Dr bach flower remedies
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Dr. Edward Bach, 1936 Dr. Edward Bach (September 24, 1886 – November 27, 1936) was born in a village called Moseley, near Birmingham, England.
Dr. Bach studied medicine at the University College Hospital, London, and obtained a Diploma in Public Health at Cambridge. He was a house surgeon and a casualty medical officer at University College Hospital. He worked at the National Temperance Hospital and practiced for over twenty years in London as a Harley Street consultant and bacteriologist. After research in immunology, he developed an interest in homeopathy and joined the laboratories of the Royal London Homeopathic Hospital in 1919. He developed seven bacterial nosodes (the seven Bach nosodes), which have received only limited recognition.
Despite the success of his work with orthodox medicine, he felt dissatisfied with the way doctors were expected to concentrate on diseases and ignore the people who were suffering from them. He turned to alternative therapies. He believed that illness is the effect of disharmony between body and mind. Symptoms of an illness are the ex
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Edward Bach
Edward Bach grew up in Bermingham, and as a boy is said to have shown a keen concern for human suffering. He worked in his father's brass foundry and observed the loneliness, alienation and apathy that appeared to affect the general health of many of his co-workers. He decided that this was not to become his profession, and considered to become a minister or medical doctor. With the financial support of his father, he eventually chose the latter.
He studied medicine at the University College Hospital, London, and was a House Surgeon there. According to his biographers he was a rather peculiar medicine student, because he soon revealed more interest for patients than for their illnesses: he sat at their bedside and let them talk. He thus discovered that the real cause of their illness was worries: the woman who suffered from acute asthma, for instance, was a very frightened person, as he learnt when she told him that her only son had moved three months before to northern England, for work reasons, and since then had been out of touch. The woman feared he had been vi
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Dr. Edward Bach
Dr. Edward Bach (24 September 1886 – 27 November 1936) was an English doctor, homeopath, bacteriologist and spiritual writer, best known for developing a range of remedies called the Bach flower remedies, a form of alternative medicine inspired by classical homeopathic traditions.
Dr Edward Bach was born in Kings Norton, Worcestershire. He attended Birmingham University and went on to University College Hospital in London to complete his studies. He studied medicine at the University College Hospital, London, and obtained a Diploma of Public Health (DPH) at Cambridge.
In 1917 Bach had a malignant tumour removed from his spleen. It was predicted that he had only three months left to live, but instead he recovered. He died in his sleep on 27 November 1936 in Wallingford, Berkshire, at the age of 50.
Bach flower remedies
In 1930, at the age of 43, he decided to search for a new healing technique. He spent the spring and summer discovering and preparing new flower remedies – which include no part of the plant but simply what Bach claimed to be the pattern
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