Guest guest Posted July 2, 2005 Report Share Posted July 2, 2005 apropos of this post I am forwarding this article from the current The Nation on this topic, which elucidates the current state of unpreparedness for an expected " big one " in the US and the world. It's not about nat. med, but about the misapprehension of public health realities by the current ship of fools, er, state... but thought it might be germane. I send the whole art. rather than a link, since it's available by sub only and thus I'm not sure if the url would get you there. As a matter of public health, I thought some might be interested to read. ann Avian Flu: A State of Unreadiness by Mike Davis Avian influenza is a viral asteroid on a collision course with humanity. Since the horrific autumn of 1918, when a novel influenza killed more than 2 percent of humanity in a few months, scientists have dreaded the reappearance of a wild flu strain totally new to the human immune system. The flu subtype known as H5N1, which claimed its first victims in Hong Kong in 1997, is that nightmare come true. Now endemic in waterfowl and poultry throughout East Asia, it is the most lethal strain of influenza ever seen, killing chickens, people and even tigers with terrifying ease. Although avian flu officially has taken fewer than 100 human lives so far (mainly farmers and their children in daily contact with poultry), most experts believe that H5N1 is on the verge of acquiring the new genes or amino acids that would enable it to travel at pandemic velocity across a densely urbanized world, with the potential, warns the World Health Organization, to cause 20 million deaths. Since early spring, moreover, all the biological weather vanes have been pointing in the direction of imminent pandemic. In Vietnam the virus has suddenly increased its transmissibility, with several likely human-to-human cases. In China, where officials now admit that more than 1,000 migratory birds have died, there are unofficial Internet reports--strongly denied by Beijing--of 120 related human fatalities. In an unprecedented collaboration to sound the tocsin, Nature and Foreign Affairs have recently devoted special issues to the " plausible scenario " of a pandemic that kills millions and wrecks the global economy. Governments have had ample warning, unlike the surprise of HIV/AIDS, that a new plague is coming. Indeed, Washington has had almost nine years to heed the advice of top influenza experts and mobilize the nation's resources to battle H5N1 in Asia and at home. The Bush Administration's failure to do so makes " homeland security " into a sick joke whose punch line may be a repetition of the 1918 catastrophe. This past December 3, Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) Tommy Thompson held a press conference to announce his resignation. His tenure ended with a note of frankness rare in the Bush era. Unlike the previous seven Cabinet members purged in the President's postelection housecleaning, Thompson, according to the New York Times, " gave candid, unexpected answers to questions posed to him. " Asked what worried him most, Thompson cited the threat of a human flu pandemic. " This is a really huge bomb that could adversely impact on the healthcare of the world, " killing 30 million to 70 million people, he said. The Secretary, of course, spoke with the authority of someone with access to the best medical intelligence in the world, but reporters were undoubtedly surprised that Thompson was so alarmed about a peril that his department, with its $543 billion annual budget--a quarter of the federal total--had done so little to address. In the 2005 fiscal year, for example, Thompson had allocated more funds to " abstinence education " than to the development of an avian influenza vaccine that might save millions of lives. This is but one example of the way that all Americans, but especially children, the elderly and the uninsured, have been placed in harm's way by the Bush regime's bizarre skewing of public-health priorities. On Thompson's watch, HHS and the Pentagon spent more than $12 billion to safeguard national security against largely hypothetical threats like smallpox and anthrax, even as they pursued a penny-pinching strategy to deal with the most dangerous and likely " bioterrorist " : avian influenza. The Administration's lackadaisical response to the pandemic threat (despite Secretary Thompson's personal anxiety) is only the tip of the iceberg. Over the past generation, writes Lancet editor Richard Horton, " the U.S. public-health system has been slowly and quietly falling apart. " Under Democrats as well as Republicans, Washington has looked the other way as local health departments have lost funding and crucial hospital " surge capacity " has been eroded in the wake of the HMO revolution. The government has also refused to address the growing lack of new vaccines and antibiotics caused by the pharmaceutical industry's withdrawal from sectors it considers to be insufficiently profitable; moreover, revolutionary breakthroughs in vaccine design and manufacturing technology have languished because of lack of sponsorship by either the government or the drug industry. In October 2000 the GAO scolded HHS for making so little progress in the development of an avian flu vaccine. It warned that the United States might have only a month (or less) of warning before a pandemic became widespread, and it accused HHS of failing to develop contingency plans to insure expanded vaccine-manufacturing capacity. It also pointed to a major contradiction in business-as-usual reliance on the private sector: " Because no market exists for vaccine after [flu season], manufacturers switch their capacity to other uses between about mid-August and December. " At minimum, HHS needed to find some way to keep production lines running full time, all year long, as well as diversify the number of companies committed to vaccine production. In addition, the GAO chided HHS for dithering over whether to stockpile antivirals, even as top influenza experts were begging the government to procure as much oseltamivir (Tamiflu)--the most potent antiviral medicine for avian flu now available--as possible. Finally, the audit faulted HHS for poor coordination of the respective roles of the federal government, state agencies and private manufacturers. Almost eight years of " process, " the GAO report implied, had failed to achieve a " plan " in any substantive or meaningful sense. All the flaws in HHS's influenza program (particularly the lack of an antiviral stockpile and adequate vaccine-manufacturing capacity), were inherited by Thompson, the former governor of Wisconsin, described as a " a straight shooter " by Edward Kennedy. The Clinton Administration's handling of public-health issues had certainly been disappointing, but the incoming Bush Administration was frightening to everyone who had been fighting to prevent the total meltdown of urban public health. Then, in September 2001, a new dispensation suddenly arrived in the form of poisoned letters contaminated with " weaponized " anthrax. DNA sequencing would later reveal that the anthrax strain used in the attacks probably originated from the Army's own laboratory at Fort Detrick, Maryland, yet this probable " inside job " became the principal justification for national hysteria about the threat of " bioterrorism " supposedly posed by Iraq, Al Qaeda and other alien enemies of the United States. With shockingly little debate and without any real evidence that such a threat even existed, most public-health advocacy groups, as well as such leading Democrats as John Edwards and Ted Kennedy, became ardent shareholders in the bioterrorism myth. Even the liberal Trust for America's Health glibly talked of an " Age of Bioterrorism, " as if malevolent hands were already opening little vials of botulism and ebola on Main Street. In fact, the irresistible attraction of the so-called health/security nexus was the billions that the White House was proposing to spend on Project Bioshield, Bush's " major research and production effort to guard our people against bioterrorism. " Many well-meaning people undoubtedly reasoned that, however farfetched the excuse, the Republicans were finally throwing money in a worthwhile direction and that some of the windfall would surely find its way to real needs after decades of neglect. Because the defensive preparations against bioterrorism borrowed heavily from pandemic planning, there was hope that influenza (previously shortchanged in the design of the National Pharmaceutical Stockpile in 1999) would be accorded its proper rank as a " most wanted " bioterrorist weapon. Certainly the leading influenza researchers, from the first H5N1 outbreak in 1997, have been doing their utmost to alert medical colleagues worldwide to the urgent threat of avian flu, as well as outlining the immediate steps the Bush Administration and other governments needed to take. As befitted his position as " pope " of influenza researchers, Robert Webster of Saint Jude Hospital in Memphis tirelessly preached the same sermon: " If a pandemic happened today, hospital facilities would be overwhelmed and understaffed because many medical personnel would be afflicted with the disease. Vaccine production would be slow because many drug-company employees would also be victims. Critical community services would be immobilized. Reserves of existing vaccines, M2 inhibitors and NA inhibitors would be quickly depleted, leaving most people vulnerable to infection. " Webster stressed the particular urgency of increasing the production and stockpiling of the NA inhibitor Tamiflu. Because this strategic antiviral was " in woefully short supply " --it is made by Roche at a single factory in Switzerland--Webster and his colleagues underlined the need for resolute government action: " The cost of making the drugs, as opposed to the price the pharmaceutical companies charge consumers, would not be exorbitant. Such expenditure by governments would be a very worthwhile investment in the defense against this debilitating and often deadly virus. " Failure to act would mean intense competition over the small inventory of life-saving Tamiflu. " Who should get these drugs? " Webster asked. " Healthcare workers and those in essential services, obviously, but who would identify those? There would not be nearly enough for those who needed them in the developed world, let alone the rest of the world's population. " Webster wasn't calling for miracles, just prudent action to insure an adequate antiviral stockpile. But for almost three years he and other influenza experts were ignored, as were those who argued more generally that " the best way to manage bioterrorism is to improve the management of existing public-health threats. " The Bush Administration instead fast-tracked vaccination programs for smallpox and anthrax, based on fanciful scenarios that might have embarrassed Tom Clancy. In reality, the biodefense boom was designed to build support for the invasion of Iraq by sowing the fear that Saddam Hussein might use germ warfare against the United States. In any event, Washington spent $1 billion expanding a smallpox vaccine stockpile that some experts claim was already quite sufficient. Hundreds of thousands of GIs were forced to undergo the vaccinations, but front-line health workers--the second tier of the smallpox campaign--largely boycotted the Administration's attempts to cajole " voluntary " participation. In spite of this fiasco and millions of doses of unused vaccine, the Administration pressed ahead with the development of second-generation smallpox and anthrax vaccines, as well as vaccines for such exotic plagues as ebola fever; it continued to reject the " all hazards " strategy recommended by most public-health experts in favor of a so-called " siloed approach " that focused on a short list of possible bioweapons. In testimony before the House of Representatives, Tommy Thompson explained that while " private investment should drive the development of most medical products, " only the government was in a position to develop those products that " everyone hopes...will never be needed " as a protection against " rare yet deadly threats. " The government, in other words, was willing to spend lots of money on biological threats that were unlikely or farfetched but not on antivirals or new antibiotics for the diseases that were actually most menacing, like avian flu. As biodefense morphed into the biggest show in town (growing from $1 billion in fiscal 2002 to more than $5 billion in fiscal 2004), Thompson's perverse logic soon had perverse impacts that confounded the hopes of the biodefense boom's early enthusiasts. For example, instead of spurring a welcome trickle-down of money for research on big killers like influenza, malaria and tuberculosis, biodefense projects stole top laboratory talent away from major disease research. With the National Institutes of Health's research budget barely keeping pace with inflation (after its banquet days under Clinton), there was an irresistible tropism of researchers and research projects toward biodefense windfalls. Reporting on this new " brain drain, " writer Merrill Goozner cited the case of a leading UCLA lab that phased out its " basic science research on TB in favor of studying tularemia [rabbit fever] " --a disease that has zero public-health importance--because the latter infection was " on the government's A-list of potential bioterrorism agents " and tuberculosis wasn't. (After workers at a different lab accidentally infected themselves with tularemia, some scientists expressed concern to the New York Times that " leaky " biodefense research may pose a menace to public health comparable to the still uncertain threat from bioterrorism.) To many infectious-disease experts, Project Bioshield was Bush and Thompson's version of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland: with priorities established in inverse relation to actual probabilities of attack or outbreak. " It's too bad that Saddam Hussein's not behind influenza, " complained Dr. Paul Offit, a dissident member of the government's advisory panel on vaccination. " We'd be doing a better job. " Indeed, HHS's zeal to combat hypothetical bioterrorism contrasts with its incredible negligence in exercising oversight of the nation's " fragile " influenza vaccine supply. As the GAO had warned Clinton's HHS Secretary Donna Shalala, vaccine availability in a pandemic would depend on the stability and surge capacity of existing production lines. But as shocked Americans discovered in the winter of 2003-04 and again in early fall 2004, the entire vaccine manufacturing system had decayed almost to the point of collapse. While Bush and Thompson were trying to bribe the pharmaceutical industry to join Project Bioshield, the same industry was abdicating its elementary responsibility to maintain a lifeline of new vaccines and antibiotics. Products that actually cure or prevent disease, like vaccines and antibiotics, are less profitable, so infectious disease has largely become an orphan market. As industry analysts point out, worldwide sales for all vaccines produce less revenue than Pfizer's income from a single anticholesterol medication. Thompson's successor, Mike Leavitt, has repeatedly reassured Congress and the public that the pandemic danger has the Administration's full attention and that he is receiving daily briefings on the worrisome situation in Asia. But in an extraordinary lecture at Harvard on June 1, Senate majority leader Bill Frist painted an apocalyptic picture of the chaos, even societal breakdown, that would ensue from our current lack of resources to deal with an avian flu or smallpox outbreak: " Hospitals and our long neglected public-health infrastructure would be quickly overwhelmed. In such a circumstance, panic, suffering and the spread of the disease would intensify.... Millions might perish, with whole families dying and no one to memorialize them. " The Tennessee Republican, who long boasted of being the only doctor in the Senate, also blasted the government's failure to purchase an adequate stockpile of Tamiflu. " To acquire more antiviral agent, we would need to get in line behind Britain and France and Canada and others who have tens of millions of doses on order. " Without reference to billions already wasted, Frist proposed an urgent new Manhattan Project to protect the nation against avian flu and other infectious diseases and bioterrorist agents. From the heights of the Republican leadership it is hard to imagine a more devastating admission of the Administration's dereliction of duty to the health of the nation and the world. This article can be found on the web at: http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20050718 & s=davis Visit The Nation http://www.thenation.com/ Subscribe to The Nation: https://ssl.thenation.com/ - Par Scott Saturday, July 02, 2005 11:56 AM Avian Flu Has anybody heard any thoughts on the treatment of Avian Flu? Would the various SARS protocols be more or less effective? It sounds like its primarily respiratory with some reproduction in the gut with irritation and diarrhea. Is there anybody who has looked at the cyclical nature fo the flu season this year, and if so, is this season supposed to be strong? Par Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 Isn't it the case that the excess or deficiency symptoms are a reaction of t he patient, and are due less to the specific pathogen? Wouldn't it be the case that most externally caused illnesses result in excess symptoms for children and that the elderly just don't have much energy for lots of the symptoms of excess conditions? Guy Porter In a message dated 11/21/2005 10:51:07 A.M. Central Standard Time, herbbabe writes: > One of the many stories on this topic that I've seen come through made it > sound like this flu was harder on pediatric cases, which led me to believe > that this is predominately an excess condition. However, I can't find that > specific source right now. Rather, I'm reading that the avion flu is harder > on the elderly Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 Jin yin hua and lian qiao were just mentioned here: http://news.ncmonline.com/news/view_article.html?article_id=ebb72447f318db9ca884\ 0fc605814f24 Star anise and fennel seed oil are described here: http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=f8e7a8f2ef3af0\ 397c6e1e4363f9ea89 I haven't found in " Star Anise " in herb books, but fennel fruit is Xiao Hui Xiang. Not sure if the " seed " is a misprint or correct. -al. On 11/21/05, Cara Frank <herbbabe wrote: > > I am getting more inquiries about herbal strategies. Besides Kimchee and > Star anise, does anyone have access to information on herbs? > > -- > Cara O. Frank, R.Ac, Dipl Ac & Ch.H. > President China Herb Company > Program Director of the Chinese Herb Program > Tai Sophia Institute for the Healing Arts > office: 215- 438-2977 > fax: 215-849-3338 > Www.chinaherbco.com <http://Www.chinaherbco.com> > Www.carafrank.com <http://Www.carafrank.com> > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 Regarding star anise: the ³tamiflu² content is so small you¹d have to take a toxic dose. So that¹s out. Wondering about all our typical antivirals: ban lan gen, da qing ye, huang lian, eg. cara > Jin yin hua and lian qiao were just mentioned here: > http://news.ncmonline.com/news/view_article.html?article_id=ebb72447f318db9ca8 > 840fc605814f24 > > Star anise and fennel seed oil are described here: > http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=f8e7a8f2ef3a > f0397c6e1e4363f9ea89 > > I haven't found in " Star Anise " in herb books, but fennel fruit is Xiao Hui > Xiang. Not sure if the " seed " is a misprint or correct. > > -al. > > On 11/21/05, Cara Frank <herbbabe wrote: >> > >> > I am getting more inquiries about herbal strategies. Besides Kimchee and >> > Star anise, does anyone have access to information on herbs? >> > >> > -- >> > Cara O. Frank, R.Ac, Dipl Ac & Ch.H. >> > President China Herb Company >> > Program Director of the Chinese Herb Program >> > Tai Sophia Institute for the Healing Arts >> > office: 215- 438-2977 >> > fax: 215-849-3338 >> > Www.chinaherbco.com <http://Www.chinaherbco.com> >> > Www.carafrank.com <http://Www.carafrank.com> >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 One of the many stories on this topic that I've seen come through made it sound like this flu was harder on pediatric cases, which led me to believe that this is predominately an excess condition. However, I can't find that specific source right now. Rather, I'm reading that the avion flu is harder on the elderly. Here are a few cases discussed that talk about commonaliities to those who have the worse cases of bird flu. I see that low white blood cell count is among those items that severe cases have in common. That's a WBCs are huang qi thing, right? http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve & db=PubMed & list_uids=9\ 482437 & dopt=Abstract On 11/21/05, Cara Frank <herbbabe wrote: > > Regarding star anise: the ³tamiflu² content is so small you¹d have to > take a > toxic dose. So that¹s out. Wondering about all our typical antivirals: ban > lan gen, da qing ye, huang lian, eg. > > cara > > > > > > Jin yin hua and lian qiao were just mentioned here: > > > http://news.ncmonline.com/news/view_article.html?article_id=ebb72447f318db9ca8 > > 840fc605814f24 > > > > Star anise and fennel seed oil are described here: > > > http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=f8e7a8f2ef3a > > f0397c6e1e4363f9ea89 > > > > I haven't found in " Star Anise " in herb books, but fennel fruit is Xiao > Hui > > Xiang. Not sure if the " seed " is a misprint or correct. > > > > -al. > > > > On 11/21/05, Cara Frank <herbbabe wrote: > >> > > >> > I am getting more inquiries about herbal strategies. Besides Kimchee > and > >> > Star anise, does anyone have access to information on herbs? > >> > > >> > -- > >> > Cara O. Frank, R.Ac, Dipl Ac & Ch.H. > >> > President China Herb Company > >> > Program Director of the Chinese Herb Program > >> > Tai Sophia Institute for the Healing Arts > >> > office: 215- 438-2977 > >> > fax: 215-849-3338 > >> > Www.chinaherbco.com <http://Www.chinaherbco.com> < > http://Www.chinaherbco.com> > >> > Www.carafrank.com <http://Www.carafrank.com> < > http://Www.carafrank.com> > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 Al, Star Anise is in the Chen and Chen herb book, Da Hui Xiang, right next to Xiao Hui Xiang. It is acrid, sweet and warm enters liver, kidney and spleen. Xiao Hui Xiang is listed as fennel seed, fennel friut. - Al Stone Monday, November 21, 2005 10:58 AM Re: Avian flu Jin yin hua and lian qiao were just mentioned here: http://news.ncmonline.com/news/view_article.html?article_id=ebb72447f318db9ca884\ 0fc605814f24 Star anise and fennel seed oil are described here: http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=f8e7a8f2ef3af0\ 397c6e1e4363f9ea89 I haven't found in " Star Anise " in herb books, but fennel fruit is Xiao Hui Xiang. Not sure if the " seed " is a misprint or correct. -al. On 11/21/05, Cara Frank <herbbabe wrote: > > I am getting more inquiries about herbal strategies. Besides Kimchee and > Star anise, does anyone have access to information on herbs? > > -- > Cara O. Frank, R.Ac, Dipl Ac & Ch.H. > President China Herb Company > Program Director of the Chinese Herb Program > Tai Sophia Institute for the Healing Arts > office: 215- 438-2977 > fax: 215-849-3338 > Www.chinaherbco.com <http://Www.chinaherbco.com> > Www.carafrank.com <http://Www.carafrank.com> > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 Huang qi, and also nu zhen zi is a white blood thing. Cara > One of the many stories on this topic that I've seen come through made it > sound like this flu was harder on pediatric cases, which led me to believe > that this is predominately an excess condition. However, I can't find that > specific source right now. Rather, I'm reading that the avion flu is harder > on the elderly. > > Here are a few cases discussed that talk about commonaliities to those who > have the worse cases of bird flu. I see that low white blood cell count is > among those items that severe cases have in common. That's a WBCs are huang > qi thing, right? > http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve & db=PubMed & list_uids > =9482437 & dopt=Abstract > > > On 11/21/05, Cara Frank <herbbabe wrote: >> > >> > Regarding star anise: the ³tamiflu² content is so small you¹d have to >> > take a >> > toxic dose. So that¹s out. Wondering about all our typical antivirals: ban >> > lan gen, da qing ye, huang lian, eg. >> > >> > cara >> > >> > >> > >> > >>> > > Jin yin hua and lian qiao were just mentioned here: >>> > > >> > >> http://news.ncmonline.com/news/view_article.html?article_id=ebb72447f318db9ca8 >>> > > 840fc605814f24 >>> > > >>> > > Star anise and fennel seed oil are described here: >>> > > >> > >> http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=f8e7a8f2ef3a >>> > > f0397c6e1e4363f9ea89 >>> > > >>> > > I haven't found in " Star Anise " in herb books, but fennel fruit is Xiao >> > Hui >>> > > Xiang. Not sure if the " seed " is a misprint or correct. >>> > > >>> > > -al. >>> > > >>> > > On 11/21/05, Cara Frank <herbbabe wrote: >>>>> > >> > >>>>> > >> > I am getting more inquiries about herbal strategies. Besides >>>>> Kimchee >> > and >>>>> > >> > Star anise, does anyone have access to information on herbs? >>>>> > >> > >>>>> > >> > -- >>>>> > >> > Cara O. Frank, R.Ac, Dipl Ac & Ch.H. >>>>> > >> > President China Herb Company >>>>> > >> > Program Director of the Chinese Herb Program >>>>> > >> > Tai Sophia Institute for the Healing Arts >>>>> > >> > office: 215- 438-2977 >>>>> > >> > fax: 215-849-3338 >>>>> > >> > Www.chinaherbco.com <http://Www.chinaherbco.com> < >> > " >http://Www.chinaherbco.com> <http://Www.chinaherbco.com> >>>>> > >> > Www.carafrank.com <http://Www.carafrank.com> < >> > " >http://Www.carafrank.com> <http://Www.carafrank.com> >>>>> > >> > >>>>> > >> > >>>>> > >> > >>>>> > >> > >>>>> > >> > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 Star anise and xiao hui xiang are not the same herb. Star anise is a dried fruit of a tree, and is used as a cooking spice, not as medicine to my knowledge. Xiao hui xiang, also called fennel or anise, is a seed from an herbaceous plant in the celery and carrot family. , L.Ac Acupuncture and Chinese Herbal Medicine 753 N. Main Street, Suite C-1 Cottonwood, AZ 86326 (928) 274-1373 Al Stone <al wrote: Jin yin hua and lian qiao were just mentioned here: http://news.ncmonline.com/news/view_article.html?article_id=ebb72447f318db9ca884\ 0fc605814f24 Star anise and fennel seed oil are described here: http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=f8e7a8f2ef3af0\ 397c6e1e4363f9ea89 I haven't found in " Star Anise " in herb books, but fennel fruit is Xiao Hui Xiang. Not sure if the " seed " is a misprint or correct. -al. On 11/21/05, Cara Frank <herbbabe wrote: > > I am getting more inquiries about herbal strategies. Besides Kimchee and > Star anise, does anyone have access to information on herbs? > > -- > Cara O. Frank, R.Ac, Dipl Ac & Ch.H. > President China Herb Company > Program Director of the Chinese Herb Program > Tai Sophia Institute for the Healing Arts > office: 215- 438-2977 > fax: 215-849-3338 > Www.chinaherbco.com <http://Www.chinaherbco.com> > Www.carafrank.com <http://Www.carafrank.com> > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 Jake Fratkin has a nice discussion titled " Modern Applications For Anti-Viral Therapy " you can find it at these links: http://www.drjakefratkin.com/articles.htm http://www.drjakefratkin.com/pdf/AT_Virus.pdf , Cara Frank <herbbabe@v...> wrote: > > I am getting more inquiries about herbal strategies. Besides Kimchee and > Star anise, does anyone have access to information on herbs? > > -- > Cara O. Frank, R.Ac, Dipl Ac & Ch.H. > President China Herb Company > Program Director of the Chinese Herb Program > Tai Sophia Institute for the Healing Arts > office: 215- 438-2977 > fax: 215-849-3338 > Www.chinaherbco.com > Www.carafrank.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 I think it goes without saying that if such an epidemic does arise, and I have my doubts that it will, that it will take not a symptomatic response with a couple of herbs or formulas, but a deep analysis of all factors contributing to the epidemic, and the symptom patterns that ensue. We will need to use everything we've got, all our tools, both physical and intellectual to effectively deal with such an epidemic. Are we really up to the task as a profession? On Nov 21, 2005, at 9:31 AM, wrote: > Star anise and xiao hui xiang are not the same herb. Star anise is > a dried fruit of a tree, and is used as a cooking spice, not as > medicine to my knowledge. Xiao hui xiang, also called fennel or > anise, is a seed from an herbaceous plant in the celery and carrot > family. > > , L.Ac > Acupuncture and Chinese Herbal Medicine > 753 N. Main Street, Suite C-1 > Cottonwood, AZ 86326 > (928) 274-1373 > > Al Stone <al wrote: > Jin yin hua and lian qiao were just mentioned here: > http://news.ncmonline.com/news/view_article.html? > article_id=ebb72447f318db9ca8840fc605814f24 > > Star anise and fennel seed oil are described here: > http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html? > article_id=f8e7a8f2ef3af0397c6e1e4363f9ea89 > > I haven't found in " Star Anise " in herb books, but fennel fruit is > Xiao Hui > Xiang. Not sure if the " seed " is a misprint or correct. > > -al. > > On 11/21/05, Cara Frank <herbbabe wrote: >> >> I am getting more inquiries about herbal strategies. Besides >> Kimchee and >> Star anise, does anyone have access to information on herbs? >> >> -- >> Cara O. Frank, R.Ac, Dipl Ac & Ch.H. >> President China Herb Company >> Program Director of the Chinese Herb Program >> Tai Sophia Institute for the Healing Arts >> office: 215- 438-2977 >> fax: 215-849-3338 >> Www.chinaherbco.com <http://Www.chinaherbco.com> >> Www.carafrank.com <http://Www.carafrank.com> >> >> >> >> >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 I think that as a profession we are more equipped than any other: we really do have an arsenal of herbs at our disposal. How effective they are in the real world is unknown. And I think it is OK to think about this in general terms: Epidemics ( EPF¹s that manifest in the same way, irrespective of constitional factors) is a cause of disease in Chinese medicine. I also have doubts that any epidemic will arise. IMHO, It¹s a rather transparent attempt by the Bush administration to worry us about something other than the war. Cara > I think it goes without saying that if such an epidemic does arise, > and I have my doubts that it will, that it will take not a > symptomatic response with a couple of herbs or formulas, but a deep > analysis of all factors contributing to the epidemic, and the symptom > patterns that ensue. We will need to use everything we've got, all > our tools, both physical and intellectual to effectively deal with > such an epidemic. Are we really up to the task as a profession? > > > On Nov 21, 2005, at 9:31 AM, wrote: > >> > Star anise and xiao hui xiang are not the same herb. Star anise is >> > a dried fruit of a tree, and is used as a cooking spice, not as >> > medicine to my knowledge. Xiao hui xiang, also called fennel or >> > anise, is a seed from an herbaceous plant in the celery and carrot >> > family. >> > >> > , L.Ac >> > Acupuncture and Chinese Herbal Medicine >> > 753 N. Main Street, Suite C-1 >> > Cottonwood, AZ 86326 >> > (928) 274-1373 >> > >> > Al Stone <al wrote: >> > Jin yin hua and lian qiao were just mentioned here: >> > http://news.ncmonline.com/news/view_article.html? >> > article_id=ebb72447f318db9ca8840fc605814f24 >> > >> > Star anise and fennel seed oil are described here: >> > http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html? >> > article_id=f8e7a8f2ef3af0397c6e1e4363f9ea89 >> > >> > I haven't found in " Star Anise " in herb books, but fennel fruit is >> > Xiao Hui >> > Xiang. Not sure if the " seed " is a misprint or correct. >> > >> > -al. >> > >> > On 11/21/05, Cara Frank <herbbabe wrote: >>> >> >>> >> I am getting more inquiries about herbal strategies. Besides >>> >> Kimchee and >>> >> Star anise, does anyone have access to information on herbs? >>> >> >>> >> -- >>> >> Cara O. Frank, R.Ac, Dipl Ac & Ch.H. >>> >> President China Herb Company >>> >> Program Director of the Chinese Herb Program >>> >> Tai Sophia Institute for the Healing Arts >>> >> office: 215- 438-2977 >>> >> fax: 215-849-3338 >>> >> Www.chinaherbco.com <http://Www.chinaherbco.com> >>> >> Www.carafrank.com <http://Www.carafrank.com> >>> >> >>> >> >>> >> >>> >> >>> >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 While I agree with you about the media fear that is hyping the epidemic, I have to disagree in one small way. We are POTENTIALLY equipped more than any other alternative profession. The problem is two-fold: 1) the lack of infrastructure to deal with public health issues and 2) the lack of training by a majority of CM practitioners in wen bing theory and prescriptions. On Nov 21, 2005, at 3:03 PM, Cara Frank wrote: > I think that as a profession we are more equipped than any other: > we really > do have an arsenal of herbs at our disposal. How effective they are > in the > real world is unknown. And I think it is OK to think about this in > general > terms: Epidemics ( EPF’s that manifest in the same way, > irrespective of > constitional factors) is a cause of disease in Chinese medicine. I > also have > doubts that any epidemic will arise. IMHO, It’s a rather > transparent attempt > by the Bush administration to worry us about something other than > the war. > Cara Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 Yes, it is the patient's constitution that will cause an excess or deficient type presentation, not necessarily the pathogen, and indeed there are kids who tend toward deficiency type illness (long term, low grade) and those who favor the excess type (short term, strong illness). Certainly, as Z'ev reminded us, we'll need to treat the patient's presentation, not statistics. Still, when we're talking about a pandemic, we have to have some sort of response for public health rather than everybody going to the practitioners on this list. : ) -al. On 11/21/05, DrGRPorter <DrGRPorter wrote: > > > Isn't it the case that the excess or deficiency symptoms are a reaction of > t > he patient, and are due less to the specific pathogen? Wouldn't it be the > case that most externally caused illnesses result in excess symptoms for > children and that the elderly just don't have much energy for lots of the > symptoms > of excess conditions? > > Guy Porter > > In a message dated 11/21/2005 10:51:07 A.M. Central Standard Time, > herbbabe writes: > > > One of the many stories on this topic that I've seen come through made > it > > sound like this flu was harder on pediatric cases, which led me to > believe > > that this is predominately an excess condition. However, I can't find > that > > specific source right now. Rather, I'm reading that the avion flu is > harder > > on the elderly > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 Hi All, So it might make sense to start holding forums or workshops on this very issue to get the conversation going so there is adequate information out in the acupuncture world. Encouraging review of the Wen Bing theory and prescriptions. Right? Rozz wrote: > While I agree with you about the media fear that is hyping the > epidemic, I have to disagree in one small way. We are POTENTIALLY > equipped more than any other alternative profession. The problem is > two-fold: 1) the lack of infrastructure to deal with public health > issues and 2) the lack of training by a majority of CM practitioners > in wen bing theory and prescriptions. > > > On Nov 21, 2005, at 3:03 PM, Cara Frank wrote: > > >>I think that as a profession we are more equipped than any other: >>we really >>do have an arsenal of herbs at our disposal. How effective they are >>in the >>real world is unknown. And I think it is OK to think about this in >>general >>terms: Epidemics ( EPF’s that manifest in the same way, >>irrespective of >>constitional factors) is a cause of disease in Chinese medicine. I >>also have >>doubts that any epidemic will arise. IMHO, It’s a rather >>transparent attempt >>by the Bush administration to worry us about something other than >>the war. >>Cara > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 21, 2005 Report Share Posted November 21, 2005 During the SARS business there was a lot of prophylactic herbal preparations floating around, there was no real evaluation of their effectiveness, but they consisted of typical antiviral herbs (ban lan gen, etc) plus wind heat stuff. We ran a series of articles on various aspects of the SARS epidemic which I will try to get some PDFs of for the CHA website. I think the best approach is to pay allot of attention to wen bing treatment models as they unfold in China and apply them carefully. It might make sense to set up some correspondence with Chinese authorities on treatment strategies, or, a flu case clinic online for English speaking authors. My recollection was that certain herbs became difficult to get for a while, so as individual practitioners it might make sense to stock up on usual suspects, or consider acupuncture approaches as well Par Scott. - " Al Stone " <al Monday, November 21, 2005 8:45 PM Re: Avian flu > Yes, it is the patient's constitution that will cause an excess or > deficient > type presentation, not necessarily the pathogen, and indeed there are kids > who tend toward deficiency type illness (long term, low grade) and those > who > favor the excess type (short term, strong illness). Certainly, as Z'ev > reminded us, we'll need to treat the patient's presentation, not > statistics. > > Still, when we're talking about a pandemic, we have to have some sort of > response for public health rather than everybody going to the > practitioners > on this list. : ) > > -al. > > On 11/21/05, DrGRPorter <DrGRPorter wrote: >> >> >> Isn't it the case that the excess or deficiency symptoms are a reaction >> of >> t >> he patient, and are due less to the specific pathogen? Wouldn't it be the >> case that most externally caused illnesses result in excess symptoms for >> children and that the elderly just don't have much energy for lots of the >> symptoms >> of excess conditions? >> >> Guy Porter >> >> In a message dated 11/21/2005 10:51:07 A.M. Central Standard Time, >> herbbabe writes: >> >> > One of the many stories on this topic that I've seen come through made >> it >> > sound like this flu was harder on pediatric cases, which led me to >> believe >> > that this is predominately an excess condition. However, I can't find >> that >> > specific source right now. Rather, I'm reading that the avion flu is >> harder >> > on the elderly >> >> >> >> >> >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 22, 2005 Report Share Posted November 22, 2005 I agree with Cara. When it first came out, the papers mentioned something about Bush trying to change the laws to allow him to deploy the army on domestic soil in order to be available for the coming epidemic! Martial law disguised as well-meaning planning for the great bird flu of 2005! I seemed to be the only person I knew who noticed that bit, and it hasn't been mentioned in the press since, to my knowledge. Perhaps it would be better if we prepared to treat bullet wounds... But not to digress into politics (whew...). In response to a previous comment regarding herbal treatment, certainly we have to treat the patient's presentation, but if it is an epidemic disease we must keep in mind the pattern of disease progression seen in other patients, and, as Jake Fratkin points out in his article, it may also be effective to include a large amount of anti-viral herbs. However, traditional Shang Han Lun theory would likely be at variance to this last approach. Zhang Zhong Jing's book was legendarily a response to his having survived an epidemic that killed half of his village or more, yet uses the approach of treating the mechanism exclusively. I would be curious to know how the Shang Han Lun-favoring herbalists in China fared in treating the SARS outbreak, or currently with the Avian flu. The anti-viral approach smacks to me a bit of allopathy, especially when it's at levels of 74% and such. Perhaps this high ratio of anti-viral herbs is required to make those tiny little patents effective, whereas with an actual decoction the ratio could be much less, along the lines of Yin Qiao San. -Matt Sieradski Cara Frank <herbbabe wrote: I think that as a profession we are more equipped than any other: we really do have an arsenal of herbs at our disposal. How effective they are in the real world is unknown. And I think it is OK to think about this in general terms: Epidemics ( EPF¹s that manifest in the same way, irrespective of constitional factors) is a cause of disease in Chinese medicine. I also have doubts that any epidemic will arise. IMHO, It¹s a rather transparent attempt by the Bush administration to worry us about something other than the war. Cara > I think it goes without saying that if such an epidemic does arise, > and I have my doubts that it will, that it will take not a > symptomatic response with a couple of herbs or formulas, but a deep > analysis of all factors contributing to the epidemic, and the symptom > patterns that ensue. We will need to use everything we've got, all > our tools, both physical and intellectual to effectively deal with > such an epidemic. Are we really up to the task as a profession? > > > On Nov 21, 2005, at 9:31 AM, wrote: > >> > Star anise and xiao hui xiang are not the same herb. Star anise is >> > a dried fruit of a tree, and is used as a cooking spice, not as >> > medicine to my knowledge. Xiao hui xiang, also called fennel or >> > anise, is a seed from an herbaceous plant in the celery and carrot >> > family. >> > >> > , L.Ac >> > Acupuncture and Chinese Herbal Medicine >> > 753 N. Main Street, Suite C-1 >> > Cottonwood, AZ 86326 >> > (928) 274-1373 >> > >> > Al Stone <al wrote: >> > Jin yin hua and lian qiao were just mentioned here: >> > http://news.ncmonline.com/news/view_article.html? >> > article_id=ebb72447f318db9ca8840fc605814f24 >> > >> > Star anise and fennel seed oil are described here: >> > http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html? >> > article_id=f8e7a8f2ef3af0397c6e1e4363f9ea89 >> > >> > I haven't found in " Star Anise " in herb books, but fennel fruit is >> > Xiao Hui >> > Xiang. Not sure if the " seed " is a misprint or correct. >> > >> > -al. >> > >> > On 11/21/05, Cara Frank <herbbabe wrote: >>> >> >>> >> I am getting more inquiries about herbal strategies. Besides >>> >> Kimchee and >>> >> Star anise, does anyone have access to information on herbs? >>> >> >>> >> -- >>> >> Cara O. Frank, R.Ac, Dipl Ac & Ch.H. >>> >> President China Herb Company >>> >> Program Director of the Chinese Herb Program >>> >> Tai Sophia Institute for the Healing Arts >>> >> office: 215- 438-2977 >>> >> fax: 215-849-3338 >>> >> Www.chinaherbco.com <http://Www.chinaherbco.com> >>> >> Www.carafrank.com <http://Www.carafrank.com> >>> >> >>> >> >>> >> >>> >> >>> >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 22, 2005 Report Share Posted November 22, 2005 If a virus is constantly mutating, making it difficult to treat by conventional means, how would you expect so-called 'anti-viral' herbs to work? Because of their non-specificity? As I mentioned in my last post, there are characteristics of epidemics that do repeat among large populations, but even here, the diseases go through different stages and one has to target the prescription to the stage. One cannot just throw anti-viral herbs against an epidemic without deep thought and diagnostic acumen. On Nov 22, 2005, at 5:45 PM, Matthew Sieradski wrote: > In response to a previous comment regarding herbal treatment, > certainly we have to treat the patient's presentation, but if it is > an epidemic disease we must keep in mind the pattern of disease > progression seen in other patients, and, as Jake Fratkin points out > in his article, it may also be effective to include a large amount > of anti-viral herbs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 23, 2005 Report Share Posted November 23, 2005 Maybe the question shouldn't be will/is a pandemic going to manifest, but rather can it... If it can, do we know how we are going to respond, both as individuals and as a profession? It is really good to see us starting to ask the question about infrastructure within the profession. There is an exciting initiative under way that has the power to unite our profession and allow a thorough exploration with the purpose of eventual institution building to deal with a pandemic, should it happen in our time... This initiative is still in its infancy, but will soon concretize. I don't mean this to be a teaser, but an FYI. More to follow soon. --Razia Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 14, 2005 Report Share Posted December 14, 2005 I have a friend, a priest in an animist African religion that does chicken sacrifices who came down with an intense flu, with rapid increases in body temperature to 106 for five days, requiring hospitalization. This followed a sacrifice of a NYC live chicken from food market sources that " appeared to be sweating in an air conditioned room. " The chicken was not consumed but there was blood anointment. My friend has very strong wei qi and is very careful with his (vegetarian) diet, or might not have survived. He attempted to control the fever with cold baths, but it climbed too dramatically. I wasn't there to take his pulses or observe symptoms, but I am thinking that epidemic heat formulas might be warranted. Star anise btw may contain the shikimic acid that is in Tamiflu, but it is in such low concentration that the quantity required would make a person ill. Star anise teas have been associated with seizures and other illnesses in 40 people according to US government reports. However given that Tamiflu appears not to be very effective against avian flu according to recent reports, we are better off looking to traditional and SARS formulas based on symptoms. -- Karen Vaughan, Lic. Ac Creation's Garden Acupuncture and Herbs 253 Garfield Place Brooklyn, NY 11215 (718) 622-6755 Co-Conspirator to Make the World A Better Place: Visit http://www.heroicstories.com/ and join the conspiracy See my Creation's Garden website at: http://ksvaughan2.byregion.net/ And my website at Avon Walk for Breast Cancer 2005 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 15, 2005 Report Share Posted December 15, 2005 The star anise that caused these health problems is a Japanese species, mistakenly used instead of the Chinese star anise. None of these symptoms have been reported with the Chinese species. Star anise teas have been associated with seizures and other illnesses in 40 people according to US government reports. -- Karen Vaughan, Lic. Ac Creation's Garden Acupuncture and Herbs 253 Garfield Place Brooklyn, NY 11215 (718) 622-6755 Co-Conspirator to Make the World A Better Place: Visit http://www.heroicstories.com/ and join the conspiracy See my Creation's Garden website at: http://ksvaughan2.byregion.net/ And my website at Avon Walk for Breast Cancer 2005 Chinese Herbal Medicine offers various professional services, including board approved continuing education classes, an annual conference and a free discussion forum in Chinese Herbal Medicine. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 4, 2006 Report Share Posted May 4, 2006 Am I the only one that's getting just a tad nervous about the impending bird flu? There are times I just put it out of my mind, thinking " whatever will happen, will happen " ....and then I hear 2 or 3 broadcasts about it, and I'm fully of anxiety!!! What herbal tinctures and/or remedies should we be prepared with or have on hand? Any ideas? I've got oregano essential oil, lots of tinctures both antiviral and antibacterial, hydrogen peroxide, colloidal silver, and grapefruit seed extract. That being said, it's still hard to know exactly what to take as I don't exactly want to bombard my body with a little of everything!!! Jeanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 4, 2006 Report Share Posted May 4, 2006 I've been hearing allot about Oscillococcinum for the flu....I got some at our local health food store and then noticed it at Walmart lately. I haven't had the flu or even a cold in years, but wanted to have something on hand just in case. So I can't tell you if it works...but possibly someone else has experience with it. Val Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 5, 2006 Report Share Posted May 5, 2006 The broadcasts about it----that's the main problem. I don't think that what's going on here is much more than media hype, encouraged by interested third parties. There is no evidence that it can be transmitted to humans, other than by ingesting raw bodily fluids of infected birds; nor is there any evidence that it will mutilate and cause the apocalyptic scenarios that the quack-doctors hired to pose as medical experts on the news channels say. Still, it has been found in Asia that the antioxidants of the Korean Kim Chee Sauce, when fed to poultry has largely removed the symptoms.BJ <pinemeadows wrote: Am I the only one that's getting just a tad nervous about the impending bird flu? There are times I just put it out of my mind, thinking "whatever will happen, will happen"....and then I hear 2 or 3 broadcasts about it, and I'm fully of anxiety!!!What herbal tinctures and/or remedies should we be prepared with or have on hand? Any ideas?I've got oregano essential oil, lots of tinctures both antiviral and antibacterial, hydrogen peroxide, colloidal silver, and grapefruit seed extract. That being said, it's still hard to know exactly what to take as I don't exactly want to bombard my body with a little of everything!!!Jeanne Love cheap thrills? Enjoy PC-to-Phone calls to 30+ countries for just 2¢/min with Messenger with Voice. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 5, 2006 Report Share Posted May 5, 2006 Jeanne, Do you work with a bunch of fowl? Do you have a great deal of fowl around your place? I don't think it's as great a danger as the media hypes. It's good to be aware and be somewhat prepared, however I don't think you should be anxious about it.. A friend says definitively that the bird flu will be here this fall and she's getting rid of all but a few chickens. And I'm thinking, how do you know this? What makes her think it's coming to her house. So now she's going to buy chicken from the store. I think that's a terrible idea. I think if you already have a small flock, it's better to know where your food is coming from than buy it from the store. Those birds have lived in the conditions where the bird flu expresses itself. The fifteen or so people in China that contracted the bird flue, to my knowledge, worked with thousands of birds a day in those awful poultry markets. That's just my opinion. Debra - BJ herbal remedies Wednesday, May 03, 2006 8:02 PM Herbal Remedies - Avian flu Am I the only one that's getting just a tad nervous about the impending bird flu? There are times I just put it out of my mind, thinking "whatever will happen, will happen"....and then I hear 2 or 3 broadcasts about it, and I'm fully of anxiety!!!What herbal tinctures and/or remedies should we be prepared with or have on hand? Any ideas?I've got oregano essential oil, lots of tinctures both antiviral and antibacterial, hydrogen peroxide, colloidal silver, and grapefruit seed extract. That being said, it's still hard to know exactly what to take as I don't exactly want to bombard my body with a little of everything!!!Jeanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 7, 2006 Report Share Posted May 7, 2006 i have used this. it does work! the trick tho is to use it at the very 1st sign that you are sick. will take care of ot straight away!!!! i always have a supply in my home.angelaValinda Marston <valkonig wrote: I've been hearing allot about Oscillococcinum for the flu....I got some at our local health food store and then noticed it at Walmart lately. I haven't had the flu or even a cold in years, but wanted to have something on hand just in case. So I can't tell you if it works...but possibly someone else has experience with it. Val Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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