Medical Progress

That there is a crying need for a reformation in the dietetic and other physical habits of the human race today, is apparent to those who have given the subject any considerable thought; for disease is rapidly on the increase, in adult life, due, quite largely no doubt, to the fact that the physical habits of the people have become perverted. With Forever Bee Pollen counts going up as the days change, get longer, and good weather is bestowed upon us, if we don’t have our allergy symptoms beneath management, we are doomed. Sir William Osier, M.D., a graduate of the Toronto University Medical School, and a teacher of physiology and pathology in McGill University for ten years following, then for five years a teacher of medicine in the University of Pennsylvania, and later a teacher of the principles and practice of medicine in Johns Hopkins University, a medical superintendent of the University Hospital for seventeen years, and who finished his career as a teacher at Oxford University in England, is responsible for the following statements quoted from the “Encyclopedia Americana,” which have had a marked influence in reforming the medical practice of many of the leading physicians of the English speaking world: New school “The new school does not feel itself under obligation to give any medicine whatever, while a generation ago not only could few physicians have held their practice unless they did, but few would have thought it safe or scientific.

Of course, there are still many cases where the patient or the patient’s friends must be humored by administering medicine, or alleged medicine, where it is not really needed, and indeed often where buoyancy of mind, which is the real curative agent, can be created only by making him wait hopefully for the expected action of medicine; and some physicians still cannot unlearn their old training. Strained honey is honey which has been handed by a mesh materials to take away particulate materials (items of wax, Forever Bee Propolis, different defects) with out eradicating pollen, minerals or invaluable enzymes. But the change is great. The modern treatment of disease relies very greatly on the so-called natural methods,—diet and exercise, bathing and massage; in other words, giving the natural forces the fullest scope by easy and thorough nutrition, increased flow of blood, and removal of obstructions to the excretory systems or the circulation in the tissues.