Dear Joy and Sherri,
I thank you for your informative responses. As I said this "honey issue" was
not about me... I made the honey suggestion to a non-homeopathy person to
aid in wound granulation because dissolving stitches post-surgery had
dissolved too quickly and the wound is healing but wide open now. ...and my
suggestion was "bashed" for as something that might contain botulism and
kill the Pt. I originally directed the Pt to several web-based articles
about the Manuka honey in particular. The next time someone comes on to an
allopathic surgery-oriented group forum saying that they will try "anything"
I will probably keep my mouth shut... a few of us in the group do utilize
homeopathy and other "holistic healing" measures and I find that the best
use of our time is in relaying our experiences rather than offering
suggestions so I do accept that I did not follow my usual posting
protocol... BUT on the upside I definitely learned something valuable from
Joy's post about her bee-keeping experience (Thank you Joy!)
best regards as always, Patti
Dear Patti, as a bee keeper I would be asking myself how the botulism finds
its way into the honey and I would think this is happening in the commercial
processing of the honey and not from the hive. Even though the botulism
bacteria is usually a soil based bacteria it is highly unlikely that a honey
bee will get anywhere near this and transport it back to the hive.
All good honey is excellent for wounds and burns etc but I would be advising
that you purchase honey straight from a bee keeper who keeps hives in an
area that doesn¹t have crops spraying or any other heavy industrial
pollution. Honey cannot be classified as organic because you never know what
plants the bees will forage on within a 6/8 mile radius. So stay away from
heavily commercialised honey, not only for this reason but because it is
refined = boiled and even has sugar dissolved into it. And to use gamma
irradiated honey makes me cringe even more
Hope useful. Best wishes, Joy