Will placing a tea bag on a cold sore make it disappear? Can you ease hot flashes with herbs? And does putting yogurt on your nether parts have a prayer of curing a yeast infection?
It used to be that you’d hear about these kinds of home remedies from your mom. These days, they’re touted on websites, blogs, and online forums. In fact, 61 percent of American adults turn to the Internet to find help in treating what’s ailing them, a 2009 study reveals.
But do these natural moves actually work … and, just as important, could they do more harm than good? Health asked medical experts to weigh in on the Internet’s most popular home cures.
The online claim: Black cohosh eases hot flashes
Is it true? Yes Read more
Categories: Alternative Medicine
Thank you for sharing all the information about alternative medicine, it will make our blog a wonderful collection of host of different issuess and with the accurate archive function one can conduct more precise review or research in years to come.
The internet is not easy as a source for medical information, because you can find one site saying this is excellent and the next site saying nothing is proven. Whom should we trust?