Vested interests in healthcare June 5, 2009
Posted by Max Drake in Vested Interests.Tags: Dara O'Briaian, Raymond Tallis, Vested Interests, William House
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Here is a link to a very interesting and important paper written by local (to Bristol) retired GP, Dr William House, called ‘Vested Interests and the Greater Good’.
This paper raises some very interesting and topical points with regard to the provision of public healthcare services, and the dissemination of information about all things medical.
Elsewhere there is a lot of noise being generated at the moment over the writer, Simon Singh’s forthcoming appeal against a legal ruling that has effectively censored him from making some criticism of chiropractors. Apparently the chiropractors took him to court and won after he had accused some of their claims of being bogus because they were not backed up by evidence. Scores of eminent people have signed a petition in support of Singh, including Stephen Fry and someone called Dara O’Briain, who describes himself as a comedian (although where is the evidence?). The brilliant Raymond Tallis makes the point that:
“The use of libel laws to pre-empt questions about the efficacy of treatments that should be subject to scientific evaluation is potentially catastrophic. It represents a regression to a pre-scientific era when ‘truth’was established on the basis of personal authority of individuals. This trend towards an increasing use of libel laws makes the world less safe for patients who deserve properly evaluated treatments; that is to say for all of us.”
and of course patients do deserve properly evaluated treatments. But since when have the general population ever got what they deserved? Where vested interests have such a grip on what constitutes evidence in the first place, where an ever smaller number of people control the research agenda, and decide what gets published, promoted, or suppressed, these highly worthy sentiments from our collective social superiors start to look a bit opaque. If you’re not sure who I’m talking about you can see a list of all the people who are supporting Simon Singh and what some of them have to say here.
You’ll probably agree, there’s some great stuff there. But there’s a little bit of delusion too, isn’t there? Of course people should be able to say what they like – the inference being, as long as they are supported by the Priesthood who control what constitutes scientific inquiry. I suspect the real reason the judgement went against Singh in the first place was not to do with any desire to silence critical discussion of medical practice and scientific evidence, and more to do with the judge recognising a bully when he sees one. Of course, now everyone’s squaring up over not very much, eager to be associated with a cause that, on the face of it, looks watertight, and which has the added bonus of having ones name linked to a very select group of hoi-polloi . So, not such a great call from the Judge, as we end up having to listen to comedians tell us what’s what with regard to science.
Incidentally, when I saw Simon Singh give a presentation last year with Edzard Ernst at the Bristol Festival of Ideas, Ernst was talking about their motives for writing their anti-homeopathy book. When he introduced Singh a picture of a new top- of- the -range BMW flashed up on the screen behind them. Says it all really.
Silver River, J’accuse March 24, 2009
Posted by Max Drake in herbal medicine on TV.Tags: grow your own drugs, james wong, silver river
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Silver River productions have replied to my good friend Zoe Hawes about recent criticisms of their programme ‘Grow Your Own Drugs’, specifically referring to criticisms of some of the content of the first episode and their continuing non-mention of herbalists and herbal medicine. Here it is:
Dear Ms Hawes,
Thank you for your letter and the chance to respond to your concerns about ‘Grow Your Own Drugs’.
Our intention in the series, was simply to make remedies which are already used widely, and many have been used historically in conventional medicine. The programmes are not in fact about medical herbalism, which is a philosophical system involving diagnosis and individualised treatment, and as you rightly say, requires years of study. In the course of our research we did speak to a number of Medical Herbalists and we were grateful for their advice. The Archway Clinic contributed a number of remedies to the book of the series.
All of the recipes in the series were assessed from the point of view of safety by Prof Liz Williamson of Reading University, a qualified pharmacist and leading expert on herbal quality and the interaction of plant based medicine with conventional drugs, who is also an external examiner for one of the UK degree courses on herbal medicine. The programme also stresses that the remedies suggested are only for minor self-limiting disorders.
To answer your comments specifically: we are certainly aware of the school of thought which considers hops to be contraindicated in cases of depression, and in the ‘British Herbal Compendium’ Volume 1, edited by Bradley and published by the BHMA it does indeed say under ‘Contraindications’ that hops are ‘inadvisable in depression’, although it offers no clinical reference in support of this statement. In Mrs Grieve’s ‘A Modern Herbal’, it states that ‘Hops were at first thought to engender melancholy’, and she quotes John Evelyn’s Pomona of 1670; this may be where the idea first came from.
However, this opinion appears to be confined to the UK and not only can we find no scientific evidence for it, there also is no mention in Weiss’s ‘Herbal Medicine’ (Germany) or Tyler’s ‘An Honest Herbal’ (USA). Neither is there any mention in the German Commission E monographs, which are widely used globally as information sources, and where it states under ‘Contraindications’ that there are ‘none known’. It is true that people with depression may not require sedation, but this is true for all sedatives and is related to the fact that depression can make people sleepy – but in such a case, the patient would not need something for insomnia anyway. Furthermore, hops have actually been shown to have potential antidepressant activity in two studies, cited below. We have the full text of these papers but are unable to supply them for copyright reasons.
New insight in the neuropharmacological activity of Humulus lupulus L.
P. Zanoli, M. Rivasi, M. Zavatti, F. Brusiani, M. Baraldi. Journal of Ethnopharmacology 102 (2005) 102–106
The last paragraph of the abstract says:
‘In conclusion this report shows that Humulus lupulus CO2 extract exerts: (a) a pentobarbital sleep-enhancing property without influencing the motor behavior of rats; (b) an antidepressant activity. The same effects were elicited by the administration of the Humulus lupulus fraction containing alpha-acids, which can be considered as the major responsible for the enhanced pentobarbital effect and for the antidepressant property.’
Evidence that the alpha-acids fraction of hops reduces central GABA-ergic neurotransmission
P. Zanoli, M. Zavatti, M. Rivasi, F. Brusiani, G. Losi, G. Puia, R. Avallone, M. Baraldi
One of the paragraphs of the abstract says:
‘When dosed at 10 mg/kg, alpha-acids increased, in the elevated plus maze, open arm entries reducing in parallel those in closed arms. In the forced swimming test, we observed a reduction in the immobility time that could suggest an antidepressant-like activity.’
You may also remember the similar case of St John’s wort, which was formerly described (for example in the British Herbal Pharmacopoeia of 1983) as being contra-indicated in ‘depressive states’, but which is now one of the most widely used anti-depressants.
Regarding the dose of senna, this was taken from Martindale’s Extra Pharmacopoeia and Weiss’s “Herbal Medicine” and we advised people not exceed the dose. In the programme, James says that the dose is 6 pods per 10 ml dose, which is well within the range of 4-12 pods. In addition, the usual method for making the infusion is to soak the senna pods for 12 hours – so at 30mins, as James advocates, the amount of active ingredient extracted will be even lower. We are therefore confident that these quantities are safe; moreover to make it even weaker would be to invite criticism that it is an ineffective product, and this would be detrimental to our philosophy of providing safe but potentially effective remedies. James Wong makes it clear in the programme that the dose should not be exceeded and that viewers must know exactly how to use them. As a safeguard he directs viewers to the website, which has the details of the recipes and advice on how to use them, the Syrup of Figs recipe includes the advice that it should only be taken for few days at a time. This advice is also repeated in the book of the series.
James also makes it clear that viewers should not self medicate without first seeking professional medical advice. This is standard practice for all forms of self-medication, and is meant to ensure that not only has a proper diagnosis been obtained, but that any serious underlying disorder is not missed and that the remedy is appropriate for that condition.
Finally, a programme which intended to bring herbalism and herbalists to the attention of a wider audience would be a very interesting project, but it was not what this was particular series was meant to do. However we feel that our programme will stimulate interest in herbal remedies in general and should encourage people to look further into the subject.
Yours sincerely
‘Grow Your Own Drugs’ Production Team
Very well done Zoe for eliciting a responses, and also well done Silver River, for taking the time to reply and for so eloquently placing your cards face-up on the table. In the case of Silver River, I do acknowledge that your primary concern is to please the people who are commissioning you to make programmes – in this case the BBC – and that this is very likely to influence how you might deal with any direct or implied criticism.
I’m not going to beat around the bush here in my response to Silver River as, to my mind, this letter perfectly illustrates what is going on with herbal medicine in Britain. You have on the one hand highly trained herbalists, who daily practice an effective form of medicine that uses herbs, and who are undoubtedly the leading experts in this part of the world on the use of herbs for any medical application, at whatever level; and on the other hand you have representatives of an aspirational political class timidly attempting to curry favour with their aspirational class peers by conforming to the agenda of a dominant medical memeplex, which daily acts in its own self-interest and against those of patients, and which needs to place itself as the central authority on all matters pertaining to the human body in order to secure central government funding, academic prestige, social status etc. ad nauseum. They probably don’t know they’re doing it, so should perhaps be grateful to me, the Dave Spart of herbal medicine, for pointing it out. (a joke).
The narrative arc of their reply takes us from a position where they simply want to describe remedies that are widely used, to a reassurance that everything is fine because they keep telling the audience they shouldn’t self-medicate without getting a ‘proper diagnosis’ first. In between they quote what they hope will amount to an impressive list of texts and alleged ‘ evidence’ to illustrate some sort of expertise of their own. The overall impression given by the tone of their reply is one of effortless superiority, a sort of shrug from a group (ie. social class) of people who are completely accustomed to the feeling of being right. This is simply a continuation of the quasi-racist cultural posturing expressed within the text of the programme itself (I am a scientist, not some hippy…) which is clearly designed to position the presenter, as a representative of the programme makers themselves, as someone who the audience can trust because he represents the dominant medical memeplex. Indeed, there is an overall characterisation of herbal medicine that runs throughout the text of the programme as something which has been recently reclaimed by science, having fallen into disuse. This is suggested by overt statements to that effect, and by the apparent flaunting of a proprietary air by the scientist – presenter as he wafts through his pristine kitchen/TV studio telling us how it is.
However, a problem arises when you start to look into the evidence they select to support their position. They are, as any psychotherapist would immediately observe, ‘in denial’. Take a look at their response to the hops/depression issue. We are told they are certainly aware of the ’school of thought’ that links hops with melancholia, quoting three text sources, but conclude there is no clinical evidence. Once again, no mention of herbalists and our vast experience of using hops in a modern therapeutic context. And despite James Wong’s statement at the beginning of every programme that there isn’t a lot of evidence about herbs because companies cannot patent them, but that they are highly effective anyway. How do they know? Who are the ghosts that plant this knowledge of herbal efficacy (or, as JW memorably said in last nights prog, ‘effectivity’) into their unwitting minds? Who decides when to believe some piece of bilge written in a book by Varo Tyler, and when to rule out any input from a large group of contemporary experts? Anyway, they then go on to do the sort of thing that people who have very little understanding of science do when they are trying to demonstrate how scientific they are, and quote a few papers where, for example, extracts of hops that are never used by herbalists are force fed or injected into rats who are then drowned but found to not be suffering from depression. Jonathan Swift of Gullivers Travel fame would be having a good old chortle at this if he were around to today. Of course, there is no reason why Silver River would be appraised of the very poor quality of the evidence they quote to support their position, as Prof. Williams is not a herbalist. A good place for them to start would be Jonathan Treasure’s brilliant critique of the German Commission E monographs at http://www.herbological.com/commisione_review.htm. I would strongly urge Professor Williamson, at least, to take a look at this critique.
Anyway, perhaps i am splitting hairs about their presentation of evidence, because whatever they say we are bound to disagree as they are still not acknowledging their debt to herbalists, herbalism, herbal medicine etc. (however you want to dress it up). But lets return to the narrative arc of the letter and look at the internal logic of their reply. Try contrasting their opening sentence: “Our intention in the series, was simply to make remedies which are already used widely, and many have been used historically in conventional medicine. The programmes are not in fact about medical herbalism, which is a philosophical system involving diagnosis and individualised treatment, and as you rightly say, requires years of study”, with the later statement “James also makes it clear that viewers should not self medicate without first seeking professional medical advice”. It is quite clear who they mean when they talk about ‘professional medical advice’. They don’t mean people who are qualified to advise on the use of herbs, whose first priority is patient safety, who are trained in orthodox medical diagnosis to be able to recognise any red-flag conditions that would require referral on to specialist medical services, and who have a very thorough grounding in research methods, assessment of evidence, and quality control in the production of herbal medicines, and any possible herb/drug interactions with conventional drugs – no, they mean people who have never had any training in the use of herbs as medicines, who, like themselves, are unaware of the depth and quality of research, observation, and tradition pertaining to the safe use of herbs over several milennia, but who have one redeeming feature that qualifies them as permission givers – they are sponsored by a ruling class who own and profit from the dominant medical memeplex.
Sorry, Silver River, if that sounds a bit harsh. Its just that you come across as being a bit ignorant. Surely when you decided to make a programme involving herbal medicines you would at some point have encountered a discourse on how holistic health models contrast with the dominant biomedical model? Herbal medicines and holistic practice have largely been excluded from NHS funding and the dominant medical model not because the knowledge has been lost or forgotten, but for thin political reasons, entirely fabricated and supported by vested interests. Herbal medicines are predominantly used, as they have always been used, as part of a holistic therapeutic model. Of course, they are also used, in the context of biomedicine, for specific applications – where, as your programme keeps demonstrating, they are also very effective. In choosing to exclude herbalists, by not mentioning the expressions ‘herbalism’, ‘herbalists’, or ‘herbal medicine’; by constantly repeating the deliberate misinformation on how herbal medicine has been lost in order to reinforce your credentials as the discoverers and new owners of this body of knowledge, you are actively contributing to the discourse, and clearly nailing your colours to the mast.
Tapping birch sap March 20, 2009
Posted by Max Drake in herbal medicine on TV.Tags: base syrup, birch sap, birch syrup, birch tapping, bristol, herbalist
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Thought I’d have a crack at doing some TV, seeing as it was such a nice day. Just click on the link below and it’ll take you to the video.
Birch Tapping with Max Drake from Rik Lander on Vimeo.
Grow your own drugs and the missing herbalist part 3 March 19, 2009
Posted by Max Drake in herbal medicine on TV.Tags: grow your own drugs, james wong
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What an absolutley fab programme this is! Yes! That is what I really think! It is getting 2.6 milllion viewers – very good for a first series on BBC2, so very likely to get recommissioned for a second series.
Now, I just want to make something perfectly clear here. I am a scientist, not a hippy. Whilst this blog can in no way be considered a clinical trial, it has been found to be remarkably effective. So if anyone from Silver River is reading, I’m obviously your man if you’re looking for a little baldy sidekick herbalist for the next series – which is obviously the way to go. When you’re thinking about that difficult second series – picture it now: you’re walking into the commissioning exec’s office in Shepherd’s Bush or wherever, and you know they’re going to be expecting a ‘wow!’ moment. No ‘wow!’ moment, no second series. You’ve tried James Wong with a mohican, but it kept flopping over. You’ve thought about getting him to look into the camera, but that’s obviously not going to work. No. What you need is a sidekick herbalist. Better still, a sidekick herbalist with a glove puppet. A gay scouse glove puppet and a pet snake. Possibly on ice, although that’s really been done quite a lot already. Explosive first episode please -motorbikes, helicopters, a chase, that sort of thing, and lots of hawthorn blossom (better get your arses in gear for that one).
Actually, on a lighter note, how likely is it there’ll be any reference to herbalists in the second series?
Grow Your Own Drugs and The Missing Herbalist part 2 March 9, 2009
Posted by Max Drake in herbal medicine on TV.Tags: acne, calendula, grow your own drugs, herbal medicine, james wong
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Just watched the second ep. of Silver River’s programme and must say it was a huuuuge improvement on the first one – but still, of course, no mention or sign of a herbalist. I expect that’s the way it’s going to stay now. We herbalists are just a no-go zone as far as the makers of this show are concerned. In fact James Wong, who I must admit is starting to grow on me (better get some ointment!), said a couple of times how all this herbal knowledge has been lost, as though he is the one that has rediscovered it and is bringing it back! I mean, he must have got these recipes from somewhere – he can’t have made them all up on his own. My guess is that, rather than trawling through medieval manuscripts that he’s rescued from the bowels of the Kew Herbarium, he got them from a contemporary herbalist or two. So why no mention, pretty boy?
By the way, that was an odd way to use calendula. Usually its the resins you want in a calendula cream, which aren’t soluble in water, so you’d want to extract them in oil or high percentage ethanol. Even so, he still managed to get a result with the acne people. It was quite telling when the poor bloke with the facial acne said it had cleared up significantly when he had restricted his diet and done a colon cleanse – a herbalist would have made more of this as we tend to treat acne from the inside, by looking at diet and digestive function.
Looking forward to the next one……
Grow Your Own Drugs and the missing herbalist March 5, 2009
Posted by Max Drake in herbal medicine on TV.Tags: edzard ernst, grow your own drugs, herbal medicine, james wong
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The most notable thing about the new BBC programme ‘Grow Your Own Drugs’ is the complete absence of any mention of herbalists. Why is this? What do the commissioning editors at the BBC have to gain from excluding herbalists from a magazine style programme that is clearly about herbal medicine?
Perhaps it would be better to ask what they would have to gain from including a herbalist or two. Looking at the first episode we were shown how filling a pillow with hops is very good for insomnia. Whilst the presenter, James Wong, was eager to point out that this in no way constituted a clinical trial (I am a scientist, there is no evidence…etc.) the message was pretty clear: If you’ve got insomnia get some hops. A herbalist, however, would have pointed out that hops are quite seriously contraindicated in depression, and since insomnia is a major feature of depression, anyone with depression should avoid hops. Wong also made a syrup from figs and senna for treating constipation. He used four handfuls of senna, which were decocted and mixed with the figs. Four handfuls of senna is enough to blast the collective arses off a herd of rhinos. I think a herbalist might also have mentioned this, and pointed out that continued use of senna can do long term damage to the digestive system. So, of the three medical interventions that Wong mentioned, two needed some serious caveats, and by anyone’s standards that’s not very good.
Going back to the original question, why no mention of herbalists? Various answers have been flying around the herbal forums. I liked the idea that someone mentioned about how the witch craze, which ran in Britain and Europe from about 1450 to about 1700, wasn’t actually that long ago. During this time it was dangerous for women to admit to knowledge of herbs, or to teach children about herbs, for fear of being branded a witch. The fear surrounding the witch phenomena became deeply entrenched over the duration of the craze, only petering out about 300 years ago. That’s only 12 generations ago, which is a short enough time span for remnants of the fear to still be there.
I think it is just as likely that the absence of herbalists from this programme is connected to the vested interests of a political class that represent, or have aspirations to represent, the establishment. The creation of a polarised discourse of conventional evidence-based medicine Vs. anything alternative has been going on for a while now in the aspirational broadsheet press, particularly the Guardian, and at the BBC. We now seem to have arrived at a point where it is not permissable for commissioning editors to communicate information about anything to do with health, without getting the sanction of a scientific priesthood. It is no longer possible, for example, to have a public debate on herbal medicine without the paternalistic voice of the priesthood to tell us what is true and what isn’t. They are often wrong, despite their impressive academic records, as not many of them have spent their lives devoted to studying herbs and trying to help patients get better by taking a holistic approach. Indeed, it is common amongst herbalists, many of whom I regard as being examples of the finest minds and noblest intentions to which one could hope to aspire, to feel sidelined, marginalised, and to some extent persecuted by the vested interests of an academic and medical establishment.
In other words, its a class issue. The aspiring political class feel uncomfortable with herbal medicine, maybe as a vestige of the witch craze, but just as likely because there is no benefit to be had from associating with a practice that can’t be controlled by an expert elite (despite their best efforts to regulate the profession). So, in the dissemination of information about this rather uncomfortable subject, it has become standard practice in the mainstream media to lend authority to people who have recognised achievements in other fields of study. These might be loosely associated with health or botany, because to get a herbalist in would be to admit that there is a body of expertise that is specifically to do with herbal medicine, and that would never do. Hence James Wong, ethnobatanist.
I witnessed another superb example of this at last year’s Festival of Ideas in Bristol. Professor Edzard Ernst was in town with his sidekick Simon Singh, villifying homeopathy as usual. Talking of herbal medicine, he mentioned that St John’s Wort has been clinically proven, according the prevailing orthodoxy of what constitutes proof, fully sanctioned by the priesthood, to be equally effective as most antidepressant drugs for treating depression, without the side effects often associated with the drugs. For this reason, Ernst went on, depressed people must avoid using St John’s Wort as there is a risk it might make them well enough to commit suicide.
Oh dear Edzard. And they still regularly wheel him out in his priestly robes in the Guardian and elsewhere to comment on herbal medicine.
Having said all that, it is quite a good thing that there is a programme about using plants for healthcare. It will probably get the viewers because its quite slick, and there is something quite anodyne about Wong himself. His posh-boy enthusiasm – he’s 27 and still gets excited about bath bombs! Gosh! – is OK for a Monday night, probably. I don’t suppose it was his decision to not include herbalists. In fact I seriously doubt that he had very much to do with the script at all. Or the design of the set that we are supposed to believe is his house/ kitchen / garden. Or any of the recipes etc. Of course I could be wrong, but I doubt it.
Here’s Christopher Hedley’s recipe for syrup of figs, using easily available dried figs and no senna, taken from the herb society’s website.
SYRUP OF FIGS
Figs are nutritious and easily digestible, but they are probably best-known for their gentle laxative action, which is particularly suitable for treating children with constipation. Syrup of figs tastes good too. Ingredients:
8 dried figs, Ficus carica
250 ml (8 fl oz) water
Juice of 1/2 lemon, Citrus limon
5ml (1 tsp) ginger, Zingiber officinale , powder
225 gm (1/2 lb) molasses or dark brown sugar. Method:Slice the figs thinly and simmer them in the water until soft, about 20 minutes. Pour the liquid off. Keep the cooked figs. Make the liquid back up to the original amount with fresh water, add the sugar and heat gently, stirring all the time, until the sugar is dissolved. Add the lemon juice, ginger and cooked figs and blend together, in an electric blender. Pour into a clean, preferably sterilized jar, label and store in a cool place. This syrup will keep well.
Dosage:For a child, 1 or 2 dessertspoons For an adult, 3 or 4 dessertspoons daily
By the way, I’ve just created a facebook group called ‘where’s the herbalist?‘ – just in case you’re on facebook, and you’re still reading this.
‘
A walk along the Malago February 22, 2009
Posted by Max Drake in Chickweed (Stellaria media), Herbs.Tags: becky beinart, chickweed, Malago
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I went exploring the Malago River today with the well named artist, Becky Beinart. This is part of the Bristol urban fringe that I haven’t visited before, and I was agreeably surprised at how well kept some of it is. Becky has been commissioned by the Architecture Centre and Groundwork Southwest as part of their Spring Green programme, exploring the themes of urban green space and green infrastructure. You can find out more here.
The Malago springs out of Dundry slopes and follows a course through South Bristol until it enters the Avon New Cut near Asda in Bedminster. A fair amount of it is underground, with much of the rest following a course through urban parkland, including woodland and recreation areas. There’s quite a lot of fly-tipping in the more built-up areas. Some people don’t seem to mind chucking their old push chairs, shopping trolleys, car batteries etc. into the stream, and I think the various conservation groups that look after the above ground bits have got their work cut out clearing up after the zombies.
There is already quite a range of useful medicinal plants that can be identified popping here and there. Not much that can be used right now, as its still a bit early, but much that will be of interest later on. There’s a fair patch of black horehound (Ballota nigra) running alongside some playing fields, and a lot of ground ivy up by Manor Woods. Cleavers, nettles, chickweed, shepherd’s purse, blackberries, elders, are all abundant at various points along the way.
The chickweed is in flower, and can be used from now until November, although it tends to go a bit fibrous later on in the Summer.

Chickweed (Stellaria media)
Chickweed contains saponins, so when you pick it and rub it in your hand you can feel its smooth and soapy texture. Its main use is in external applications, to treat hot and itchy skin conditions, such as certain types of eczema. It is particularly good for treating childhood eczema, giving immediate relief from itching, and can be effective in treating cradle cap in infants too. You can simply squish it up inyour hands and rub it on the affected parts. It extracts well in water, and you can also make a very nice cider vinegar with it. For a water extract simply put some in a blender, cover with water, and bend. Do the same with organic cider vinegar to make the vinegar. In both case strain it well. You can bottle the vinegar and it will keep for several months. With the water extract you need to use it within a week unless you can find some way of preserving it.
To make chickweed and calendula cream make a strong water extract of chickweed, and place it in a container in a hot water bath. In another container, in the same hot water bath, pour an equal amount of calendula infused oil. Once both the chickweed water and the calendula oil are suitably hot, dissolve a small lump of beeswax in the oil, and half a teaspoon of borax in the chickweed water. When these are both completely dissolved, slowly pour the water fraction into the oil fraction, stirring or whisking all the time. Pour the resulting mix straight into sterilised jars and pop the lid on. It will solidify reasonably quickly and there you have it. Label it and keep it in the fridge. It should be good for a couple of months or so. You can put a few drops of lavender essential oil, or, even better, chamomile essential oil (if you can get it) into the bottom of the jar prior to pouring in the mixture. This will help to preserve it and give it a bit extra anti-inflammatory effect.
For general itching or more widespread eczema, you can add half a cup of the chickweed cider vinegar to a hot bath. Worth a try as I’m told it can be very soothing. You can also use the vinegar in salad dressings to treat internal inflammatory problems, such as gastritis and colitis.
Grow Your Own Drugs February 20, 2009
Posted by Max Drake in herbal medicine on TV.Tags: grow your own drugs
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I see the BBC are trailing a new series called ‘grow your own drugs’. This has been made by Silver River Productions, and is presented by a hot new TV ethnobotanist, James Wong – no doubt this year’s answer to Professor Gorgeous (a.k.a. Kathy Sykes), who presented the high gosh-factor mini series about complementary medicine last year, or whenever it was.
The series will also feature Professor Elizabeth Williamson, a pharmacist with a special interest in medicinal plants. I saw her give a really interesting lecture a few years ago at Kings College, London on synergy between different compounds in liquorice. She seemed to be attempting a rational explanation that would be acceptable to pharmacologists for a phenomenon that herbalists have always known and worked with, namely that plants produce compounds that work synergistically with each other when acting on the human organism. In other words the effects they produce as part of a whole plant are greater than would be expected if they were administered separately. This is a fairly straightforward idea, but one that medical scientists have a lot of difficulty with. The main reason being that you can’t design a quantitative study that will measure the effects of more than one compound working in synergy with another, you can only measure one uniquely definable intervention at a time – any more than that, and how would you know which intervention was causing which effect? And fair enough. But Liz Williamson had a fairly good stab at trying to explain the theory of how synergy might be measured through some other mathematical sophistry, which I didn’t understand at all, but which clearly demonstrated her heart and intentions were in the right place. You can see ther paper on synergy here. Her involvement in the programme does give me some hope that it will have some substance behind it.
The most noticeable thing about the blurb that has been sent out, and the trails that are being shown, is that there’s no reference to medical herbalists or the practice of herbal medicine, and I’m not aware of any herbalists who have been consulted in the making of the programme. I wonder why? Perhaps the series title is a clue – maybe like most TV these days, it’s designed to attract 15 year olds, and is made and presented by 15 year olds too. I wonder too how old James Wong really is, and if he actually knows anything about the practice of herbal medicine? Lets hope he does.
I think the absence of herbalists in the making of this programme points to a fairly predictable outcome. Plants will be discussed as though they are merely weaker substitutes for drugs, and are to be used in exactly the same way – a specific plant to treat a specific symptom. There will be lots of goshing and gollying about clinical trials involving St Johns Wort and what someone’s grandma used to do with comfrey. And there will be lots of warning about being careful, and talking to your pharmacist first if you want to attempt anything bolder than making a nice face cream. I would love to be proved wrong.
Meanwhile, of course, if you really want to know about growing your own drugs, or how to find them growing all by themselves, then why not come on one of my grown up walks or workshops?
A touch of the vapours – how the mind works February 8, 2009
Posted by Max Drake in Culpeper.Tags: Culpeper
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“Imagination is seated in the forepart of the brain; it is hot and dry in quality, quick, active, always working; it receives vapours from the heart, and coins them into thoughts: it never sleeps, but always is working, both when the man is sleeping and waking; only when judgement is awake it regulates the Imagination, which runs at random when Judgement is asleep, and forms any thought according to the nature of the vapour sent up to it.”
Nicholas Culpeper ‘The English Physician’ (1652)
Volunteer days at the allotment February 6, 2009
Posted by Max Drake in Uncategorized.1 comment so far