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Raw Honey for Allergies?
#21
There was a never published study done at Xavier University:

At least one informal (unfunded) study on allergies and honey conducted by students at Xavier University in New Orleans produced positive results. Researchers divided participants into three groups: seasonal allergy sufferers, year-round allergy sufferers and non-allergy sufferers. These groups were further divided into three subgroups with some people taking two teaspoons of local honey per day, others taking the same amount of non-local honey each day and the final subgroup not taking honey at all. The Xavier students found that after six weeks, allergy sufferers from both categories suffered fewer symptoms and that the group taking local honey reported the most improvement [source: Cochran].

http://health.howstuffworks.com/diseases...rgies2.htm

The theory makes sense, the more local the honey, the better.
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#22
wow Jack D.
That shiznit is on DVD?!?!?
NetFlix!
“Art is how we decorate space.
Music is how we decorate time.”
Jean-Michel Basquiat







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#23
DaviDC. wrote:
I'm allergic to honey.

Me too. My Mom was also.
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#24
TLB wrote:
...the other hypothesis is that ingestion of local honey exposes your system to local pollens and reduces the severity of future allergic reactions--not unlike periodic allergy shots. My MD subscribes to the theory and strongly recommends local honey for most everyone with seasonal allergies.

I was told (by someone, somewhere, long ago) that chewing a small piece of locally-produced honeycomb every day works best, but of course only for pollen allergies (which I don't have). No good for dust mites, animal dander, cockroach feces... Smile
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