gynecological disorders
gynecological disorders with http://www.medical-mailings.com

gynecological disorders

medical mailings

News for 05-Jul-25

Source: MedicineNet Asthma General
Advair Diskus, Advair HFA (fluticasone and salmeterol oral inhaler)

Source: MedicineNet Diabetes General
Health Tip: Prepare for Travel With Diabetes

Source: MedicineNet Asthma General
Oximetry

Source: MedicineNet Asthma General
Bronchodilators (Drug Class)

Source: MedicineNet Diabetes General
Standing or 'Easy' Walks May Help Type 2 Diabetics Control Blood Sugar

Source: MedicineNet Asthma General
ephedrine (oral)

Source: MedicineNet Diabetes General
Low Blood Sugar Linked to Death Risk for Hospital Patients

Source: MedicineNet Diabetes General
Health Tip: Creating an Insulin Routine

Source: MedicineNet Diabetes General
Insulin Prices Skyrocket, Putting Many Diabetics in a Bind

Source: MedicineNet Diabetes General
Chemo More Damaging to Hearts of Diabetics: Study

Search the Web
gynecological disorders
professional medical news
close to washington
Sarcomatoid
medical malpractice
freestanding outpatient surgery center
eye doctor
laparoscopy
obstetrical
surgeon

The Best gynecological disorders website

All the gynecological disorders information you need to know about is right here. Presented and researched by http://www.medical-mailings.com. We've searched the information super highway far and wide to provide you with the best gynecological disorders site on the internet today. The links below will assist you in your efforts to find the information that you are looking for about
gynecological disorders.

gynecological disorders

medical mailings, email campaigns
Need information on Medical Mailings? Our links will provide you with information on all type of type of Medical Mailings for Physicians over the internet including email and snail mail. For conferencing services to go with your email campagin go to Meetings on the Net - http://www.meetingsonthenet.com
medical mailings, email campaigns

The gynecological disorders links on the right side of this page will take you directly to the specific item you need so look around. We have made it easy for you and of course this company stands behind their gynecological disorders with total satisfaction guarantees

Somewhere on this page you will find the exact gynecological disorders link you are looking for as we have done extensive research to put the best sources available at your fingertips. Just take a few minutes and you will find exactly the gynecological disorders information you need.

gynecological disorders

medical mailings, email campaigns
Need information on Medical Mailings? Our links will provide you with information on all type of type of Medical Mailings for Physicians over the internet including email and snail mail. For conferencing services to go with your email campagin go to Meetings on the Net - http://www.meetingsonthenet.com
medical mailings, email campaigns

Think about the magazine section in your local supermarket. If you reach out with your eyes closed and grab the first magazine you touch, you are about as likely to get a gynecological disorders tabloid as you are a respected gynecological disorders journal.

Now imagine that your supermarket is so accommodating that they allow anyone who has an opinion on gynecological disorders, well informed or otherwise, to just stack their gynecological disorders articles, magazines or books in the store. Now if you reach out at random you are highly likely to get junk information on gynecological disorders and lots of it.

Rosemary Flower Candies (Rosemarinus Officinalis)

 by: Simon Mitchell

Leave your tic-tacs at home. This medicinal plant provides delicious mouth fresheners to integrate into a balanced healing diet.

When a herb or plant has the designation 'officinalis' it means it has been recognised to have medicinal qualities. 'Rosemarinus', so called because of marine connections (colour of sea - grows by sea e.g. Mediterranean) is possibly the best example of a herb that we commonly grow that has extensive folklore and many attributed medicinal values.

Beloved by the Romans, who bought it to the UK from Turkey, they believed this valuable herb could preserve dead bodies from corruption and it was often strewn or grown in graveyards and around tombs. It was well known to the Tudors as a stimulant to the system. In 'The Garden of Health' (1579) William Langham writes:

"Carry the flowers about thee to make thee merry and glad and well beloved of all men...hang the flowers on thy bed and place Rosemary in the bath to make thee lusty, lively, joyful, strong and young. To comfort the heart steep Rosemary flowers in rose water and drink it".

Gerard agrees in his 1636 Herbal. "The flowers of Rosemary, made up into lozenges with sugar and eaten make the heart merry, quicken the spirits and make them more lively". He also notes that Rosemary water acts as a breath freshener.

Rosemary has long been recognised as a valuable heart and liver tonic and its use can help to reduce high blood pressure. It has been used in the treatment of nervous complaints, digestive disorders and menstrual pains.

Rosemary is a symbol of constancy in love because it remains fresh and fragrant when cut, longer most other evergreens. For this reason it was often used for solemn occasions such as weddings or funerals - 'Be it for my bridal or my burial'. As in Shakespeare's Hamlet, Rosemary is for remembrance and in the language of flowers the gift of Rosemary means 'Never will your memory fade'. Ancient myth has it that 'Where Rosemary flourishes - the woman rules'. Rosemary is sometimes used in psychic work as an aid to concentration, memory and mental steadiness. Under the pillow or over the bed its delicious aroma is said to prevent nightmares.

One word of warning though - excessive use of Rosemary taken internally can cause fatal poisoning, but that is no reason not sample the delicious and invigorating herbal tea or eat a few of the flowers.

Like the raw flowers, Rosemary sugar candies are a tiny taste explosion and quite delicious. Preserving them in sugar helps to extend the amount of time you can experience this uplifting Epicurean event. First of all find a plant with flowers. It often flowers twice a year so this should not be too difficult. You can either pick the whole flower from the plant, or set up some arrangement that catches them as they fall naturally.

In a warm place, such as a sunlit window sill above a radiator, drop the flowers onto dried (even warmed) white sugar. Make sure the receptacle is open enough that moisture can evaporate from the flowers into the sugar and then into the atmosphere. Also make sure that no moisture gets to this mixture at any point as the sugar will 'clump' and the flowers will start to rot, spoiling the taste. Shake the mixture now and then to aid the process.

When thoroughly dry, seal the sugar/flower mixture into a moisture-proof receptacle and every now and then - treat yourself !

With thanks to: J. Lust, M. Woodward, D. Conway, C.L. Zalewski, R. Genders.

About The Author

Simon Mitchell


From an ebook called 'Wild Food' underway at simonthescribe. If you wish to republish this article (with resource box intact) you will find excellent quality pictures to accompany it at http://www.simonthescribe.co.uk/rosemary.html

Google

http://www.gomailings.com/
Medical Meetings | Talk On The Net | Broadcast On the Net | MD News | Go Meetings

Medical Presentations   Medical Meetings On The Net   Medical Meetings