Product Details
The Complete Encyclopedia of Natural Healing

The Complete Encyclopedia of Natural Healing
By Gary Null

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Product Description

This unique and reliable health reference picks up where other sources leave off, offering a comprehensive listing of some of today's most common diseases and their simple, natural, inexpensive cures Telephone interviews .


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #68423 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-10-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 320 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal
Null (The Clinician's Handbook of Natural Healing, LJ 5/15/98) has compiled a guide to natural healing intended for "today's confused health care consumer," and the easy-to-use format will indeed appeal to the lay reader. Unfortunately, references to scientific research are missing, undermining the often solid advice that Null provides. The book is divided into two sections: "Conditions," arranged like an encyclopedia with natural cures for over 60 ailments, and "Treatments and Patient Experiences," in which Null shares patients' views while often criticizing traditional medical approaches, e.g., for prostate cancer, he favors ozone treatment in Mexico over surgery. Even though Null offers clear discussions of causes, symptoms, cures, and treatment summaries, these personal testimonies do not add to the reliability of his book. Most of the therapies are not controversial, however; interventions like massage, reflexology, aromatherapy, and allergy control are, for instance, recommended for conditions like headaches. But the recommendations for herbal remedies and dietary supplements come simply from Null's own naturopathic experience, without any supporting scientific evidence. By comparison, naturopathic physicians Michael Murray and Joseph Pizzorno cite 53 references to studies supporting their claims in the chapter on migraines in their Encyclopedia of Natural Medicine (LJ 5/1/91). This is too bad, for Null's guide has a great deal of common-sense advice for diet improvements, detoxification, immune system fortification, mental attitude improvements, and lifestyle changes that are in line with the philosophy of natural medicine. To be used with caution in larger alternative medicine collections only.ARebecca Cress-Ingebo, Wright State Univ. Libs, Dayton, OH
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.


Customer Reviews

The Complete Encyclopedia of Natural Healing- Good to the last page!5
The Complete Encyclopedia of Natural Healing offers quick and relevant insights for your health. I truly enjoy this book for its straight forward details and users-friendly nature. Dr. Null writes with a simple elegance which makes the information easy to understand and even easier to apply. Easier does not mean simply. I find that practically every sentence offers some important insights into the subject; this is not a small feat considering the fact that the "Complete Encyclopedia" is over 600 pages. I'd read other reviews knocking this book for its lack of scientific references, but there are more than enough notable references. Honestly, do you really want to read 5,000 scientific citations every time someone says that vitamin C or ginseng works? If you really do, then I suggest you read Dr. Gary Null's "Clinician's Handbook of Natural Healing," which offers 870 pages of scientific peer review studies. Growing up in an Asian household, I can not tell you how much astragalus, wolfberry and other Chinese herbs I ate not as herbal remedies but as a part of a regular diet. I have also added daily supplements of numerous vitamins to my diet for the better part of my life. If I have a bias for the alternative supplements mentioned in Dr. Null's book, it is formed through years of personal experiences. My wife and I use the remedies mentioned in the "Complete Encyclopedia" quite often, because information is quickly available and comprehensively revealed. Furthermore, Dr. Null's reputation as one of the primary authority on dietary supplements is unequivocal considering the outstanding history he has as a pioneer of the industry. His "Complete Encyclopedia of Natural Healing" is a wonderful complementary journal that read with a coffee table friendliness.

One of the best books on health and nutrition by Gary Null5
This book was written for the layperson but written by an Expert. Gary Null gets down to the root of the problem and tells you what to do for your problem. An important thing that he talks about doing for almost every symptom is to exercise and to destress which is very important instead of just taking vitamins. The book also includes a section on magnet therapy and biofeedback.

Gary Null Has Outdone Himself,5
The indefatigable Dr. Gary Null has truly outdone himself with The Complete Encyclopedia of Natural Healing (Revised and Updated ISBN #:0-7582-1316-6). I very much enjoyed the original Encyclopedia, but Dr. Null has redone the entire book, making it much more "user friendly." Parts of it actually read like a novel. Not only has he included many more references to scientific studies, but he has also incorporated studies from this year, 2005-this is an indication of how hard he must have worked to include up-to-the-date information. For example, it was just this year that cancer replaced heart disease as the number one killer of Americans. Out of curiosity, I perused the book to see whether it noted this. It did! To me, this is an indication of how much of his considerable talent and experience were put into this project.
However, Encyclopedia's greatest asset is in how it presents scientific jargon in a language that the layperson can easily digest. After buying the book, I visited my mother for dinner. The next day, after realizing I had left the book at her house, I called her to ask if she'd seen the book. Not only had she seen it, but she had even read several chapters and wanted a copy for herself!
In my opinion, of the 30 or so Dr. Null books that I have read, this is the best, and is in a category all by itself.