Sunday, April 21, 2013

Large numbers Have Prediabetes however Don't Understand it: CDC

Just 11% of the predicted 79 million People in america who are at risk for diabetes understand they are at risk, government health officials noted Sunday.

The situation, recognized as prediabetes, describes higher-than-normal blood glucose levels that set individuals in danger of building diabetes, according to the United State Centers for Disease Control and Elimination.

 

"All of us have a huge problem with the little amount of persons who know they have it. It's up a bit from when we measured it last, but it's still abysmally low," said report author Ann Albright, director of the CDC's Division of Diabetes Interpretation.

"We require persons to know their risk and take action if they are at risk for diabetes," Albright mentioned. "We know how to prevent type 2 diabetes, or at least delay it, so there are things individuals can do, however the very first step is knowing what your risk is — to understand if you have prediabetes."

Points that put individuals at risk for prediabetes contain being overweight or obese, being physically inactive and not eating a healthy diet, Albright stated. These people should see their medical doctor and have their blood sugar levels checked, she mentioned.

Generally there is also a genetic element, Albright stated, which is why having a family history of diabetes is another risk factor. "Your genetics loads the gun, then your lifestyle pulls the trigger," she said.

element to the statement, published in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, the lack of awareness of prediabetes was the same across the board, regardless of income, education, health insurance or access to health care.

 

1 professional discovered the numbers troubling.

"Persons do not understand about prediabetes, they don't exercise, they shouldn't eat appropriate foods and we are going to have many more diabetics in the near future than we have now," mentioned Spyros Mezitis, M.D., an endocrinologist from Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.

The risk of prediabetes is that it can improvement to full-blown diabetes, with all the complications that condition entails, including heart, kidney, circulation and vision issues.

Albright mentioned that 30% or more of those with prediabetes will develop diabetes over the course of a 10 years.

The amount of People in america with diabetes is already staggering. According to the American Diabetes Association, 25.8 million kids and adults in the United States — 8.3 percent of the population — have got diabetes.

"The great information is we understand there are things you can do to avoid or delay the development of type 2 diabetes," Albright stated. "You can prevent or delay diabetes if you lose 5% to 7% of your body weight and get 150 minutes of physical activity a 7 days."

Another specialist stated it begins with what you consume.

Consuming a healthy diet that limits sugars and carbohydrates is essential, stated Dr. Joel Zonszein, representative of the Clinical Diabetes Center from Montefiore Medical Center in New York City.

Physical exercise and diet can decrease the risk of diabetes by about 58%, he mentioned, and "giving the drug metformin can decrease the risk by 31%. Life-style changes, together with metformin, which usually the American Diabetes Association suggests for prediabetes, will be really efficient."

 

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Sunday, April 14, 2013

Federal government advised to increase NHIS in order to herbal Centers

Authorities of the Aponchi Memorial Herbal Clinic has urged government to expedite action to extend the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) to cover traditional herbal medicines and services.

They argued that Ghana would benefit more if traditional medicine was given a slot in the NHIS because of the efficacy of most herbal medicines as well as the less consultancy fee charged patients who access herbal treatment at such facilities.

Aponchi Herbal Clinic, located in Tema, which has been in existence since the 1970s, specialises in the treatment of bone fractures and stroke cases.

Some past Heads of State, Ministers of state and national and international footballers are among the many Ghanaians who have benefited from the services of the Clinic.

Mr Kwasi Afriyie- Badu, Board Chairman of the Clinic led a delegation of Board members of the Clinic to the National Health Insurance Authority (NHIA) to ascertain how soon the scheme would be expanded to cover traditional herbal medicines and services.

“We are here to know why the NHIA has not mainstreamed traditional medicine and services in the NHIS after many years of establishing the NHIA law”, Mr Afriyie- Badu asked.

He further stated that the inequity and disconnect in the management and provision of health services between orthodox medicine and traditional medicine needed to be addressed.

Mr Paul Enstie-Nyankom, Managing Director of the Clinic said most people who patronised the services at the facility were the poor who demanded from the authorities to accept the health Insurance “but we are not able to and rather offer them free services instead”.

Mr Sylvester Mensah, Chief Executive Officer of the NHIA said government considers traditional medicine very important and that efforts were being made to extend the scheme to cover herbal medicine.

He said the major challenges had been on what criterion to select herbal facilities for the scheme, the benefit packages and the sustainability of the herbal facility on the scheme.

He however gave the assurance that there was an upcoming meeting to deliberate and design an Legislative Instrument (L. I.) for the new NHIS law which was enacted in December 2012.

He said the forum would consider all the issues raised and charged herbal practitioners to endeavour to send representatives to the meeting to prepare the LI which would adequately address the issues.

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Friday, April 12, 2013

Health-related Companies: The affected person is definitely Improving upon

The actual diagnosis with regard to medical care stocks and shares is actually positive.

After riding a wave of uncertainty, health care company vital signals are now turning favorable. President Barack Obama's re-election and the Supreme Court decision in June to uphold the Affordable Care Act could help to lift many subsectors in the $1.6 trillion health care industry, including biotechnology and medical devices.

As a result, more analysts are jumping on the bandwagon for health care stocks, calling them solid long-term investments. For example, Standard and Poor's Capital IQ, the ratings and research service, notes that many health care subsectors are poised to post above-average earnings growth in 2013.

But that's not all. Demographics are on health care's side, with 77 million aging American baby boomers fueling health care growth as their medical spending increases.

Health care stocks are solid three-to-five-year market plays, says Morningstar's director of health care research, Alex Morozov. "So this is a good time to invest," he says. Morozov recommends focusing on companies with strong pricing and brand power.

Still, some subsectors in health care will prosper more than others, Morozov says. Here's how to spot the winners.

Pharmaceutical Firms

Big drug companies offer a tempting perk: consistent dividends. Companies such as Eli Lilly and Co. of Indianapolis, Merck and Co. of Whitehouse Station, N.J., and Bristol-Meyers Squibb Co. of New York pay dividends hovering above 3.5%. And because big pharmaceutical firms tend to crank out strong cash flow and high profitability, they can afford to keep raising dividends.

But there's a catch. Big pharma relies heavily on blockbuster drugs such as Lipitor or Zoloft, with long patents to drive their cash flow, and many big companies ran off that all-important patent cliff in the past several years. So investing success hinges on finding drug companies with strong pipelines. These products should be in the early launch phases, says Mark Bussard, a former health care analyst at T. Rowe Price. For example, Eli Lilly has a new Alzheimer's drug in the works.

SandP Capital IQ, which is bullish on pharmaceutical companies, prefers exchange-traded funds, or ETFs, that hold Big Pharma stocks as a way to play this subsector.

Biotech Companies

The next 10 years will be biotech's golden age, says Sam Isaly, manager of the Eaton Vance Worldwide Health Sciences Fund. The reason: Biotech companies have fat pipelines, pushing through more new drugs than ever. And they're also creating breakthroughs in stubborn health problems such as cancer and heart disease, he says.

However, Bussard says new drugs also bring substantial risk should they fall short of their treatment expectations. "And no biotech company has a perfect batting average," he says.

In addition, biotech companies run the gamut from big firms to microcap companies reliant on one product, so don't invest more money in biotech than you're willing to lose, Bussard says.

Isaly suggests investing in a diversified biotech mutual fund. There are also seven biotech ETFs, which can help to spread out risk, according to ETF Database.

Medical Devices

The medical devices subsector is strongly tethered to the economy. "When it's soft, patients defer elective surgery," Morozov says. However, the outlook is increasingly promising. In 2013 and 2014, there will be upticks in medical-device demand, he says. It's also rising in emerging growth countries, Morozov says. People are aging there, too, and they're less healthy, creating demand for devices there, he says.

Bussard says some firms also are creating new therapeutics, which threaten diseases. For example, Edwards Lifesciences, a heart valve leader, is introducing a heart valve replacement that doesn't require open-heart surgery.

"That's an important step forward," he says. Bussard also likes big, stable players such as Medtronic Inc. in Minneapolis, or Kalamazoo, Mich.-based Stryker Corp., which don't rely on single products. "The smaller players have uncertain regulatory paths," he says.

Health Care Services

The health care services subsector includes hospitals and managed-care providers. "They're most affected by health care reform," says Sheryl Skolnick, co-head of research at CRT Capital Group LLC in Stamford, Conn. According to a Congressional Budget Office report, the Affordable Care Act will cover an additional 30 million nonelderly people without health insurance. However, hospital and managed-care provider stocks will be volatile for now, Skolnick says, since the government hasn't finalized all the insurance exchange rules, and some states are lagging as well.

As a result, health care services stocks will be volatile for the next 12 months, Skolnick says. "This niche is not a no-brainer," she says. Skolnick suggests investing in highly diversified companies for now until the new regulations are written.

Longer term, growth in health care services stocks will accelerate, she says. In the meantime, she advises a look at managed-care providers. Cigna Inc. of Philadelphia and Bloomfield, Conn., and WellPoint Inc. of Indianapolis are two examples because they generate lots of cash. They also have stable ongoing dividends that can be increased, she says. She also likes large, geographically diversified hospital companies. "They're strongly positioned and well-capitalized," she says.

SandP Capital IQ sees healthy growth in managed-care ETFs, adding that companies can diversify internationally.

Morozov advises focusing on strong fundamentals when picking health care stock. "Avoid the headline noise," he says.

Source: Medical care Stocks and shares: The individual is actually Enhancing

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Completely new plant herbal based an answer to cancer tumor affected individuals

Al Ain: Origanum Majorana (marjoram herb), a widespread plant with a long history of both culinary and traditional medicine, may be a promising chemo-preventive and therapeutic candidate against cancer, especially for breast cancer, a UAE research has found.

Associate professor in the Department of Biology, United Arab Emirates University (UAEU) Dr Rabah Iratni and his team of researchers have “found that the leaf extract from the marjoram herb (Origanum Majorana) can inhibit the growth of cultured invasive breast cancer cells.”

The study, which was published in the international scientific journal “PloS ONE” and “Nature Middle-East”, has a lot of significance.

UAE accounts for 15 per cent of all deaths due to cancer with breast cancer being the most frequently diagnosed one among women. It ranks only second as a cause of cancer death in women after lung cancer.

Dr Iratni established a laboratory three years ago to explore if a potent new anti-cancer drug could be found in home gardens.

Dr Iratni’s research team began studying various types of plant extracts and naturally occurring phytochemicals in the search for new compounds that could provide more effective, less toxic ways to fight different forms of cancer, with a focus on breast and lung cancer. 

So far, the laboratory has evaluated numerous phytochemicals and extracts and many of them have revealed to be highly effective against these cancers.

The result of the study leads to an effective herbal medicine for cancer cure.

“We found out that the Origanum extract (OME) elicited different effects on the invasive breast cancer cells. Lower concentrations of the extract blocked the breast cancer cells at the mitosis stage of cell division. On the other hand, higher concentrations triggered massive cell death and caused severe depletion of the mutant “tumour suppressor” protein in these cells. It is noteworthy to mention that the mutant has been reported to play a key role in cancer cell resistance to certain anti-cancer drugs and thus is considered as a potential cancer-specific target for pharmacologic interventions.”

“Hence, our findings provide strong evidence that Origanum Majorana may be a promising chemo-preventive and therapeutic candidate against cancer, especially for highly invasive triple negative mutant breast cancer, thus validating its complementary and alternative medicinal use,” said Dr Iratni.

Dr Ali Rashid Al Noaimi, UAEU vice-chancellor, commended the team of researcher.

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

PEOPLE health and fitness price range boosts wasting regarding reform, emotional health and fitness

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama's proposed 2014 budget includes an increase of $3.9 billion (2.5 billion pounds) to support the administration's healthcare overhaul, and cuts programs such as immunizations and cancer screenings that would in the future be financed through individual state insurance exchanges.

The nearly $4 billion, an increase over the amount approved for the 2012 budget, is part of the $80.1 billion budget proposed for the Department of Health and Human Services. Congress has not enacted a budget for 2013.

The budget is designed to support the implementation of the 2010 Affordable Care Act's health insurance exchanges, which are scheduled to start providing insurance coverage on January 1.

In the wake of the Newtown, Connecticut, school shooting in December, the budget also offers a new $130 million initiative to expand mental health services, including $55 million for a project to help school districts and communities identify students with mental health issues and ensure they are referred for treatment.

The budget increases funding for the Food and Drug Administration by $821 million to bolster food and drug import safety. The agency's budget comes in part from appropriations approved by Congress and in part from fees charged to industry.

The budget would cut $400 billion from Medicare, Medicaid and other programs over the next decade by implementing "payment innovations" and other reforms intended to encourage efficiency.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will receive more than $30 million to support a nationwide violent death surveillance system and conduct research on the causes and prevention of gun violence.

The budget proposal also provides $31 billion for the National Institutes of Health, and includes fulfilling the government's commitment to enhance research into Alzheimer's disease.

Source: ALL OF US wellness spending budget increases investing with regard to change, psychological wellness

Monday, April 8, 2013

Southern Africa's Mandela simply leaves medical center right after pneumonia

By Jon Herskovitz

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - Previous Southern Africa leader Nelson Mandela remaining medical center a prior weekend not too long ago for over per week associated with remedying of pneumonia which elevated worldwide issue concerning the wellness from the 94-year-old anti-apartheid innovator.

"(He) has been discharged from hospital today ... following a sustained and gradual improvement in his general condition," the South African presidency said in a statement.

A military ambulance pulled into Mandela's spacious Johannesburg home before the statement was released. The presidency said Mandela, who spent about 10 days in hospital, would receive further medical care at his residence.

This was the third health scare in four months for the Nobel Peace Prize laureate, who became South Africa's first black president in 1994 and who is a global symbol of tolerance and the struggle for equality.

He was in hospital briefly in early March for a check-up and was hospitalised in December for nearly three weeks with a lung infection and after surgery to remove gallstones.

Mandela stepped down as president in 1999 and has not been politically active for a decade. But he is still revered at home and abroad for leading the long campaign against apartheid and then championing racial reconciliation while in office.

His lung problems date from when he contracted tuberculosis as a political prisoner. He spent 27 years on Robben Island and in other jails for trying to oust the white-minority government.

Mandela's last notable public appearance was at the final of the soccer World Cup in 2010. Since then, he has stayed at his home in Johannesburg or in Qunu, the remote village where he was born in the impoverished province of Eastern Cape.

REMINDER OF MORTALITY

For several years South Africans have watched Mandela's health gradually deteriorate, reminding them of the mortality of the man whose face adorns the nation's new banknotes.

As he has receded from public life, critics say his ruling African National Congress (ANC) has lost the moral compass he bequeathed it when he stepped down as president in 1999.

"There are those in South Africa who argue that the ANC, especially under the leadership of current President Jacob Zuma, has deviated from Mandela's principles and values," said political analyst Aubrey Matshiqi.

Under such leaders as Mandela, Walter Sisulu and Oliver Tambo, the ANC gained international respect as it battled white rule.

Once the yoke of apartheid was thrown off in 1994, it began governing South Africa in a blaze of goodwill from world leaders who viewed it as a beacon for a troubled continent and world.

Almost two decades later, this image has dimmed as ANC leaders have been accused of indulging in the spoils of office, squandering mineral resources and engaging in power struggles.

Mandela was criticised for not doing enough to prevent an HIV/AIDS epidemic and for making political compromises in the transition from apartheid that have kept the black majority from benefiting significantly from South Africa's mineral wealth.

The country has some of the world's highest rates of income inequality. Nearly two decades after the end of apartheid, the average white household earns about six times more than the average black household, according to government data.

But Mandela's achievement in leading South Africa out of apartheid is seen as eclipsing any criticism.

"There was no one else in 1994 who could have pulled off what he did and kept the country together and kept those forces at bay that would have plunged South Africa into a racial, civil war," analyst Matshiqi said.

 

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Ayurvedic clinic goodies sufferers along with view problems whenever traditional medicinal practises provides forget about

An ayurvedic herbal paste known as a 'patthu' is applied to a Sri Lankan eye patient at the Gangula Veda Medura medical center in Panadura, Sri Lanka, April 6. The medical center has restored the eyesight of numerous patients who were all classified as hopeless cases by conventional medicine.

 

An ayurvedic assistant prepares individual herbal prescriptions.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Green tea argument nevertheless making because rejeton consider within

Following a long-running, sometimes bitter, battle over legal rights to the popular Wong Lo Kat brand of herbal tea, Guangzhou Pharmaceutical Holdings prevailed over Hong Kong-based JDB Group last year.

Yet it now faces another challenge - from descendants of the tea's namesake originator who recently announced they "never licensed the tea's formula" to the Guangzhou company.

A veteran in the tea war, Guangzhou Pharmaceutical countered that it has enough evidence to prove it is the rightful successor to the famous drink.

Agnes Kin-Yee Wong, great-great-granddaughter of Wong Chat Bong - or commonly known as Wong Lo Kat - and other family members held a press conference in Shenzhen on March 26. They claimed the recipe for the tea "has (always) been owned by Wong's descendants only".

Wong said she licensed the formula exclusively to JDB in 1992. She now serves as honorary chairperson of the company.

"The current Jiaduobao herbal tea and the former Wang Lo Kat herbal tea in red cans, both produced by JDB, are authorized to use the secret recipe of Wong Chat Bong," she said at the press conference.

She also raised objections to four trademark applications by Guangzhou Pharmaceutical that use portraits of Wong Chat Bong or his descendants.

She said many people are now using the name, portrait, honor and historic events of Wong Chat Bong as trademarks or in commercials.

"Many products on the market bearing the name Wong Lo Kat are actually not produced by our family, such as instant porridge," she said. "From generation to generation we have only sold herbal tea, and want to promote the herbal tea culture."

In a statement, Guangzhou Pharmaceutical responded that it "respects the time-honored brand and the descendants of its creator, and is grateful to his contribution to society".

But at a ceremony to mark the 185th anniversary of Wong Lo Kat tea on March 28, the company said Agnes Wong's opinion only represents one branch of the founder's descendants.

The company said that there are two main branches of Wong's descendants today - one in Guangzhou and the other in Hong Kong that separated from the family in the early 1890s.

Agnes Wong belongs to the Hong Kong clan.

Guangzhou Pharmaceutical's statement said there have been no business relationships between the two branches over the past century except for disputes in court, and the Hong Kong branch "did not inherit the herbal tea business".

It also claimed to have nine documents notarized by the Guangzhou Notary Office that it says proves it is the only legal successor to Wong Lo Kat herbal tea on the Chinese mainland.

A ruling by the China International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission last year banned JDB from using the trademark Wong Lo Kat after it ruled the trademark authorization from Guangzhou Pharmaceutical was invalid.

 

Medicine along with Brand new Dietary supplement with regard to Fallopian Pipe Circumstances Available these days On the internet

Wuhan Dr. Lee’s TCM Clinic is the Ministry of Health of China registered Traditional Chinese Medicine clinic which specializes in health conditions of reproductive and urinary system. A new herbal formula for treating fallopian tube conditions which is produced by Dr. Lee Xiaoping from Wuhan Dr. Lee’s TCM Clinic is now available online. This herbal formula has been approved by SIPO (State Intellectual Property Office of the P.R.C) in the year 2011.

"This herbal formula named Fuyan Pill works directly in the reproductive system to treat fallopian tube conditions, including tubal adhesions, tubal blockage, hydrosalpinx, and other tubal conditions caused by inflammations or infections," stated by global.fuyanpills.com. "Some herbs in the formula are impactful in promoting blood circulation and dissolving hard lumps. With other herbs to preserve spleen and promote Qi circulation, symptoms like abdominal pain and irregular menses can be treated meanwhile."

Chinese doctors who study Traditional Chinese Medicine have been prescribing this herbal formula for patients with fallopian tube conditions since many years. Clinical data shows that the success rate is very high on patients with short history (less than 7 years). "Patients with longer history can be permanently cured too, even a surgery may be needed," Dr. Lee explains.

According to the estimations, over 40% of women with fertility problems are bothered with fallopian tube conditions. Mostly patients are suggested to undergo surgeries, but they may face a problem - recurrence after the treatment. Experts from Wuhan Dr. Lee’s TCM Clinics have considered this problem while producing the formula of Fuyan Pill, and have made it possible for Fuyan Pill to treat inflammations and infections which are the very causes of fallopian tube conditions. "This is the reason why our formula can permanently cure fallopian tube conditions and they never recur," says Dr. Lee, the chief doctor of Wuhan Dr. Lee’s TCM Clinic.

"I was mostly concerned with the adverse effects when I was seeking for alternative treatment for tubal blockage," says Jane, a patient who has benefited from Fuyan Pill, "and I’m glad I have found one with no side effect at all. So I ordered, and my exam after 3 months of pills showed that I had two open tubes. I’m really grateful for that."

Dr. Lee says, "Fuyan Pill has only been used in our own clinic in China, after noticing the reality that it has been effectively benefiting women with fallopian tube conditions who don’t want to undergo surgery, we’ve decided to make it available to be ordered online, in order to benefit more overseas patients

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Booming Herbal Healthcare Company in India and Himalaya

It is raw materials are plant life and it bases it is products on texts dating back to millennia, yet don't dare phone India's biggest herbal health-related group a maker regarding "alternative medicine".


"It's high time people took us very seriously and did not view us as an alternative form of medicine," says Philipe Haydon, the India chief executive of the Himalaya group from his office in tech and healthcare hub Bangalore.
"This is not a feel-good product. This will save a man's life," he says, taking a box from a stack next to his desk.

 


It is marked Liv 52, a blend of six herbs used to treat liver disorders, and is one of the firms best-selling products.
In two recent clinical tests, results published in the World Journal of Gastroenterology in 2007 and in the Antiviral Research journal in 2009 showed significant results.
"It so happens that the input material is a herb but the rest of it is very very modern," said the 50-year-old, who joined Himalaya in 1979.       

The group is an Indian healthcare success story, combining ancient traditional medicine known as Ayurveda with cutting-edge technology.
Its air-tight production facility converts truck-loads of fragrant organic matter into eight million tablets a day and 10,000 bottles of medicine.


In the quality control area, men and women in lab coats sit next to conveyor belts as tablets fly past on their way into plastic pots carrying Himalaya's green and orange labels.
In the research and development wing, 250 scientists are working to find new combinations of herbs whose active ingredients are extracted and concentrated to form products that are then tested by humans.


Sales have quadrupled in the last five years to reach 12 billion rupees ($220 million) in 2012. Its target is a billion dollars in annual revenue in the next four years as it spreads into foreign markets.
Ayurvedic medicine -- which means the "science of life" in Sanskrit -- treats the physical and mental sources of illness through, for example, prescribing herbs in conjunction with yoga or massage.
Much of the knowledge, passed on by word of mouth, predates written records, but two volumes of remedies and prescriptions have survived called the Caraka Samhita and the Sushruta Samhita.
"This is where it all begins, these herbal texts that were handed down 3,000 years ago," said Haydon.


"We look at the kind of combinations (of herbs) that are suggested and from that point onwards we have a group of scientists who bring contemporary medicine and science to those texts."
The group now has 75 remedies, including treatments for hypertension, kidney stones and cholesterol.


An estimated 80 percent of India's 1.2-billion population uses Ayurvedic medicine, partly for cost reasons, with a pack of 100 Liv 52 tablets selling for just 65 rupees ($1.20).
To raise its profile and revenues, Himalaya branched out in 1996 into consumer products such as shampoos and sun cream.


Like the pharmaceuticals, these use herbs such as neem, a tree known as a "village pharmacy" in rural India due to the range of its medicinal properties.
Dotted around India but centred in the temperate foothills of the Himalayas, 4,000 producers of leaves, roots and plants are busy farming for the group on long-term contracts.
The rejection of the "alternative" tag is partly borne of bitter experience in the West, where regulations on pharmaceuticals mean Himalaya's products are classed as food supplements and thus stocked alongside other treatments that Haydon dismisses as "feel-good products".


If Himalaya must be considered "alternative", he says it should be seen only as an alternative to multi-national pharmaceutical firms.
"We are competing with GlaxoSmithKline, Beechams and AstraZeneca. They have products for diabetes, so do we. They have products for hepatitis, so do we," he says.
Overall, the resources are tiny compared with a giant like GlaxoSmithKline which recorded a $7.0-billion profit last year.


And Himalaya holds a mere eight patents having "got out of the patent race" because they offered little protection from competitors who could simply copy a combination, add a new herb and then claim it as a different product.
Jon Tilburt, an expert on modern Western and traditional medicine at the Mayo Clinic healthcare group in the United States, says he understands why Himalaya rejects the "alternative" label.
"There are plenty of herbal companies and all of them in some ways would like to have the esteem of a pharmaceutical company but then none of them wants the regulatory burden," he told AFP.
"They really want their own category of a sort of executive club for herbal players."


Generally the scientific evidence on alternative medicine is mixed, he said, echoing the World Health Organisation which has called for more funding to test traditional treatments from India, Africa or China.
And there are potential dangers that give the herbal industry a bad name.


A study published this month by Graham Lord, a professor of medicine at King's College London, warned about remedies once sold but now banned in the West that contain aristolochic acids linked to kidney failure.
"Herbal remedies around the world are not legislated as medicines," he told AFP. "Because it's herbal, it's not necessarily safe."


But also for Himalaya, the long run appears vivid -- not least as the domestic drugs marketplace is growing in an annual rate regarding 15 percent, in line with the Confederation regarding Indian Industries.

Herbal News Articles 02 April 2013

Chinese herbal remedy reduces hot flashes, study finds
Mother Nature Network
The women were given an herbal formula or placebo twice a day for 12 weeks. The team found a reduction in the frequency of daily hot flashes of 62 percent for the herbal formula group, compared to a 52 percent reduction among those taking the placebo.
See all stories on this topic »


Mother Nature Network

Himalaya, India's Booming Herbal Healthcare Company
Sudan Vision
Himalaya, India's Booming Herbal Healthcare Company. Its raw materials are plants and it bases its products on texts dating back millennia, but don't dare call India's biggest herbal healthcare group a maker of "alternative medicine". "It's high time ...
See all stories on this topic »


Sudan Vision

Tommy Little in Sex, Drugs & Herbal Tea
Herald Sun
Tommy Little knows this and uses as a base for his show Sex, Drugs & Herbal Tea, which pokes fun at twentysomething culture in Melbourne. He is quick-witted and has a strong show but delves into the serious side of growing up, which almost has the ...
See all stories on this topic »

Chinese Herbs May Reduce Hot Flashes
CHANNELS
Women taking a Chinese herbal formula experienced less than half the number of menopausal hot flashes they had before the treatment, according to a new study from Hong Kong. Among women taking an herbal mix called Er-xian decoction (EXD), the ...
See all stories on this topic »


CHANNELS

Herbal cannabis seized
Mid Ulster Mail
Herbal cannabis seized. editorial image. Published on 01/04/2013 14:51. A MAN in his 20s was arrested after suspected herbal cannabis and cash was found in a car stopped at the weekend. The incident happened at a checkpoint on the Moneymore Road, ...
See all stories on this topic »


Mid Ulster Mail

"Adventures of an Ethnobotanist in the American South: The Herbal Remedies"
Jackson Free Press
Ethnobotanical field research has documented the use of wild plants and herbal remedies from the garden for self-treatment in America. The proper collection and preparation of plants that are documented as deadly poisons will be discussed and ...
See all stories on this topic »

Chinese Herb Best Remedy to Reduce Menopause Symptom
Science World Report
The herbal formula, known as Er-xian decoction (EXD), is a type of Chinese medicine that helps in relieving menopausal symptoms. Consisting of compounds that are extracted from the roots, stems or leaves of six Chinese herbs that are later processed ...
See all stories on this topic »


Science World Report

Legal Herbal Online Introduces More New and Exclusive Herbal Incense Blends ...
DigitalJournal.com (press release)
Legal Herbal Online can be a shopper's one stop for purchasing new, all natural herbal incense blends that are 50 states compliant. The opportunity to find such exclusive offers for herbal incense wholesale and otherwise can be few and far between ...
See all stories on this topic »

A Little Respite for Women Approaching Menopause
French Tribune
This herbal formula is known as Er-xian decoction (EXD), which is prepared from roots, stem and leaves of six Chinese herbs. It was found that consumption of the product reduced the menopause symptoms by 62%. "It's a modest effect, but not a zero ...
See all stories on this topic »


French Tribune

BLD Pharmacy - Herbal Viagra Reviews
Get original Eli Lilly Viagra (Sildenafil) medicines without prescription (receipt) in the FDA approved pharmacy store. Absolute inconspicuousness, express ...
www.bladelius.com/?p=45

Chinese Herbal Formula Reduces Hot Flashes Linked To Menopause
EXD (Er-xian decoction), a Chinese herbal formula reduced the symptoms of hot flashes in perimenopausal women as well as improving their quality of life.
www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/258451.php

Ice cream shop serves up cold version of herbal sensations ...
A popular local ice cream chain is drawing on Portland's tea craze by offering flavors of the herbal kind, like chamomile, chai, kombucha and ginger. The new tea ...
www.katu.com/.../Ice-cream-shop-serves-up-cold-version-of-h...

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Letter Re: Become Your Own Herbal Doctor - SurvivalBlog.com
Jim: I enjoyed the Become Your Own Herbal Doctor article very much as herbal medicine is my current interest and latest preparation. Because I did not learn ...
www.survivalblog.com/.../letter-re-become-your-own-herbal-...