Cineraria for cataracts and onions for flu….

Some weeks ago I got an email from Pat Schooling, director of the allergy charity, Action Against Allergy, of which I am a trustee, asking whether I had ever heard of raw onions being used to guard against flu?  As it happened, I had – well, I had heard (and even experimented) with onions attracting bacteria, although I must admit that I had entirely forgotten about it.

Anyhow, Pat had received the totally delightful email copied below and thought that she would share – as I am now doing…

PLEASE READ TO THE BOTTOM – IT IS IMPORTANT.

In 1919 when the flu killed 40 million people there was this Doctor that visited many farmers to see if he could help them combat the flu. Many of the farmers and their family had contracted it and many died.

The doctor came upon this one farmer and to his surprise, everyone was very healthy. When the doctor asked what the farmer was doing that was different the wife replied that she had placed an unpeeled onion in a dish in all the rooms of the home, (probably only two rooms back then). The doctor couldn’t believe it and asked if he could have one of the onions and place it under the microscope. She gave him one and when he did this, he did find the flu virus in the onion. It obviously absorbed the bacteria, therefore, keeping the family healthy.

Now, I heard this story from my hairdresser. She said that several years ago, many of her employees were coming down with the flu, and so were many of her customers. The next year she placed several bowls with onions around in her shop. To her surprise, none of her staff got sick. It must work. Try it and see what happens. We did it last year and we never got the flu.

Now there is a P. S. to this for I sent it to a friend in Oregon who regularly contributes material to me on health issues. She replied with this most interesting experience about onions:

Thanks for the reminder. I don’t know about the farmer’s story but, I do know that I contacted pneumonia, and, needless to say, I was very ill… I came across an article that said to cut both ends off an onion put it into an empty jar, and place the jar next to the sick patient at night. It said the onion would be black in the morning from the germs. ..sure enough it happened just like that…the onion was a mess and I began to feel better.

Another thing I read in the article was that onions and garlic placed around the room saved many from the black plague years ago. They have powerful antibacterial, antiseptic properties.

This is the other note.

Lots of times when we have stomach problems we don’t know what to blame. Maybe it’s the onions that are to blame. Onions absorb bacteria and that  is the reason they are so good at preventing us from getting colds and flu and is the very reason we shouldn’t eat an onion that has been sitting for a time after it has been cut open.

LEFT-OVER ONIONS ARE POISONOUS

I had the wonderful privilege of touring Mullins Food Products, Makers of mayonnaise. Questions about food poisoning came up, and I wanted to share what I learned from a chemist.

Ed, who was our tour guide, is a food chemistry whiz. During the tour, someone asked if we really needed to worry about mayonnaise. People are always worried that mayonnaise will spoil. Ed’s answer will surprise you. Ed said that all commercially-made mayo is completely safe.

“It doesn’t even have to be refrigerated. No harm in refrigerating it, but it’s not really necessary.” He explained that the pH in mayonnaise is set at a point that bacteria could not survive in that environment. He then talked about the summer picnic, with the bowl of potato salad sitting on the table, and how everyone blames the mayonnaise when someone gets sick.

Ed says that, when food poisoning is reported, the first thing the officials look for is when the ‘victim’ last ate ONIONS and where those onions came from (in the potato salad?). Ed says it’s not the mayonnaise (as long as it’s not homemade mayo) that spoils in the outdoors. It’s probably the ONIONS, and if not the onions, it’s the POTATOES.

He explained onions are a huge magnet for bacteria, especially uncooked onions. You should never plan to keep a portion of a sliced onion. He says it’s not even safe if you put it in a zip-lock bag and put it in your refrigerator.

It’s already contaminated enough just by being cut open and out for a bit, that it can be a danger to you (and doubly watch out for those onions you put in your hotdogs at the baseball park!). Ed says if you take the leftover onion and cook it like crazy you’ll probably be okay, but if you slice that leftover onion and put on your sandwich, you’re asking for trouble. Both the onions and the moist potato in a potato salad, will attract and grow bacteria faster than any commercial mayonnaise will even begin to break down.

Also, dogs should never eat onions. Their stomachs cannot metabolize onions.

Please remember it is dangerous to cut an onion and try to use it to cook the next day, it becomes highly poisonous for even a single night and creates toxic bacteria which may cause adverse stomach infections because of excess bile secretions and even food poisoning.

I had scarcely finished reading this when my daily Natural News bulletin plopped into my in box including this piece on alternative treatments for cataracts. Remedies that they suggest include homeopathic remedies Calcarea phosphoricum, Sepia and Causticum, Bentonite clay on the eye lids – and cineraria:

Cineraria maratima, or dusty miller, is a common herb whose juice is known to dissolve cataracts. India’s Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has noted that Cineraria tincture can prevent cataracts from developing. Additionally, homeopathic doctor William Boericke, M.D. notes in his Materia Medica with Repertory that Cineraria tincture may reverse existing cataracts. To obtain the full effects of this herb, the mother tincture must be used diluted in saline water. Commercial products are not effective.

Roll on natural medicine….

 

Living with eczema

Those of us lucky enough to have relatively normal skin all pay lip service to ‘how awful it must be to have bad eczema’ and ‘those poor little children’ with weeping, open sores. (Pictures courtesy of Dr Harry Morrow Brown.) And indeed we do feel genuinely sympathetic – but how little we really understand.

So bravo for Ruth Holroyd who, as many of you will know, runs the excellent What Allergy? blog, for bearing her soul about how totally miserable it is to have a bad eczema flare up. (Read her post here.) As she says, she often talks about her
allergies (anaphylactic to nuts and milk and possibly celery, intolerant to tomatoes and a whole raft of other foods) as allergies make for interesting conversation – but eczema… Who wants to know that you are itchy, hot, scratchy, slimy from too much moisturiser, cannot bear to look at your red, rough skin in the mirror or let anyone else see you either, are grumpy from too little sleep….

Because it is Ruth, and, despite her allergies and her eczema, she is a totally upbeat person, the post contains not only her vent on the horribleness of an eczema flare up, but eleven really useful tips for minimising the misery and helping the eczema to clear.

Ruth’s rant reminded me of reading, some year’s ago, Jennifer worth’s ‘Eczema and food Allergy: the hidden cause?’ Jennifer, who sadly died last year, was not only a generous donor and supporter of the allergy charity Action Against Allergy, of which I am a trustee, but the author of Call the Midwife, her hugely successfully reminiscences of her life as a midwife in the East End of London in the 1950s which has now been made into an even more successful prime time telly series.

Jennifer was brought down, in her early 60s, by appalling eczema that covered her from head to foot, her skin cracking, weeping and itching all over her body. It turned out that her eczema was caused by food allergy and was finally successfully treated by a combination of a rigid elimination diet and Enzyme Potentiated Desensitisation (EPD) – an immunotherapy type treatment which worked on a range of allergens at the same time.

You can still get Jennifer’s book about eczema from Merton Books (also the first publishers of Call the Midwife). You can read the article that she wrote for Foods Matter about EPD here. But, before you get too excited about  EPD  as a possible treatment for allergy or for allergy-related eczema, I have to tell you that it is not currently available in this country – or, indeed, anywhere.

Pioneered by Dr Len McEwen (now retired), EPD was never adopted by the NHS although it was used quite widely in the US. However, an American regulation banning the use of multiple allergens in the formulation virtually halved the market and meant that it was not longer viable to produce in the UK.

However, all is not yet lost. I have just spoken to the  the Friends of EPD, who are part of the National Society for Research into Allergy , who told me that they are hoping to raise sufficient funds to reopen an EPD laboratory and to restart both production and treatment. They suggest that, if you are interested, you stay in touch with them.

 

 

Allergy Show Roundup…

As anyone will know who has ever worked on a stand at an exhibition, it normally takes about a week to recover – so I am making no excuses for only getting round to blogging about the Allergy Show today! Indeed, given that it only finished on Sunday I am pretty impressed that I am doing it today…

I am putting my relative perkiness down to the fact that it was an excellent show (always makes one feel better), that Alex Gazzola was running the stand for us which meant that not only was it beautifully run but that it was great fun to work on, and to the fact that I upped my nightly dose of oxygen to counteract the heavy electrosmog of Olympia – and it seems to have worked a treat!

We were at the show to promote the FreeFromFood Awards – and were delighted to see so many award winners also there promoting their delicious freefrom products. If you want to see a full list of exhibitors, including freefrom foods and lots of freefrom skin care, you can find them on the Allergy Show site.  Visitors also got the benefit of an excellent programme of seminars and workshops, including a workshop for the parents of allergic children run by Action Against Allergy with the allergy team from Guy’s and St Thomas’ hospital. This is one of series of workshops which the charity has run over the last few years and is now developing on line in conjunction with talkallergy.com. Check in at the Action Against Allergy site over the next week for details about the hay fever on-line clinic they will be running for a week from May 20th.

Meanwhile…. for more on the show, if you did not manage to get there, see What Allergy?’s  Top 10 Highlights from this years’ show post and Alex’s own post on his blog.

However, that will not allow you to buy a special offer copy of Alex’s new book – Coeliac Disease: what you need to know which you could have bought at the show…. But, never fear – you can still get it from via his piece on the foodsmatter site
Nor will it allow you to buy a copy of my new recipe book, Cooking gluten, wheat and dairy free which we had also hoped to sell at the show but which, sadly, did not arrive from the printers in time – but which you should be able to buy on Amazon in a couple of weeks time. More anon…