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This invaluable book not only provides practical suggestions and advice regarding common medical issues and ailments, but also presents the fundamental principles of anthroposophic medicine. It explains the underlying picture of disorders in the human organism and the therapeutic approach of anthroposophic medical practice, giving answers to the questions that, in an ideal world, a patient would like to discuss at length with his or her doctor. Anthroposophic Medicine for all the Family illustrates some of the key remedies and procedures used in the treatment of common ailments as diverse as influenza, asthma, menstrual pain, sunburn, hypertension and childhood illnesses. It provides support for anyone seeking to improve their health whilst involving the reader in a conscious process of healing and self-development. SERGIO MARIA FRANCARDO has worked as an anthroposophic doctor in Milan since 1980. He is a member of the Technical-Scientific Committee on Complementary Medicine in the Region of Lombardy and the author of numerous articles and conference contributions on anthroposophic medicine and the importance of diet in the prevention of disorders.
While conventional medicine analyzes disease in terms of cellular disturbances and prescribes drugs to counteract physical symptoms, anthroposophical medicine adds a spiritual image of the human being. Anthroposophical doctors (who qualify first in conventional medicine) increase the range of treatments available, offering artistic therapies, herbal remedies, and many others. Where conventional treatment can only suppress the symptoms, these treatments extend the possibilities of a cure and reduce the need to use conventional drugs. This book is an excellent introduction to the scope and potential of anthroposophical medicine.
Today's medicine is strongly influenced by natural science, which focuses entirely on the material nature of reality. Molecular biology has become the foundation of modern medicine with the result that today's medical industry chases after technology to solve all its problems. In the process it is losing its own essence as it moves into fields increasingly alien to human nature as a whole. Nevertheless, many doctors are beginning to reexamine this exclusive worldview in favor of a more wholistic approach to healing. To this end, anthroposophical medicine encompasses a wide range of healing modalities, including orthodox, allopathic medicine. The Anthroposophical Approach to Medicine explores the body's relationship to soul and spirit on the basis of Rudolf Steiner's insights into the activities of the spiritual world. Edited by doctors Friedrich Husemann and Otto Wolff, this book invites us to an in-depth view of a true alternative to materialistically oriented medicine. Chapters include essays on childhood development and diseases; the disorders of old age; neuroses and psychological imbalances; pharmacology; healing plants; biochemistry and pathology; blood-work; and special diagnostic techniques. This first of a multi-volume series is an invaluable tool to all who want to extend the practice of medicine to include the whole human being.
In this concise summary and introduction, Michaela Glöckler presents the therapeutic spectrum of anthroposophic medicine – its scientific basis, diagnostic methods and potential for practice. She gives numerous practical examples of its application and suggestions for treating patients at home. Anthroposophic medicine is an integrative system that combines scientific training and practice with a spiritual understanding of the human being. It seeks primarily to stimulate self-healing powers, directly supporting recovery processes and innate capacities of resistance. Anthroposophic physicians – registered general practitioners and specialists in all fields – utilize the knowledge and skills of conventional treatments as well as anthroposophic and homoeopathic medicines, external applications, and eurythmy, art and physical therapies. Michaela Glöckler describes the current status of anthroposophic medicine whilst raising awareness of the social dimension of illness and health to address issues of fate and destiny and to show what individuals can do for their own and other people’s health. She reflects on Rudolf Steiner’s call to ‘make the health system democratic’ and clarifies why scientific pluralism of methods and freedom of therapy are essential for the further development of the healthcare system and a modern understanding of disease.
At a time of increasing volatility in healthcare provision, we are all having to become more responsible for our own well-being. This book – an imaginative, practical and accessible guide to our inner organs – is written for anyone who wants to improve their health and develop resiliency against illness. Although trained as a medical doctor, Olaf Koob has the vision and experience of a holistic physician. He has surveyed diverse medical systems – orthodox medicine, naturopathy, homeopathy, Chinese, ayurvedic and anthroposophic medicine – and found their common substance. Using this knowledge, he relates the essence of each human organ: its position, colour, form, embryonic development, function and characteristic attributes. Thus, the organs begin to tell their own stories, revealing their ‘biography’, physiognomy and the illnesses they are prone to.
This acclaimed guide to children's physical, psychological and spiritual development is now available in a fourth revised edition. Combining up-to-date medical advice with issues of development and education, this is a definitive guide for parents. This is the book for anyone who has ever wanted a deeper understanding of their children's illnesses, or sought a more holistic approach to children's health. As well as comprehensively covering medical issues, it also discusses parenting techniques, education, spirituality and play -- a truly integrated approach to all aspects of raising healthy children in the broadest sense. The authors have over 20 years' experience treating children at Herdecke Hospital, Germany, which is run using anthroposophical principles. The fourth edition includes updates on treatments for tonsilitis, croup, sunstroke and headlice. The section on vaccinations includes the latest recommendations including measles, meningococcal and HPV. There is also a new section on electromagnetic pollution, including mobile (cell) phones.
Anthroposophic medicine (AM) is a form of traditional, complementary and integrative medicine (TCI), integrated into conventional medicine in outpatient practices and hospitals. As more countries begin to set policies and regulatory frameworks for the practice of TCI, policy-makers require information to make informed decisions, including evaluations of the quality of practices, difficulties that may be encountered, and suggested ways in which these can be addressed. These are the first benchmarks for training in AM and reflect what the AM community considers to be minimum training for professionals to practice any of the AM disciplines, in ways which ensure consumer protection and patient safety, including quality assurance, and the effectiveness and proper use of AM.
Based on the authors' many years of medical experience in the "trenches," this book offers new ways of looking at the complex topic of childhood illnesses and immunizations. Essential information is presented from an anthroposophic point of view: ∞ Childhood Illnesses: their fundamental characteristics and meaning ∞ Immunization Information: benefits and dangers ∞ Remedies (more than 100 ): immunizations and the general wellbeing of children ∞ Anthroposophic Medicine: essential concepts ∞ Spiritualized Education: Why is it so essential in relation to immunizations? ∞ Rudolf Steiner's Texts: comprehensive selection on immunizations and childhood illnesses ∞ Basic Immunology: combining natural and spiritual scientific insights C O N T E N T S Foreword Before We Get Going: Anthroposophy: A Spiritual Basis for Medicine Introduction 1. Basic Concepts of Anthroposophy and Anthroposophic Medicine 2. Basic Concepts of Immunology 3. Smallpox: Eradicated, but Not Gone? 4. Anthroposophic Understanding of Childhood Illnesses 5. Modern Immunizations 6. Modern Vaccinations: A Critical View 7. Constitutional Strengthening for Children 8. A Selection of Anthroposophic Remedies 9. The Seven Metals as Core Anthroposophic Remedies 10. Other Innovative Remedies 11. Other Commonly Used Remedies 12. Remedies for Emergencies and Specific Symptoms and Side Effects 13. Other Health-bringing Modalities 14. Replace through Education What Is Lost through Immunization Epilogue Appendices: 1. Rudolf Steiner--Excerpts from His Work 2: Immunology Review Article 3. A Brief Description of the Path of the Incarnating Individual to a New Birth 4. CDC Recommended Vaccine Schedule 2017 5. Review of an Article by Russell Blaylock 6. Anthroposophic Lifestyle and Allergic Disease--Lancet Medical Journal 7. Quality of Potentized Medicines 8. Five Minerals Meditation/Verse, from R. Steiner 9. Gall Bladder / Chicory 10. Michael's Mission in the Cosmic Age of Human Freedom Resources Index
Today, many allopathic medical practitioners are beginning to seek out a greater connection with holistic and integrative approaches. The authors of this book introduce one specific therapy and make a case for integrative health in general, including anthroposophically extended medicine, naturopathy, and other holistic approaches. Mistletoe therapy has long been considered a viable treatment for cancer by the European medical community and is beginning to gain recognition in North America, as well. The mistletoe plant possesses many remarkable properties. As a therapy, it represents a rediscovery of ancient wisdom and shows us how the science of modern medicine might expand its reach and reconnect with a more human-centered medicine. The book is structured to follow the syllabus of a three-day practitioner training hosted by the Physicians' Association for Anthroposophic Medicine (PAAM). It serves as an introductory summary of - not a replacement for-those intensive professional trainings. While this book should not be regarded as a treatment or diagnostic manual, it is intended to both prepare practitioners to begin mistletoe therapy training and to make this information available, in an accessible form, to anyone interested in learning about this approach to treating cancer.
Anthroposophic nursing care goes beyond the communicative approach of soft skills. Nurses form a bridge between treatment of the body and treatment of the patient's soul and spirit by actively valuing the human body, paying attention to touch, using warmth, cold, air, and light to promote healing processes, and much more. Although physical wellbeing, autonomy, and youthfulness are central to our modern materialistic culture, our bodies actually receive little respect and appreciation, especially when they become ill and eventually old. Nursing values need to be rediscovered that respect the debased human being, embrace illness as a part of existence, and allow time for healing. A key aspect of this book involves the idea and practice of "nursing gestures," relating inner attitudes and practical nursing activities to one another in detail through numerous examples and overviews. Anthroposophic Nursing Practice shows not only the possibility, but also the practical experience of nursing care, which aims to be both holistic and optimistic. The knowledge and perspectives gathered in this book have matured through the work of several generations of anthroposophically oriented nurses, all striving to refine a truly integrative nursing practice. This unique book will no doubt become the classic text on the important practice of anthroposophic nursing. Contributors include Klaus Adams, Frances Bay, Gudrun Buchholz, Annegret Camps, Bernhard Deckers, Carola Edelmann, Sasha Gloor, Renate Hasselberg, Inge Heine, Rolf Heine, Christel Kaul, Monika Layer, Regula Markwalder, Heike Schaumann, Jana Schier, Ada van der Star, Christoph von Dach, Ursula von der Heide, Gabriele Weber, and Anna Wilde. C O N T E N T S Introduction to the English edition Adam Blanning, MD Preface by Rolf Heine Foreword to the fourth German edition by Matthias Girke, MD Foreword to the third German edition by Michaela Glöckler, MD I. METHODICAL-DIDACTICAL FOUNDATIONS 1. How Do You Learn Anthroposophic Nursing? Learning Aid and Guide through this Textbook II. ANTHROPOSOPHY AND NURSING 2. Observation as a Method of Self-development and a Therapeutic Element in Care and Destiny 3. The Anthropological Foundations of Nursing Extended by Anthroposophy 4. Illness and Destiny 5. Nursing as a Path of Development 6. Meditation in Nursing 7. The Concept of Nursing Gestures as a Model for Nursing Care III. ELEMENTS OF NURSING CARE 8, Rhythm 9. The Human Warmth Organism and Its Care 10. Variations on Whole-body Washing 11. Preventing Bedsores, Pneumonia, and Thrombosis in Seriously Ill Patients 12. Rhythmical Einreibung According to Wegman/Hauschka 13. Compresses in Anthroposophically Extended Nursing Care 14. Active Principles in External Applications IV. SPECIALIZATIONS IN NURSING 15. Pregnancy, Childbirth, and Puerperium as Stages of Human Becoming 16. Neonatal Nursing Care. Care Is Education--Education Is Care . 17. The Concept of Development as the Basis for Anthroposophically Extended Pediatric Nursing 18. Psychiatric Nursing 19. From the Question of Meaning in Cancer to the Cultivation of the Senses 20. Anthroposophic Oncology Nursing 21. Geriatric Care as Care for Human Beings 22. Aspects of Caring for Elderly People who are Mentally Ill or Confused 23. Caring for People with Dementia in Inpatient Facilities 24. Palliative Care 25. The Care and Accompaniment of the Dying and the Deceased Epilogue List of Products Mentioned, with US and European equivalents About the Authors Index This book is a translation from German of Anthroposophische Pflegepraxis--Grundlagen und Anregungen für alltägliches Handeln, 4th edition (Salumed Verlag, Berlin, Germany, 2017). Translated from the German by Carol Brousseau.