviral medicinal plants is enshrined in their multitarget and broad-spectrum activities which include attacking the viral components (envelop, nucleic acid and proteins) and viral life cycle (entry, replication, assembling and release) [19]. These medicinal plants may also stimulate the defense mechanism of the host via their immunomodulation, antioxidant, antiinflamatory and bronchodilatory properties in destroying the deadly viruses.

There are sufficient scientific data to show that antiviral Ghanaian medicinal plants possess such mechanistic features which can be unearthed to combat Covid-19. It is possible that some biomedical natural product scientists have already commenced investigation into the effect of GHM products or its components on SARS-CoV-2 in the laboratories. The diverse research efforts towards Covid-19 should be brought to a common platform by policy makers and stakeholders in order to have a unified direction and purpose for optimal utilization of research funds, research infrastructure and social uptake of research.

This therefore places a call on the government to consider substantial research support to interdisciplinary research teams in terms of funds and material resources in its Covid-19 combat plan for now and the future. For a start, the government can dedicate 5% -20% of the proceeds of the Covid-19 National Trust Fund to Covid-19 priority research needs and invite applications from local interdisciplinary research teams in collaboration with CMPR and FDA, Ghana. In a couple of months, it is envisaged that outstanding indigenous polyherbal medicines suitable for clinical trials would be developed as antiviral agents for the treatment of Covid-19 patients.

Written by:

Caleb K. Firempong (PhD),

Medicinal Plant Biochemist,

Department of Biochemistry and Biotechnology,

Faculty of Biosciences,

College of Science,

KNUST- Kumasi.

Email: ckfirempong.cos@knust.edu.gh

References

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Promoting Ghanaian Herbal Medicine (GHM) in the Fight against the Covid-19 Pandemic - Myjoyonline.com

China touts alternative remedies from bear bile to orange peel to treat coronavirus – Telegraph.co.uk

By the banks of the Yangtze River, a shiny, modern hospital block towers over Wuhan, ground zero of the coronavirus pandemic. Inside, patients consult doctors in dozens of examination rooms divided by practice cardiology, pediatrics.

It looks and feels like a Western medical facility, but treatments for ailments including Covid-19 at the Wuhan Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine are very different.

To combat coronavirus, doctors at such institutions are doling out procedures including acupuncture and moxibustion plus pills and powders, mixed with water, that use ingredients such as bear bile, goat horn, licorice, lily bulb, dried orange peel, sweet wormwood, and honeysuckle.

China is promoting traditional medicine in the absence of a coronavirus vaccine, claiming a combination of alternative and conventional treatments curbed the outbreak.

These remedies, steeped in ancient Chinese culture, have had great impact in battling coronavirus, and prevented serious cases from developing into critical ones, and ultimately lowered the death rate, Liu Qingquan, president of the Beijing Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, said in a press briefing on a government-arranged tour.

But regardless of whether herbal remedies are used, many coronavirus patients may still recover, as 80 per cent of cases are mild, said Yanzhong Huang, a senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations.

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China touts alternative remedies from bear bile to orange peel to treat coronavirus - Telegraph.co.uk

What is allowed with the easing of tightened Covid-19 circuit breaker measures from May 5 – straits times

SINGAPORE - Hair salons, cake shops and home-based food preparation businesses are among those allowed to operate as Singapore progressively eases tightened circuit breaker measures from May 5.

These measures, which kicked in on April 7 and will end on May 4, were introduced to stem the spread of the coronavirus, which has seen more than 17,000 cases in Singapore as of Friday.

- Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) needle acupuncture for pain management only, if assessed by the TCM practitioner to be essential. Cupping, moxibustion, guasha and tuina manipulative therapies are excluded.

- The sale of retail products by TCM halls with registered TCM practitioners. This is on top of the consultation and herbal dispensary services which they are already allowed to provide.

- Exercise within the common areas of strata-titled residential buildings, such as private condominiums. Residents living there can use areas such as footpaths, but must continue to practise safe distancing measures. The same rules that apply in public areas will also apply within the common areas of these developments.

- Manufacturing and onsite preparation of all food, including cakes and confectionery, ice cream, cocoa, chocolate and chocolate products, and other snacks.

- Opening of retail food outlets, including shops selling cakes and confectionery, packaged snacks and desserts. They may be open for takeaway and delivery only.

- Home-based food businesses, but only for delivery or collection. Home-based private dining will not be allowed. Delivery and collection of food orders should be done in a safe and contactless manner, by appointment. This will allow pick-ups to be spaced out and prevent bunching.

- Laundry services

- Barbers and hairdressers, for basic haircut services

- Retail of pet food andsupplies

- The resumption of services by some workplaces that run essential services. They can have their staff backonce their premises have been judged to have put in place the necessary measures. These selected companies are likely the ones that were allowed to operate before tightened circuit breaker measures were introduced two weeks ago.

The list of activities allowed to operate will be updated on the GoBusiness website. Individual shops need to get exemption specifically from the Ministry of Trade and Industry before they can start resuming operations.

- Students from graduating cohorts returning to schools in small groups for face-to-face consultations and lessons. Priority will be given to students requiring school facilities for coursework and practical sessions, and those who need additional support and remediation during the school vacation period.

- Institutes of higher learning (IHLs), especially the Institute of Technical Education, bringing back small groups of students on campus for critical consultations, projects or practicums.

- The use of condominium facilities, including swimming pools and gyms. They will remain closed, as will public sports facilities.

- Diningin at food and beverage establishments.

- Socialising in group settings such as at canteens or in pantries for workplaces that are allowed to reopen from May 12.

- Businesses offering other forms of alternative medicine, such as Indian traditional medicine and chiropractic care. While TCM outlets can reopen with some conditions, these other businesses will have to remain closed for the time being.

- Activities, events or premises that will create large groups gathering in close proximity or close contact between people.

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What is allowed with the easing of tightened Covid-19 circuit breaker measures from May 5 - straits times

8 Growing Industries to Watch in the UK – Bdaily

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The role of businesses is fluctuating constantly, especially in highly developed cultures throughout Great Britain and the United Kingdom. One year, were marveling at the prevalence of social media platforms and the next were amazed at the growth of the alternative medicine sector.

Right now, there are several up and coming companies in the United Kingdom that are growing quickly or set to explode in the coming months. Heres what you need to know about them.

The United Kingdom as a whole took a little longer than some nations to decriminalize the use of cannabis and allow its sale, but now that its there, its set to skyrocket. A recent report shows that the cannabis market could be worth more than 2.31billion by 2024 if it continues on this upward slope.

Medical cannabis and recreational cannabis are growing rapidly thanks to changing legislation, but its nothing compared to the CBD market. This legal substance thats non-psychoactive and therefore not considered a schedule D drug has been making big waves in the alternative medicine field.

Consumers are seeking out nutritional CBD oils to help them conquer their pain, anxiety, skin problems, stress, and more. Since it was legalized, it has brought in a lot of entrepreneurs and investors seeking to enter the game and make their fortune in the trade.

The construction industry throughout the UK has been defying expectation. After the Brexit vote, industry leaders believed that the construction industry would directly suffer, but that doesnt seem to be the case.

Between the years 2016 and 2018, it appears that more than 30,000 new businesses were formed in the construction industry, a 10 percent growth rate. The industry made up 13 percent of all UK businesses in 2019, making it an exciting investment opportunity or career path for any interested parties.

Immersive technology encompasses a variety of burgeoning technologies including virtual reality, augmented reality, haptics, and mixed reality. Basically, its any kind of technology made for any purpose that brings virtual content into a physical space, usually in the form of immersion.

Despite followers of this technology thinking it was ahead of its time, it seems to be a profound part of UK society. IBISWorld reports that the Immersive technology industry in the UK has grown an incredible 36 percent between the years 2014 and 2019.

UK residents, like much of the world, have discovered the convenience of having their food delivered to them, even if it costs them a few extra dollars plus a tip to have it done. With online food ordering and delivery services, consumers can have their food delivered to them even from institutions that dont offer an in-house delivery service.

Many of these platforms are structured kind of like Uber. Consumers can order food through an app, then a delivery driver will claim it, pick it up for you, and deliver it to your door. They typically collect their fees based on a commission from whats ordered and tips.

The platforms are set up as go-betweens for both restaurants and grocery stores. The growth rate of this trend is growing rapidly, and although nothing is certain, the one thing that could cause it to peak is the fact that more grocery stores and restaurants are starting to offer their own delivery services.

Over the last decade or so, the UK has made impressive strides in the digital marketing arena. The growth has been so impressive in the last few years that theres somewhat of a shortage in marketing professionals to fill the work. Firms are starting to offer higher wages for junior marketing positions to attract more people into the field.

As of now, the biggest roles involve marketing in SEO, social media, and marketing technology. These seem to be the most effective areas of marketing at the moment and therefore have the highest demand.

Marketing is somewhat of a tricky business to maintain, as the trends in successful marketing seem to change from day to day. This has lent to the rapid growth of the company. As more skills and abilities are needed to complete the work of a digital marketing campaign, more companies are hiring out their marketing needs.

The clothing industry has long been a highly competitive one without a lot of growth beneath its wings; therefore, it might seem surprising to see online mens clothing in the list of rapidly growing industries.

It seems that the demand for mens clothing in online platforms is growing steadily as more men become aware of the potential shopping opportunities online. Over the last five years, males have arguably become more fashion conscious.

Additionally, the ease of shopping online must appeal to men who dont enjoy shopping in the traditional sense. With the rising number of internet-enabled devices in the average home, its easier than ever for men to take care of their clothing needs, and the online marketplace seems to be responding to the demand.

Fintech is another area of rapid growth worth viewing, specifically in the peer-to-peer lending categories. The industry started out shaky as consumers felt uneasy about putting their financial needs in the hands of new companies without a long history of financial success.

However, the changes in market conditions, the increase in restrictions on lending, and the interest rates have driving a large number of consumers to the internet for their lending needs. It has become more and more stable and consumers are enjoying the benefits of both borrowing and contributing to these lending platforms.

Like most developed companies, the UK is now putting special emphasis on reducing their greenhouse gases and slowing climate change. The government has been working on increasing their consumption of renewable energy resources and putting in place more restrictions to help companies do the same.

This has led to a growth in both jobs and technologies to help bring about the climate change initiative. Companies are being built around providing clean energy sources and making it easier for consumers to incorporate clean energy practices at home.

It will be interesting to see how clean energy practices, and all the other industries on this list, will flourish as 2020 progresses. Were likely to see continued growth and opportunity for years to come.

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8 Growing Industries to Watch in the UK - Bdaily

CHARMAIN NAIDOO: The five stages of lockdown – Business Day

Astonishing, too, because there was no end date to our house arrest. We, none of us, murmured dissent. We embarrassed ourselves by loading our cars with toilet paper, denuding shops of cigarettes, booze, flour and yeast mix as we prepared to hunker down.

Curiously, we have continued to trust those who are in charge: Ramaphosa; health minister Zweli Mkhize; the experts such as Prof Salim Abdool Karim even minister in the presidency Jackson Mthembu, who cant tell his ventilators from his vibrators and has confused them in his press briefings.

We continue to trust them because they have been transparent, consistent, accessible and knowledgeable; theyve inspired trust by making (mostly) good decisions. (The exceptions being the cigarette and booze bans that continue to make nanny-state decisions for South Africans. And the inexplicable ban on the sale of what are, essentially, essential items: books!).

Weve been given a global thumbs up for doing a jolly good job; the World Health Organisation (WHO) has lauded the way in which there is consultation and communication with communities; that august magazine, The Economist, pronounced that we are better prepared for the onslaught because weve waged war on Aids and TB.

Were getting it right. On the medical, PR front, that is.

For most of us citizens, though, the past five weeks have been a transformative journey.Were going through the five stages of grief, drawn from the [Elisabeth] Kbler-Ross model, eponymous with the Swiss-American psychiatrist who was a pioneer in near-death studies and author of the internationally best selling 1969 book, On Death and Dying.

Our journey began early this year with denial (1). This coronavirus was a Chinese problem. Poor people of Wuhan, ground zero of the pandemic. Poor Chinese people; if you coughed you were rounded up and literally imprisoned in your home. Nobody could leave their homes. How awful.

And we blithely went on flying, traversing the globe, cavorting on beaches, sitting within spitting distance in restaurants, hugging each other. What did we know? We were OK.

Then came news that Italy was in serious trouble; then Spain, people were dying in unprecedented numbers. Suddenly it was a European problem and our anger(2) kicked in, along with a lot of racism, and fear that, perhaps, this was not a contained disease and we might not be immune.

Were still in the anger phase. With the economy in a state of collapse, unemployed people are hungry and angry, showing their hungry displeasure by rioting in the streets when promised food aid does not arrive.

A Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC) survey finds that a shocking one quarter of all South Africans have no money to buy food 24% of the people in our country.Of those polled, 63% say theyll be unable to pay their debts during the lockdown while 45% say they will have difficulty keeping their jobs.

We must trust that the presidents relief package will ease some of the pain.

While still in the anger phase, were also bargaining(3).Were happy to stay home but please can we buy cigarettes? No? OK, then how about alcohol? No? Books? No? And on it goes.

We stayed home, went online and found virtual lives, had countless Zoom meetings, parties, dinners.We bravely set out the parameters of what we should do, and did it. Until cabin fever kicked, we all went a little mad and for a lot of us depression(4) has set in.

What is the meaning of it all? Where will it end?

It has become clear that there is no easy, quick fix. Covid-19 is here to stay until a medical treatment method is found or until a vaccine is developed. Or, of course, until we get herd immunity which would mean a lot of us have to get sick to get better, an option our health service could not cope with.

Abundance or a bun dance?

Im not sure when well reach the fifth and last stage of grief, acceptance.

Im on day 15 of a Deepak Chopra 21-day abundance meditation.Chopra, a renowned alternative medicine advocate, leads the meditation in which we are encouraged to believe that there is no lack or shortage of anything in the world, only the limits we put on our thinking.

Tell that to those hungry people desperate to feed their children.

I vacillate between wanting to scream Humbug! at Chopras assertions and encouraging every hungry mother to meditate on abundance.

Would it make a difference if those with rumbling bellies tapped into the infinite source that Chopra promises? Will give us what it is we want?One of the first rules of living in the sphere of abundance, we are told, is gratitude.

Its not a new concept. Its one that I hear often in the meeting rooms of Alcoholics Anonymous.There are a gazillion Ted Talks, and YouTube-guided meditations and books and podcasts and, and, and, on the power of gratitude as a tool to foster forgiveness; to engender well-being and to take you out of yourself into a place of service.

Hard to be grateful, though, when youre living in squalor, hungry and with few prospects of things changing.

Gratitude seemed to be the theme of the week and I wonder if that is what is needed to reach the final stage of grief, acceptance.Paradoxically, some of us gratefully living in safe, sheltered homes with enough (too much) food are dealing with another problem: were getting fat.

For us, time has become something of an abstract notion, an ideal that should be mastered but its also OK if its not.

Time morphs into something else as I keep track of the days using my weekday pillbox: if its a purple Calciferol pill day then its midweek Wednesday.

As I see it, the only thing we can continue to do is trust: our government, the medical experts, the promise that the relief package will reach those who need it, and, it seems, that the universe will provide.

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CHARMAIN NAIDOO: The five stages of lockdown - Business Day

The origins of the nature we’ve rediscovered – Newsroom

Ideasroom

The roots of the parks and tree-lined streets we are enjoying during the Covid-19 lockdown lie in 19thcentury colonialists belief in the restorative power of nature

During this worrying time, many of us are rediscovering our local nature and the joy and support it can give us. This might be in our own backyard while gardening or searching for bugs with our children, or while walking through parks or along tree-lined streets.

The legacy of finding in nature something restorative, something soothing, especially during a period of terrifying change, is a constant in many of the cultures that make up Aotearoa New Zealand Pacific, Mori, European, Chinese and many others besides.

This article reflects on the green-tinged heritage of the colonial period of New Zealand: a period in which parks, tree-lined streets, walkways and public gardens were laid out, very often over a rich and important Mori past.

In a world without antibiotics, in a society in which anaesthetics were only just coming into use, people in the 19th century felt very vulnerable to a host of unseen diseases. Perhaps what we are experiencing now was something like that which people in the past felt when facing uncertain dangers.

Medicine, environment and plants

In a society lacking effective medical intervention, environment everything from trees and flowers to weather and geology assumed a power we can today only imagine. Environment affected life and death, sickness and health. The rhythms of daily life moved in time with the patterns of seasonal disease. Agues, remittent fevers, malarias and other diseases came and went at certain times of year. Travellers received doctors advice not to move to climates that differed from their own, lest their constitutions suffer.

To remedy ill health, Tohunga, doctors (both Chinese and European), charlatans, quacks and chemists plied a wide variety of plant-derived remedies on the general public. The ubiquitous eucalypt, for instance, found its way into many tinctures, potions and remedies.Some also were derived from native plants, often by drawing extensively on Mori knowledge systems.

The French-born nursing nun Mother Mary Aubert enthusiastically explored and exploited something of the medical potential of New Zealands plants by preparing and selling herbal remedies commercially and using them for the care of many Mori she ministered.

These examples show the plurality of medical thought and breadth of healing available in the early years of colonisation, but also testify to the strength of what we today call alternative medicines, as well as a relative lack of confidence in the efficacy of the medical profession.

A key 19th-century New Zealand medical concept people used to express the negative connection between health and environment was miasma.The term was frequently used as a shorthand for poisoned or impure air, with people believing decaying animal and vegetable matter poisoned the air, leading to a variety of diseases. But just as bad environments could cause illness, so good ones could be healthy.

The health-giving tree

Eucalypts were widely acknowledged not only to filter miasma from the air but also to produce lots of ozone, as well as sanitise the air.Popularised by the Australian scientist Ferdinand von Mueller (1825-96) Baron Blue Gum to his supporters word of its beneficial properties rapidly spread throughout the world, peaking in the 1870s.

According to the Baron, eucalypts could successfully combat malaria in southern Europe, render uninhabitable areas in California habitable, even redeem vast wastes of malaria-poisoned land in North Africa. In his hands, there seemed no end to its usefulness. Various distillations and concoctions of it could be rubbed on the body, taken internally, even sniffed.

Eucalypts proved especially popular in New Zealand from the 1860s, where they were favoured for their quick growth, utility for firewood, and health-giving properties.

In his 1880 article Planting in Towns, botanist JB Armstrong demanded that, for health reasons, carbon-absorbing plants be introduced into New Zealands towns. He highlighted the qualities of the Blue Gum as the most active absorber of carbon known, but also listed a number of other Australian and European species and two from New Zealand.

City parks

Tree-planting in cities, it was thought, purified stale, sickly city air. Parks enabled the lover of flowers, as one contemporary put it, to enjoy himself, and also [provided a space] where the invalid can breathe a little fresh air, mingled with the perfume of the surrounding flowers.

Provision of city parks, trees and open spaces together with sanitation, town planning and other public works furnished important weapons in the 19th century fight against disease. Establishing parks and planting trees further appealed to the spirit of the age Romanticism whose followers worshipped the spiritually and physically regenerative qualities of natureand fervently believed bringing trees and parks into cities would counter their artificiality and the poor health of inhabitants.

Driven by fears of replicating many of Europes urban problems, even before organised European colonisation began in the late 1830s, the private settlement organisation, the New Zealand Company, had laid out public parks and spaces in its town plans, green havens in its blueprints for a better world for settlers.

Dunedins town belt is one such example. Indeed, most newly established towns in New Zealand soon had land reserved for either a public park or domain, while urban gardens, aside from their value as food producers, also grew ozone-producing plants.

Park-making and the health-giving properties of those spaces enshrined the ideals of a progressive (white) New Zealand society intent on maximising its resources and improving both its nature and people.

Folks sought these shores to better themselves, explained a journalist in 1884, not merely [through] the acquisition of wealth; [but also through] the happiness of freedom and health for themselves and their children.

The writer declared thatan adequate open space or lung for the well-being of future inhabitants should be dedicated for public use and should form an important part of rational and social progress in the country.

Protecting trees and city parks

While recognising the need to remove trees to make way for cultivation in rural areas, settlers objected when parks and trees in urban areas were threatened with destruction. In 1866, Dunedin lawyer Francis Dillon Bell reacted angrily to council plans to lease out portions of the citys town belt, originally gazetted in the 1840s before formal settlement commenced.

As he explained in a letter to the local newspaper in 1866, its scenery is unsurpassed for beauty; the ground offers rare facilities for laying out with taste; and the health of the City would be immensely improved by proper use being made of these great natural advantages, and by rigidly preserving the land for the single object it was set apart for.

Bell maintained that the leasing of the town belt should be prohibited on grounds of aesthetics, health and the principles of democracy wherein a minority should not unfairly control the resources of a majority.

Now we have time to contemplate the nature on our doorstep, as well as that of our neighbourhood, its time for us to consider the origins of some of the parks we are walking in, or some of the trees and flowers we admire: for some of these are sure to have been planted in the 19th century, while the parks we walk in express the idea and concept of the 19th century that believed in the restorative power of nature.

This article is adapted from a blog post for the Garden History Research Foundation.

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The origins of the nature we've rediscovered - Newsroom

Underrated Benefits of Alternative Medicine – Flux Magazine

words Al Woods

Alternative medicines are used by a considerable number of people. Although they are not clinically prescribed medicines but claim to be quite effective and the makers claim thousands of satisfied customers all over the world.

Our body has a response to everything that goes inside. Alternative medicine promises positive effects on the body. These alternative medicines have low or zero side effects as compared to prescription medicine. Some of the underrated benefits of alternative medicines are:

Mainstream medicine treats the symptoms of any disease. It doesnt target the underlying cause itself. Many diseases share common symptoms and treating only symptoms doesnt necessarily mean hitting the actual disease.

Alternative medicines on the other hand directly treat the cause of pain or disease. This helps in eliminating the disease from its roots. These medicines are designed to cure the actual reason that is causing pain and discomfort in the body.

Most people are recommended alternative medicines along with positive changes in their routine. This improves their overall quality of life. Prescription drugs usually work for a certain time period and when the drug is flushed out from the system, the pain may return. Whereas alternative medicine is like a positive influence on our body and improves overall life quality which eases discomfort for a relatively long period.

Alternative medicines are prepared from all-natural materials and are completely safe whereas prescription medicines have a man-made formula and many chemicals are used in their preparation so they have their side effects.

Almost all mainstream medicines have some sort of side effect. These side effects are usually written on their packaging. On the other hand, alternative medicines to ensure that they dont cause harm to the body in any way. There is no such side effect and they affect the body positively.

Alternative medicine offers flexibility in treatment plans. Usually, these medicines are prescribed according to ones lifestyle. They allow flexibility in usage, whereas medical professionals will not offer any such leniency.

Alternative medicines come with healthy changes in your routine. They provide satisfaction, comfort, and zero side effects. Prescription medicines, on the other hand, put a negative influence on a person. A person feels scared and stressed during and after the treatment. Whereas alternative medicines are more like an ally that aids and promotes improvement in the body. A person feels healthier and satisfied and this affects the health of an individual positively.

Several things play an important role in the construction or damage of the human body. Stress, lack of sleep, depression and many other underlying factors can boost the disease to penetrate its root in the human body. Prescription medicine doesnt address these issues. Alternative medicine, on the other hand, treats these other factors and removes them from their core. It not only benefits in curing the disease itself, but also keeps the body healthy in the long run.

Alternative medicines have revolutionized the world. Doctors dont recommend it because they have no biological plausibility, but they cant either deny the hidden healing powers of alternative medicine. Medical science only supports proven facts from scientific research, but the human body and psyche have done wonders that no science can prove.

The alternative medicines have shown unimaginable results in fields like homeopathy, traditional medicine, chiropractic, and acupuncture. They help people in losing weight, gaining a healthy lifestyle, treating pain and what not? The human body is a natural fighter and with little aid from nature itself, it can heal itself to unimaginable limits.

Prescription medicine works as a drug and unknowingly, the body gets addicted to it. The requirement of the dose gets more and more and the side effects keep hitting the body. Alternative medicine has no such dependency. One can take, stop or change the dose of medicine according to his requirements.

Medical doctors think that alternative medicines are not more than just peoples perceptions. They are not right here. One can shed his weight, keep his diabetes in control, kick the BP away, keep joints healthy and say no to aging. All of this just cant be a perception or error of ones mind, especially if it is happening with a large population. No one can deny the positive effects of alternative medicine and the amount of goodness it is bringing in peoples life.

Alternative medicines are not only promoting a healthy lifestyle, but have also impacted the population positively. A human body gets damaged both physically and psychologically and alternative medicine, treated on both grounds.

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Underrated Benefits of Alternative Medicine - Flux Magazine

Facebook ads, conspiracy theorists pushed bleach consumption and UV ray cures – NBC News

Unfounded and harmful coronavirus treatments including those that were floated by President Donald Trump continue to spread online, evading efforts to crack down on misinformation.

Trump suggested at a White House news briefing Thursday that scientists should test beaming ultraviolet light inside the body and injecting disinfectants in an effort to find new coronavirus remedies.

Supposing you hit the body with ultraviolet or just very powerful light," Trump said. "And I think you said that hasnt been checked, but youre going to test it? Then I said supposing that you brought the light inside the body, either through the skin or some other way. And I think you said, youre going to test that, too."

Download the NBC News app for full coverage of the coronavirus outbreak

A recent Homeland Security study found that the coronavirus on surfaces may be killed by humidity and high exposure to UV rays through sunlight, indicating that the outbreak may subside in the coming summer months. The study was featured during Thursday's news briefing.

But the use of UV rays or disinfectants for human treatment has been roundly rejected by the health and science communities and embraced by conspiracy theorists and extreme alternative medicine communities. Bleach and most household disinfectants are highly toxic, and exposure to UV light has been linked to skin cancer.

Advocating for the consumption of disinfectants like bleach and the use of ultraviolet beams as medical treatments has been commonplace for years on fringe parts of the internet, and false viral rumors about curing COVID-19 by drinking industrial alcohol have proven deadly across the world in recent weeks.

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Trump's comments come as health policy experts continue to warn about the spread of coronavirus misinformation an "infodemic," as the World Health Organization has warned.

Around that misinformation, a cottage industry of fake coronavirus treatments has emerged.

Facebook pages created in late March sold UV sanitizer lights, promising a proven impact on COVID-19 and to be the most effective way to kill viruses. The companies, which had names like Beam Sanitizer, ran ads on Instagram and Facebook in March, according to Facebook's ad library. Some ads, including ones from companies including UV Sanitizers, and Uvlizer, were still active as of Friday morning. The products apparently evaded the companys ban of ads for coronavirus miracle cures instituted last month.

In an effort to quell the impact of viral social media posts, the World Health Organization released a warning in March stating that UV lamps should not be used to sterilize hands or other areas of skin as UV radiation can cause skin irritation.

Conspiracy theorists, including those that center around the QAnon conspiracy, have also advocated for drinking a diluted form of bleach called Medical Mineral Solution, or MMS.

QAnon adherents falsely believe Donald Trump is secretly running a military operation to rid the government of satanic, child-eating cannibals, and many QAnon followers believe those same people are responsible for the virus. Prominent QAnon accounts celebrated Trumps apparent nod to bleach consumption or injection, with one prominent QAnon YouTuber and MMS reseller calling it a good lung cleaner on Thursday night.

Last week, the Department of Justice announced a crackdown on the online sale of MMS, which it said is a chemical product which, when combined with the included activator, creates a powerful bleach product that the defendants market for oral ingestion.

The Department of Justice will take swift action to protect consumers from illegal and potentially harmful products being offered to treat COVID-19, Assistant Attorney General Jody Hunt said in a press release for the DOJs injunction against Genesis II Church of Health and Healing, which was selling the product online.

Viral misinformation claiming isopropyl alcohol cures coronavirus led to the deaths of hundreds and sickened thousands of Iranians in March alone. Text messages, forwarded on messaging services like WhatsApp, pushed an urban legend that some people had cured themselves of the virus with whiskey or industrial-strength alcohol.

Full coverage of the coronavirus outbreak

In the U.S., some pro-Trump media sources began noting a section about isopropyl alcohol in a Department of Homeland Security memo that was leaked to Yahoo News last week. One day after the memo was leaked, The Epoch Times, a pro-Trump media outlet, highlighted a section of the PDF about isopropyl alcohol and bleachs effect on the virus in saliva.

The leaked document does not recommend ingesting or injecting bleach at any point.

Five days later, Trump referred to disinfectants and ultraviolet light in his news briefing, citing the way it kills it in one minute.

Dr. Vin Gupta, a pulmonologist and global health policy expert who is an NBC News and MSNBC contributor, told NBC News on Thursday that injecting or ingesting any type of cleansing product into the body is irresponsible, and it's dangerous.

"It's a common method that people utilize when they want to kill themselves," Gupta said.

Ben Collins covers disinformation, extremism and the internet for NBC News.

Brandy Zadrozny is an investigative reporter for NBC News.

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Facebook ads, conspiracy theorists pushed bleach consumption and UV ray cures - NBC News

The alternative to prevention is treatment | Guest Columns – Galveston County Daily News

Hi, Orf. Your training in public health must make you an expert during this pandemic.

My training wasnt epidemiology, the study of disease in populations.

Thats a pretty academic distinction.

I suppose, but I did learn that prevention is easier and cheaper than treatment. Its the difference between saddling a horse in a stable and trying to saddle it in the field.

What does prevention entail for this virus?

Weve learned a great deal about prevention over the past centuries. In 1854, John Snow identified the Broad Street pump as the source for a cholera epidemic. He used careful mapping to identify the source of the contagion. Today, widespread testing allows us to find likely hotspots to isolate and investigate in detail. This was done in Korea leading to early control of the epidemic. The method is known as surveillance and contact tracing.

That might work in a smaller and more compact population, but how would it work in the United States with this virus?

No question that it will be harder. Especially since people can be infected and spreading the virus before they have symptoms. Moreover, it appears some people will carry the disease and infect others yet never show symptoms. Typhoid Mary was such a carrier in the early 20th century. Until we can test people at random, we will not be able to get a good handle on the extent of infection.

So, testing and social distancing will help control the epidemic. What about a vaccine?

That would make prevention much easier, but its not likely for years. Currently, we have several coronavirus diseases that need a vaccine but none has been found. Examples include MERS, SARS and Ebola. Developing a vaccine requires hard science and careful testing.

The alternative to prevention is treatment.

Like saddling that horse, its much more difficult in the field. Modern medicine can alleviate symptoms and stabilize patients, but it cannot guarantee a cure. Moreover, because this virus has clever ways hiding its infection, it becomes extraordinarily expensive and time consuming to treat.

Could there be a magic bullet to kill the infection?

Possibly, but finding one may take years. The usual sequence involves a series of clinical trials conducted in phases with careful protocols to insure the medication is working. The biggest risk is when the proposed treatment is worse than the disease. Remember, most people recover spontaneously or with mild treatment.

What are the trial phases?

The first phase tests carefully selected small groups to assess safety. This is particularly delicate in vulnerable populations, such as nursing home residents. In phase two, efficacy is tested by comparing at least two treatment groups, one of which may get a placebo or sugar pill. Confirmation occurs in phase three with a larger sample. A recent study with 333 patients tested tPA for the treatment of ischemic stroke.

Wow thats amazing.

Its far better than giving people an untested treatment that may kill them.

Dan Freeman lives in Galveston.

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The alternative to prevention is treatment | Guest Columns - Galveston County Daily News

Modi govt wants states to start producing herbal remedy for Covid-19 immunity, sends recipe – ThePrint

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New Delhi:The Ministry of AYUSH (ayurveda, yoga, unani, siddha, sowa rigpa and homoeopathy) has directed states and union territories to start the commercial production of a herbal decoction that it claims boosts immunity against Covid-19.

The directive comes after Prime Minister Narendra Modi threw his weight behind a ministry advisory urging the use of alternative medicines to strengthen immunity amid the pandemic.

Considering the importance of immunity boosting measures in the wake of COVID-19 outbreak, Ministry of AYUSH intends to promote the use of following ready-made Ayush formulation in the interest of health promotion of the masses, which has been endorsed by the honourable Prime Minister during his address to the nation on the Constitution Day, 14th April, 2020, the ministry says in a letter dated 24 April that has been sent to states and union territories.

The letter, which has been accessed by ThePrint, outlines the ingredients of the decoction thus: Basil (tulsi) leaves, cinnamon bark, sunthi (Zingiber officinale) and krishna marich (Piper nigrum).

A decoction is a concentrated liquid, which is prepared by heating or boiling a substance. It is generally a herbal medicinal preparation. The other names the ministry has used for the decoction in the letter are kwath, kudineer or joshanda.

Also read:After Modis appeal, AYUSH ministry gets over 2,000 proposals to tackle Covid-19 pandemic

The letter, which is titled Ayush health promotion product for commercial manufacturing by Ayurveda, Siddha and Unani drug manufacturers shares the complete recipe of the decoction that is to be manufactured.

The letter advises manufacturers to dry the ingredients and make a powder and put them in sachets or tea bags each of 3 grams of powder and sell to public to boost immunity.

It suggests that the preparation can also be manufactured as tablets, which can be consumed like tea or hot drink by dissolving in 150 ml of boiled water, once or twice daily.

The formulation may be manufactured and sold in generic name as Ayush Kwath or Ayush Kudineer or Ayush Joshanda, the letter adds.

The ministry also directs the AYUSH Licensing Authorities to consider granting approval to interested, licensed ASU (ayurveda, siddha, unani) drug manufacturers for the production of this herbal medicine, in accordance with the provisions of the Drugs & Cosmetics Rules, 1945.

Also read:Honey-pepper and water boiled with tulsi-haldi Modi bats for Covid-19 home remedies

On 14 April, in an address to the nation, PM Modi had recommended following AYUSH Ministrys guidelines that suggest a range of home remedies to boost immunity.

The advice offered includes frequently sipping water boiled with tulsi leaves, crushed ginger and turmeric (haldi), timely sleep, eating freshly cooked food, and practising yoga and pranayamaunder the guidance of qualified instructors.

The ministry has also urged the consumption of chyavanprash in the morning, and a herbal tea or decoction made from tulsi, cinnamon, black pepper, dry ginger and raisin once or twice a day. It also advised people to drink golden milk turmeric powder mixed into 150 ml hot milk once or twice a day.

The government had earlier recommended some siddha treatments as well, especially the Nilavembu Kudineer decoction a combination of nine herbs used to treat fevers caused by viral infections, malaria, chikungunya, among others twice a day. A decoction made by boiling Behidana, Unnab, Sapistan in water was the unani remedy advised.

Also read:Homoeopathy for coronavirus: Is AYUSH commitment to alt meds healthy or promoting quackery?

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Modi govt wants states to start producing herbal remedy for Covid-19 immunity, sends recipe - ThePrint

Kemron: the HIV/Aids cure that never was – Daily Nation

By JOHN KAMAUMore by this Author

A country can, indeed, be taken for a ride, and in June 1990 we did exactly that with the story of Kemron.

It was six years after Kenya had reported its first case of HIV infection and the world was struggling to understand the intriguing pandemic that had no cure. In the US, the disease was ravaging African-American neighbourhoods.

Out of the blue, and during his June 1, 1990 Madaraka Day address, President Daniel Moi surprised the world when he announced that Kenya had discovered a solution to the raging HIV-Aids pandemic: a drug known as Kemron, developed by the then 10-year-old Kenya Medical Research Institute (Kemri).

If there ever was a hoax we sold to the world, this was it. Later, President Moi launched the drug with a lot of fanfare, flanked by the Kemri director, Dr Davy Koech, a budding immunologist who had in the previous year replaced Dr Mutuma Mugambi as the boss.

At 29, Dr Koech was among the scientists who had managed to convince President Moi on the need to set up a medical research institute in 1979, when the Clinical Research Centre (CRC) was set up. At the time, Koech was a doctoral student in immunology at the University of Nairobi.

Before he was removed from Kemri in 2007, Dr Koech had run the institution for a record 18 years as chief executive and had been with the institution for more than two decades.

Today, the story of Kemron does not feature in the history of Kemri and is only mentioned in passing. There is a reason for that.

Kemron was unveiled as part of the achievements of the Moi regime, alongside the development of the Nyayo Pioneer Car by the University of Nairobi.

But while Kemri managed to survive the Kemron saga, the two Nyayo Pioneer car prototypes are still hidden in a godown at the Numerical Machining Complex, the successor to the Nyayo Car Project.

It has never been clear whether Moi jumped the gun or had been misadvised by Dr Koech who had published peer-reviewed scientific papers on tropical and infectious diseases and Kemris chief research officer, the University of London-trained Dr Arthur Obel, who would later claim to have found a cure for Aids in a concoction that he called Pearl Omega, and which was selling for Sh30,000 in the 1990s.

It now appears that some mistakes happened, and we could learn from them as we combat Covid-19.

Two scientific papers on the wonder drug made Dr Koech an instant global celebrity, especially among African-Americans, who thought the US Food and Drug Administration was deliberately dragging its feet in approving an Aids cure.

For instance, the Capital Spotlight, published in Washington, DC, ran several stories on Dr Koechs work and how he had rescued Black families from apocalypse.

Patti Roses book, In Search of Serenity, advised African-American families that only a community-based action plan would work in the face of increasing community ignorance and government apathy, while African researchers argued that the Western media had underreported the findings on Kemron in order to protect the status quo of more expensive drugs prescribed for Aids patients.

It would later emerge that Kemrons clinical trial was flawed, and that the claim that the low-dose oral alpha interferon improved the health of Aids patients could not be ascertained.

Actually, HIV scientists were sceptical of the drug, although it was promoted as a wonder drug in the US.

Some Harlem-based radio stations sent their reporters to Nairobi, among them Barbara Justice of WLIB-AM, who accused the US government of ignoring Kemris drug.

The saga, mired in race politics, was aptly captured in the Newsweek story Angry Politics of Kemron:

By ignoring the Kemron outcry, the government would only harden the suspicion that it is suppressing a treatment that works. In purely scientific terms, there may be more promising drugs to investigate. But where Aids is concerned, science has to accommodate the world.

Western publications claim that the original idea that oral alpha interferon could benefit Aids patients was conceived by a Texas veterinarian, Dr Joseph Cummins, who had used it to treat respiratory infections in cattle.

Award-winning journalist Larry Krotz, in his 2012 book Piecing the Puzzle: The Genesis of Aids Research in Africa, claimed that Dr Cummins had given Kemri the powdered version of the drug.

Cummins started sending a new powdered form of the drug to Koech, who had his patients ingest a daily dose of it by eating it on wafers. He gave the product the trade name Kemron and within months declared the treatment a success, wrote Krotz.

Some of Dr Koechs published reports, co-authored with Dr Cummins, claimed that 99 out of 101 patients had become healthy after ingesting the drug. Some, they claimed, had also turned HIV-negative.

Dr Koech, a fast-rising immunologist, had previously been working with Joan Kreiss on a research project among sex workers in Nairobi.

They, among other scientists, published a ground-breaking paper in the New England Journal of Medicine on their work.

It was during this period that Dr Koech announced that his patients had made remarkable recovery and Moi announced the breakthrough.

While most doctors and researchers felt Dr Koech had jumped the gun, the Kemri newsletter still described his work as a miracle drug that the world was apparently waiting for.

The only side effect reported during the 10-month study was an increased appetite in the majority of patients, said the newsletter.

After this scientific breakthrough, Finance minister George Saitoti announced that a manufacturing plant for the drug would be set up in Kenya.

Then the World Health Organisation entered the fray and Dr Koech flew to Geneva to defend his results.

Clinical trials financed by WHO in five African countries later found that the dramatic benefits that Dr Koech and Dr Obel had reported were minimal.

In light of the evidence available to date, the WHO said in a press release, the meeting concluded that low-dose interferon alpha remains an experimental drug of as yet unproved benefit for HIV infection or Aids.

The WHO called for controlled studies before any conclusions could be reached. The US Congress discussed the matter and initiated its own study of Kemron through the National Institutes of Healths Aids Research Advisory Committee.

In the final report, Gerald Medoff, a former director of infectious diseases and one of the first US physicians to establish an Aids clinic, told Congress that Kemron was ineffective as a treatment for HIV infection and strongly recommended that patients then receiving the drug seek alternative treatment.

Before WHOs bombshell that the drug was of no value, the then director of medical services, Dr Joseph Oliech, had said that Kemron would be made available at designated provincial hospitals, priced at Sh74 a tablet.

But even before the drug was taken to the market, patent wars erupted. Kemri had claimed that it owned the patent but Dr Cummins Amarillo Cell Culture Company claimed to have originally developed oral alpha interferon and had it manufactured by Hayashibara Biochemical Laboratories of Okayama, Japan. That was the powder given to Dr Koech, it said.

There is no Kenya invention involved in this technology, Dr Cummins asserted in a letter to Dr Koech, and which was quoted by the New York Times.

Soon, counterfeit Kemron drugs appeared in Uganda and there was rolling business by merchants.

One of the appointed distributors of Kemron in Uganda, Ms Casey Burns, told wire news agency Agence France-Presse that she had heard of doctors making huge profits by selling the drug.

In Parliament, the Kemron saga became the best way to embarrass the Moi regime. As later as 1994, the Ministry of Health was still lying that Kemron was effective.

With regard to Kemron, clinical trials done in Kenya and 10 other countries, under the auspices of WHO, have shown that the drug has some clinical benefits to most of the HIV/Aids patients. It is after these positive and encouraging results that Kemron was registered as a drug against HIV infection in Kenya, said a ministerial statement.

Today, Kemron is long forgotten, but it is still, perhaps, our best attempt yet to find a cure for HIV/Aids.

Kemri has come of age, and recently celebrated 40 years of existence. It has made some dramatic research and contributed a lot to the world of medicine.

Dr Koech rose to become a distinguished scholar in his own right, while his counterpart is still selling herbal medicine in Loresho, Nairobi. Such is life.

See the article here:

Kemron: the HIV/Aids cure that never was - Daily Nation

People are trying traditional/herbal medicine to fight the coronavirus – News Landed

With no medicines available against COVID-19, it is seen that a lot of people are switching towards alternative medicine as a possible source of cure for the disease. This is more pronounced in countries like China and India, where the traditional methods of medicines are valued by the population. This is raising criticism among various field professionals regarding the reliability of such therapies.

When the disease broke out initially in India, the government claimed that such therapies might be key to the cure. Similarly, China said that the traditional way of medicine might help to fight the virus. These statements gave rise to debates and speculations all around the globe. Responding to this, the WHO advised people not to rely on traditional medicines. It also later added that some people are turning towards traditional medicine to reduce the symptoms of the disease.

Read Also: Beyonc makes a surprise appearance in ABCs Disney Family Singalong

It is also seen that some WHO experts welcome the move of traditional medicines. WHOs emergency chief added that rigorous studies on traditional medicines would be like any other drug. He also said that many studies are already underway in China trying to combat the disease. However, we need enough evidence to prove such therapy or medicine is effective against the virus. Even the U.S. National Institutes of Health warned people against choosing alternative medicine over current medicinal therapies.

India is one of the major countries that gives importance to traditional medicine. Ayurveda is a major branch of alternative medicine, which is based on herbal preparations and dietary modifications. In addition, there also exist minor ways of alternative medicine called the Siddha and the Unani. The Indian government issued a set of guidelines that could enhance immunity. With criticism rising, the government later announced that they are just suggesting ways to boost immunity and not a way to cure the disease. Also, later the Ayush ministry ordered all the states to stop publicity of promising cures due to the alternative therapies.

Similarly, the Chinese government claims that a combination of alternative medicine and conventional medicine has helped the country to fight the disease. The countrys national health mission said it was treating people with herbal medicines to reduce symptoms. Also, it said that it was recommending herbal soup preparations for detoxifying lungs in affected people. While the Chinese government is making such a claim, there is no mention of any traditional medicine reports in journals and literature. Only the established conventional therapies are used to review and study the cases.

Read Also: UN estimates 300,000 future deaths in Africa due to coronavirus pandemic

Although traditional therapies have proven to exist for centuries curing various diseases, one should see that to treat and combat modern diseases. We need evidence that such therapies are reliable. While cultural sentiments are also valuable, we need to see that saving lives is more important with resources we have rather than making claims which lack support.

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Source: Associated Press

Read more here:

People are trying traditional/herbal medicine to fight the coronavirus - News Landed

Bots explores indigenous medicine to tackle Covid-19 Gaborone – The Southern Times

Mpho Tebele

Gaborone - State owned University of Botswana has said that it is forging ahead with its plans to explore alternative medicines for Covid-19.

Speaking during a press briefing, University of Botswana Vice Chancellor, Professor David Norris, said they were engaging self-indigenous knowledge adding that the coronavirus pandemic has shown that self-reliance was critical.

On its Twitter page, the University of Botswana explained that its scientists were exploring extraction of medicines from indigenous plants used traditionally as inhalants to open chest airways.

According to the university, the research by the Faculty of Healthy Sciences is on medicinal plants such as aromatic plants that have been historically rubbed on the chest to aid breathing.

Norris revealed that the University of Botswana has designed and produced a clinically sound ventilation hood and face mask for Covid-19 patients.

We have also designed and developed a face shield for Covid-19 frontline health workers. The shields are already in production while the hood and mask will soon go for production as well, he said.

With regard to the ventilation hood, it has been developed for Covid-19 patients with acute respiratory failure (those having difficulty in breathing). It offers the patient a non-invasive support for breathing.

The hood is a see-through bag worn on the head. It has a rubber neck which sticks comfortably on the neck to reasonably seal off a mixture of oxygen and clinical air supplied to the patient by trained medical staff.

The bag has three openings at the bottom, two of which serve to supply a proportionally controlled mixture clinical air and oxygen to the patient while the third one serves as an exhalation outlet-Inlet gases are readily available in hospitals either from bedside lines or pressurised containers.

What is most interesting about this hood is that it is clinically sound for any medical environment. Furthermore, it is made from locally available material. It is relatively cheap and one-size-fits-all.

The hood works within acceptable air pressure and volume that suit patients various needs. The hood also provides visibility in that the patient can be physically observed while being given attention. Most importantly, the device can be used in remote areas.

Meanwhile, the face mask which is also a see-through device covering the mouth and nose, has similar functions as the ventilation hood. Consequently, in the event of severe respiratory failure, the mask can be used together with a ventilator to induce breathing in patients. Again, the interesting part about the face mask is that it has similar functions and attributes as the ventilation hood and comes in different sizes.

According to the Dean of Faculty of Engineering Professor Benjamin Bolaane, all the three products are part of the University of Botswanas initiatives towards providing innovative solutions to societal challenges. Therefore, he said, in the wake of Covid-19, the university immediately assembled a team of engineers and product designers to specifically come up with solutions that support the national response to the Covid-19 pandemic.

See more here:

Bots explores indigenous medicine to tackle Covid-19 Gaborone - The Southern Times