Are home remedies any good?
September 19, 2008 by JM
Filed under Diabetes Treatment
Home remedies seem to be stubborn to retire altogether from the presence of the diabetes patient. “do-gooders” as well as friends and family member are eager to provide the patient with all the necessary information so that the patient can start venturing in the “home-remedy” spiral that might go alongside with the proper medical treatment, whirl upwards to a certain and unexplainable improvement or downwards to the chaotic bottoms of the added diseases and health ailments.
They start with the personal and subjective perception of the first thing that used that particular food with the intention of converting it into a medical remedy. It might have been by chance or by the conjunction of a series of uninvited happenings, but in any case, it is a home remedy that has not been tested for accuracy and that, in the best of cases, will work only as a false remedy.
Then, the “remedy” is then passed orally to others that might “benefit” from this form of household medicine; and the chain starts until the source of the remedy is lost in time and the remedy acquires the status of undeniable truth. Even though they might be truth and they might actually work in most cases, the people who attempt to use such household remedies will come to face that they are not as good as prescription medicine.
Still, in other cases, they will be added to a vast knowledge of alternative medicine, where others that believe in the power of “pure” herbs will take them. while taking alternative medicine is no problem at all in terms of something that might damage the patient – just as long as he or she is not allergic to the components – it is important for the patient not to leave the prescribed medication and guidelines that have been provided to him or her by the attending physician.


