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The Reproductive System
There are a number of important books focusing on the use of healing plant
in the holistic treatment of the male and female reproductive system. I
strongly recommend that these books be read and reread by all interested
in this field. Recommended writings include:
Green, James. Herbs & Health Care for Males, Crossings
Press, Santa Cruz 1991
Koehler, Nan. Artemis Speaks, 1985
McIntyre, Anne. Herbs for Pregnancy and Childbirth, Sheldon Press,
London 1988
Parvati, Jeannine. Hygieia, a woman's herbal, Freestone, 1978
Weed, Susun. Wise Woman Herbal for the Childbearing Years, Ashton
Publishing, 1986
A number of excellent general guides to health and well-being for women
have been written. These are well worth referring to, especially for the
male herbalist! One I can recommended is:
Wilson, Josleen. Woman: Your Body, Your Health. Harcourt, Brace,
Jovanovich, 1990
This is an area of wonderful healing potential, but incredible semantic
confusion! It should come as no surprise that Nature is rich in plants that
nurture or address in some way the process of conception and birth. After
all, this creative process is the very keynote of life. However, there arises
an unfortunate 20th. century dilemma for the phytotherapist. Some of the
primary remedies for the female reproductive system used by the Eclectic,
Physio-Medicalist and Thomsonian herbalists of previous centuries are now
seriously endangered species. The most problematic (at the moment) are:
Chamaelirium luteum : False Unicorn Root
Cypripedium spp. : Ladies Slipper
Trillium spp. : Beth Root
It is one of the signs of the ecological holocaust that humanity has wrought
on our world that healing plants of this importance have become endangered
to the degree that they have. Whilst still occasionally abundant locally,
their ecological range has been dramatically diminished.
In the material that follows these plants are referred to, especially Chamaelirium,
because they offer such profound healing possibilities. However I would
caution against buying them unless they have been cultivated, which in the
case of Cypripedium is extremely difficult. Wildcrafting in this
case would be an ecological crime.
For more information about endangered plants and bioregional conservation
issues that relate to your area please consult local conservation groups
or Native Plant Societies. A good source of address for such groups is :
The National Wildflower Research Centers WildFlower handbook
Texas Monthly Press, Austin 1989
Herbal Therapy for Reproductive Health
Emmenagogues: are they or are they not?
Uterine Tonics
Amenorrhea
Dysmenorrhea
Menorrhagia
Pre-Menstrual Tension
Menopause
Herbs, Fertility & Contraception
Infertility
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