Homeopathic Medicines for Pregnancy and Childbirth
Richard Moskowitz, MD
List price:
$18.95
Our price:
$18.95
Written by the former President of the National Center for Homeopathy, this user-friendly guidebook is helpful to the layperson or health professional. It describes the common remedies effective in treating common problems of pregnancy, childbirth, and post-partum, and it does so with specific cases and thoughtful descriptions.
"No one before has written such a comprehensive tome on homeopathy and the childbearing period. No one could bring more attention to detail and intellectual precision to the subject than Dick Moskowitz. And no book could be more accessible. Don 't even hesitate. You will want to own this book. It will revolutionize the health care of women in this country."
-- Peggy O'Mara Editor, Mothering Magazine
"Homeopathy offers a useful alternative set of meidcations for the childbearing cycle. The book offers an introduction to the philosophy and practice of homeopathy, as well as case presentations of successful homeopathic treatments for mother and child, including labor pain, teething, depression, irritability, and marital discord. I am sure it will be of enormous use to parents and physicians."
-- Barbara Katz Rothman Editor, The Childbirth Encyclopedia
"This fine book will reach beyond the confines of the homeopathic community. It speaks to doctors, nurses, parents, midwives, and women nationwide. Its scholarly and elegant presentation will assist homeopaths in their care of mothers and infants."
-- Catherine Coulter Author, Portraits of Homeopathic Medicines
For people interested in some of Dana Ullman's earliest writings, you can read his undergraduate thesis at U.C. Berkeley in 1975 on "Human Learning." Honor students at UC Berkeley who wish to have an independent major (and who do not want to have a regular generic major) are required to write a thesis. This paper on "Human Learning" provides insights into Dana's early synthetic and integrative thinking. The beginning of the article and its definition of "science" may be of special interest. Also, Dana creatively chose to use his own invented pronouns to replace the masculine emphasis of "he," "him," and "his," with "che," "chis," and "cher."