diagnostics of traditional chinese medicine

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How To Detoxify Your Body - Colon Cleansing

Tel Aviv----Almost everyone can benefit from a cleanse. It's one of the best ways to remain healthy in a destructive environment. Not one of us is immune to environmental toxins. The more toxic we are, the faster we age. It will improve your energy, health, vibrancy and is Anti-aging.

Securing these is what detoxifying is all about. Symptoms of toxicity may include being overweight or tired all the time. Do you have headaches, other aches and pains, frequent colds and flu's, constipation or digestive problems, high blood pressure, PMS, allergies or sensitivities? Do you often drink too much alcohol, drink caffeinated beverages, smoke cigarettes, use over-the-counter or recreational drugs, or eat fast, fried or refined foods?

What is detoxification? Our bodies naturally do it every day.


Chinese book fair kicks off in Nepal

KATHMANDU, June 6 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese Book Fair, sponsored by General Administration of Press and Publication of the People's Republic of China, kicked off here Wednesday. Speaking at the inauguration ceremony of the Chinese Book Fair with the theme "Reading China", Nepali Minister for Information and Communication Krishna Bahadur Mahara stressed on the importance of book in course of search for information and truth. While expressing confidence that similar fair would continue in the days ahead, he laid emphasis on the need of study for enhancement of knowledge. Saying that those Nepalis who are eager to learn about China are somewhat disheartened due to lack of Chinese publications which were easily available in Nepal in the past, Minister Mahara expressed optimism that the success of this book fair would give continuity to such fairs in the days to come.


We Say: WHY US NEEDS TO BE CAUTIOUS WITH REGION

Not since World War II has the Pacific region gained such geopolitical importance as now. Beginning last year, the United States of America has sent consistent signals to the region and the world at large that it intends to firmly drop anchor in the world’s single largest geographical feature, the Pacific Ocean.After sending top officials on country tours and regional forum meetings, it announced this year would be the "Year of the Pacific" and took 20 islands leaders for a meeting in Washington DC, the first to be held on the mainland, in a bid to underscore the importance of the region to its own administration and to make clear its intentions to the leaders.Having ignored the region for decades, it is clearly in a hurry to recover lost ground. But it may already be too late to make any effective impression.


Foot massages for the masses

SAN GABRIEL, Calif. -- Shortly before midnight, on a moonlit corner of Valley Boulevard in San Gabriel, a small crowd waited outside a store with a yellow banner advertising one-hour foot massages for $9.99.

Inside the dimly lighted business decorated with Chinese bamboo screens, a room full of customers sank into black leather armchairs while uniformed masseuses rubbed their feet with lotion. As a Mandarin movie beamed from a flat screen television, the workers carefully pressed the tips of their fingers on pressure points believed to promote better circulation and improve overall health.

There was a poker dealer from a nearby casino who needed the tension lifted from her muscles after a day on her feet, a nail-salon worker who comes because he believes the therapy boosts his fertility, and an investment analyst who injured himself running and wanted scar tissue rubbed.


Mexicans think government is guilty in drug case

MEXICO CITY - The newspapers fly off the stands at Juan Perez's kiosk on bustling Avenida Juarez - especially those splashed with headlines about the riches of Zhenli Ye Gon, an importer accused of drug trafficking in a case Mexican and U.S. authorities have hailed as a blow to the methamphetamine trade.But to Perez, who has hawked news on this street for 60 years, the true defendant is the Mexican government."Tons! Tons of drugs passed through the ports. Who gave the permits?" asked Perez, a spry 75, jabbing his finger into the warm midafternoon air as taxis whizzed by his stand. "In all this, the government is guilty."Dubbed "El Chino" - the Chinaman - by Mexican media, the man whose arrest at a Wheaton, Md., restaurant last week thrust him into the center of the U.S. drug war has for months been the notorious protagonist of what analysts here call the country's biggest political scandal in recent years.Questions are swirling about government complicity in Ye Gon's alleged trade, not to mention his recent claim that much of the $205 million found in his Mexico City mansion was a "slush fund" he was forced to safeguard for Mexico's ruling National Action Party.President Felipe Calderon has called Ye Gon's version of the story a "cuento Chino," a phrase that literally translates to "Chinese story" but means "tall tale." Many observers reject Ye Gon's explanation as absurd.


Psoriasis: what's the alternative?

EACH week our team of health experts tackle all your most pressing health concerns. This week they look at the benefits of omega oils, how to get pregnanat and alternative cures for psoriasis.

THE CHILD BEHAVIOUR EXPERT

Amanda Clarkson works for The Cactus Clinic at the University of Teesside.

Q: I keep hearing about how Omega 3 and 6 are good to improve children's' learning. In there any truth in this?

Amanda says: Awareness of omega oils has increased significantly over the past few years. In terms of brain function omega 3 helps the brain membranes around neurons (cells which transmit messages throughout the brain and to other parts of the body) to be flexible, allowing vital molecules to pass through so the neurons can communicate properly.


Chinese Clinic Rapped For Making False Claims

In an adjudication published recently, the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has fully upheld the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) complaints about a company in Maidstone, Kent. The Everwell Chinese Medicine Centre was advertising Traditional Chinese Medicines (TCMs) and making inaccurate and misleading medicinal claims.

The MHRA raised its concerns with the ASA on 10 January 2007, that the public was at risk from claims being made in a leaflet produced by the company. The leaflet said that its Chinese medicines could treat terminal illnesses, as well as a wide range of other health problems such as ME, MS, paralysis, impotence, infertility, psoriais, arthritis, hypertension, blood pressure, strokes and depression, all of which are serious or prolonged medical conditions.


Thirteen-Year-Old Egyptian Girl Dies During Female Circumcision

The father has been referred to the state prosecutor.

The doctor involved also has been referred to the prosecutor and his clinic in rural Gharbiyah province has been closed down, state-owned al-Gomhoria daily reported.

The reports could not be immediately confirmed as judicial authorities were not available for comment Saturday.

In June, the death of 12-year-old Badour Shaker during a circumcision operation in the southern town of Maghagh sparked a public outcry, prompting the government to officially ban hospitals from performing female circumcisions.

The Egyptian Health Ministry said violators would be punished, but did not specify the penalty. The ban is not as enforceable as a law, which requires passage in the national legislature.


American Opinion

Some fans despaired that the fall of the Berlin Wall would mean the end of the Cold War spy novel. Now it's clear that the clash of warring New World Order camps just intensifies the need for human intelligence, and for master spy craft. Le Carr once wrote on fighting communism. Now, he writes on the evils of unbridled capitalism, and on bad faith in medicine. "The Constant Gardener" begins in Nairobi with the murder of the wife of a British diplomat who blew the whistle on a pharmaceutical giant. The drug company is cynically using Africans as guinea pigs in developing an incredibly lucrative antibiotic against drug-resistant tuberculosis. The stakes are high, and British intelligence has been called in to protect the drug company.

James Bond, no longer needed to fight S.P.E.C.T.R.Ec, becomes a mercenary in the fight against medical whistleblowers.


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