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📖 The Nature’s Lost Vault Book Is Now Available. Learn more: https://naturelostvault.com/book.htmlIn 1918, the deadliest pandemic in recorded history was killing thousands of Americans a week. Two groups of doctors treated the same disease. One group used the new pharmaceutical wonder drug being promoted by the Surgeon General and the Journal of the American Medical Association. The other used a plant that grew wild in swamps and wetlands across eastern North America. The group using the swamp plant lost 5 times fewer patients.Within 20 years, the United States government had ensured no licensed physician would ever be trained to use that plant again. Not because it failed. Because it could not be owned.This vault opens inside a century of suppressed clinical evidence. It follows a man named Abraham Flexner, a non-physician hired by the Carnegie Foundation and backed by the AMA, whose 1910 report closed more than half of all American medical schools and erased an entire lineage of botanical medicine from legitimate practice. It follows the Eclectic physicians who used boneset, pleurisy root, and the full materia medica of North American plant medicine across 6 decades of epidemics. And it follows the modern researchers who finally confirmed in a laboratory what those physicians documented by hand in clinical journals a century ago.The plant is still out there. White flowers in August. Growing in wetlands from Nova Scotia to Florida. It has been waiting since 1939.📚 Sources:- Abascal, Kathy and Eric Yarnell. "Herbal Treatments for Pandemic Influenza: Learning from the Eclectics' Experience." Alternative and Complementary Therapies 12, no. 6 (2006): 214-221.- Derksen, Annika, et al. "Antiviral Activity of Hydroalcoholic Extract from Eupatorium perfoliatum L. Against the Attachment of Influenza A Virus." Planta Medica 82, no. 11-12 (2016): 1012-1017.- Gassinger, C.A., G. Wunstel, and P. Netter. "A Controlled Clinical Trial for Testing the Efficacy of the Homeopathic Drug Eupatorium perfoliatum D2 in the Treatment of Common Cold." Arzneimittelforschung 31, no. 4 (1981): 732-736.- Hensel, Andreas, et al. "Eupatorium perfoliatum L.: Phytochemistry, Traditional Use and Current Applications." Journal of Ethnopharmacology 138, no. 3 (2011): 641-651.- Stahnisch, Frank W. and Marja Verhoef. "The Flexner Report of 1910 and Its Impact on Complementary and Alternative Medicine and Psychiatry in North America in the 20th Century." Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine (2012).- Starko, Karen M. "Salicylates and Pandemic Influenza Mortality, 1918-1919: Pharmacology, Pathology, and Historic Evidence." Clinical Infectious Diseases 49, no. 9 (2009): 1405-1410.- Wagner, H. and K. Jurcic. "Immunologic Studies of Plant Combination Preparations: In-vitro and In-vivo Studies on the Stimulation of Phagocytosis." Arzneimittelforschung 41, no. 10 (1991): 1072-1076.- Flexner, Abraham. Medical Education in the United States and Canada: A Report to the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. New York: Carnegie Foundation, 1910.- Flannery, Michael A. John Uri Lloyd: The Great American Eclectic. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1998.#ancientwisdom #plantmedicine #naturalhealing #homesteading
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