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Hippocrates health program | A Wisdom Archive on Hippocrates health program |  | Hippocrates health program A selection of articles related to Hippocrates health program |  |
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Hippocrates health program, Health Archives, Health Dictionary, Body Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Medicine, Alternative Health Care, Natural Health, Natural Medicine, Alternative Remedy, Alternative Remedies, Health, Alternate Healing Methods, Alternate Healing Method, Natural Healing, Alternative Health Dictionary -, Alternative Medicine Dictionary - H, Alternative Health - H, Alternative Medicine - H, Alternative Health Care - H, Natural Health - H, Natural Medicine - H, Alternative Remedy - H, Alternative Remedies - H, Health - H, Alternate Healing Methods - H, Alternate Healing Method - H, Natural Healing, Holistic Medicine - H, Holistic Therapies - H, , Health Care, Womens Health, Mental Health, Health and Beauty, Health and Fitness, Sexual Health, Health Food, Woman Health, Man Health, Mens Health, Mans Health, Man's Health
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Hippocrates health program |  |  |  | Hippocrates health program:
Alternative
Health Dictionary on Hippocrates health program Hippocrates health program (Hippocrates program): Variation of Nature Cure developed by wholistic health educator Dr. Ann Wigmore (1904-1994), author of Be Your Own Doctor, The Healing Power Within, The Hippocrates Diet and Health Program, Hippocrates Live Food Program, Recipes for Longer Life, The Sprouting Book, The Wheatgrass Book, and Why Suffer?. Wigmore founded the Hippocrates Health Institute in 1957. The Hippocrates program encompasses brushing the skin, deep breathing, enemas, food combining, the Hippocrates Diet (see Living Foods Lifestyle), and exercises such as squatting. According to its theory, integration of body/mind/spirit is central to health. In Belief: All There Is (1991), Brian R. Clement, codirector of the Hippocrates Health Institute, in West Palm Beach, Florida, asserted: [B]elief can bring you anything that you desire (p. 41). He further stated that death is a sham (p. 67). (See also: Hippocrates health program, Body Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
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Alternative
Health Dictionary on Living Foods Lifestyle Living Foods Lifestyle (Hippocrates Diet): Dietetic variation of self-healing originated by Ann Wigmore (1904-1994). It is the centerpiece of the Hippocrates health program. The Hippocrates Diet comprises seven categories of uncooked (living) foods: (1) specific fruits; (2) specific vegetables; (3) fresh juices extracted from fruits, vegetables, and sprouts; (4) specific sprouts; (5) nuts and seeds; (6) fermented foods such as sauerkraut and miso; and (7) unfiltered honey. In The Hippocrates Diet and Health Program (1984), Wigmore stated that life energy is the active agent of enzymes and claimed that the diet stops unnecessary wastage of enzyme energy. (See also: Living Foods Lifestyle, Body Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
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 |  |  | Hippocrates health program: Encyclopedia - AsthmaAsthma is a disease of the human respiratory system in which the airways narrow, often in response to a “trigger” such as exposure to an allergen, cold air, exercise, or emotional stress. This narrowing causes symptoms such as wheezing, shortness of breath, chest tightness, and coughing, which are the hallmarks of asthma. Between episodes, most patients feel fine.
The disorder is a chronic inflammatory condition in which the airways develop increased responsiveness to various stimuli, characterized by bronchial hyper-respon ...
Including:
Read more here: » Asthma: Encyclopedia - Asthma |
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Hindu -
Hinduism Dictionary on Ayurveda ayurveda: (Sanskrit) "Science of life." A holistic system of medicine and health native to ancient India. This sacred Vedic science is an Upaveda of the Atharva Veda. Three early giants in this field who left voluminous texts are Charaka, Sushruta and Vagbhata. Ayurveda covers many areas, including: 1) chikitsa, general medicine, 2) shalya, surgery, 3) dehavritti, physiology, 4) nidana, diagnosis, 5) dravyavidya, medicine and pharmacology, 6) agada tantra, antidote method, 7) stritantra, gynecology, 8) pashu vidya, veterinary science, 9) kaumara bhritya, pediatrics, 1 10) urdhvanga, diseases of the organs of the head, 11) bhuta vidya, demonology, 1 12) rasayana, tonics, rejuvenating, 13) vajikarana, sexual rejuvenation. Among the first known surgeons was Sushruta (ca 600 bce), whose Sushruta Samhita is studied to this day. (Hippocrates, Greek father of medicine, lived two centuries later.) The aims of ayurveda are ayus, "long life," and arogya, "diseaselessness," which facilitate progress toward ultimate spiritual goals. Health is achieved by balancing energies (especially the doshas, bodily humors) at all levels of being, subtle and gross, through innumerable methods, selected according to the individual's constitution, lifestyle and nature. Similar holistic medical systems are prevalent among many communities, including the Chinese, American Indians, Africans and South Americans. See: doshas. (See also: Ayurveda, Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul)
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Hindu -
Hinduism Dictionary on Ayurveda ayurveda: (Sanskrit) "Science of life." A holistic system of medicine and health native to ancient India. This sacred Vedic science is an Upaveda of the Atharva Veda. Three early giants in this field who left voluminous texts are Charaka, Sushruta and Vagbhata. Ayurveda covers many areas, including: 1) chikitsa, general medicine, 2) shalya, surgery, 3) dehavritti, physiology, 4) nidana, diagnosis, 5) dravyavidya, medicine and pharmacology, 6) agada tantra, antidote method, 7) stritantra, gynecology, 8) pashu vidya, veterinary science, 9) kaumara bhritya, pediatrics, 1 10) urdhvanga, diseases of the organs of the head, 11) bhuta vidya, demonology, 1 12) rasayana, tonics, rejuvenating, 13) vajikarana, sexual rejuvenation. Among the first known surgeons was Sushruta (ca 600 bce), whose Sushruta Samhita is studied to this day. (Hippocrates, Greek father of medicine, lived two centuries later.) The aims of ayurveda are ayus, "long life," and arogya, "diseaselessness," which facilitate progress toward ultimate spiritual goals. Health is achieved by balancing energies (especially the doshas, bodily humors) at all levels of being, subtle and gross, through innumerable methods, selected according to the individual's constitution, lifestyle and nature. Similar holistic medical systems are prevalent among many communities, including the Chinese, American Indians, Africans and South Americans. See: doshas. (See also: Ayurveda, Hinduism, Body Mind and Soul) |
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 |  |  | Hippocrates health program: Encyclopedia II - Weight training - HistoryMain article: History of strength training
Hippocrates eloquently explained the principle behind weight training when he wrote "that which is used develops, and that which is not used wastes away." Progressive resistance training dates back at least to Ancient Greece, when legend has it that wrestler Milo of Croton trained by carrying a newborn calf on his back every day until it was fully grown. Another Greek, the physician Galen, described strength training exercises using the halteres (an ...
See also:Weight training, Weight training - History, Weight training - Basic principles, Weight training - Progressive overload, Weight training - Recovery, Weight training - Benefits, Weight training - Common concerns, Weight training - Is weight training the same as bodybuilding?, Weight training - Is nutrition relevant for weight trainers?, Weight training - Do women who train with weights look bulky?, Weight training - Are light high-repetition exercises effective for toning muscles?, Weight training - Is weight training safe for children?, Weight training - Can weight training help me slim down?, Weight training - Safety, Weight training - Types of exercises, Weight training - Isotonic Isometric and Plyometric exercises, Weight training - Isolation exercises vs compound exercises, Weight training - Free weights vs exercise machines, Weight training - Aerobic exercise vs anaerobic exercise, Weight training - Exercises for specific muscle groups, Weight training - Advanced techniques, Weight training - Bibliography, Weight training - Footnotes Read more here: » Weight training: Encyclopedia II - Weight training - History |
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 |  |  | Hippocrates health program: Encyclopedia II - Sports medicine - Sports medicine todaySports medicine has always been difficult to define because it is not a single specialty, but an area that involves health care professionals, researchers and educators from a wide variety of disciplines. Its function is not only curative and rehabilitative, but also preventative, which may actually be the most important one of all. Despite this wide scope, there has been a tendency for many to assume that sport-related problems are by default musculoskeletal and that sports medicine is an orthopaedic specialty. There is much more to sports ...
See also:Sports medicine, Sports medicine - History, Sports medicine - Sports medicine today, Sports medicine - United States, Sports medicine - First olympic sports medicine team, Sports medicine - The future of sports medicine Read more here: » Sports medicine: Encyclopedia II - Sports medicine - Sports medicine today |
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 |  |  | Hippocrates health program: Encyclopedia II - Post-traumatic stress disorder - PrevalencePTSD may be experienced following any traumatic experience, or series of experiences which satisfy the criteria, and that do not allow the victim to readily recuperate from the detrimental effects of stress. It is believed that of those exposed to traumatic conditions between 5% (life threatening disease such as cancer) and 80% (rape) will develop PTSD depending on the severity of the trauma and personal vulnerability.
In peacetime, 30% of those that suffer will go on to develop a chronic condition; ...
See also:Post-traumatic stress disorder, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Background, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Diagnostic Criteria, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Symptoms and their possible explanations, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Biology of PTSD, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Neurochemistry, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Neuroanatomy, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Prevalence, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Cancer as PTSD-trauma, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Treatment, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Fiction, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Movies, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Non-Fiction Read more here: » Post-traumatic stress disorder: Encyclopedia II - Post-traumatic stress disorder - Prevalence |
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 |  |  | Hippocrates health program: Encyclopedia II - Tuberculosis - HistoryTuberculosis has been present in humans since antiquity, as the origins of the disease are in the first domestication of cattle (which also gave humanity viral poxes). Skeletal remains show prehistoric humans (4000 BC) had TB and tubercular decay has been found in the spines of Egyptian mummies from 3000-2400 BC. There were references to TB in India around 2000 BC and TB was present in The Americas from about 2000 BC
Phthisis is a Greek term for consumption. Around 460 BC, Hippocrates identified phthisis as the most widespread disease of ...
See also:Tuberculosis, Tuberculosis - Other names for the disease, Tuberculosis - The bacterium, Tuberculosis - The disease, Tuberculosis - Transmission, Tuberculosis - Pathogenesis, Tuberculosis - Progression, Tuberculosis - Drug resistance, Tuberculosis - Diagnosis, Tuberculosis - Treatment, Tuberculosis - Prevention, Tuberculosis - BCG vaccine, Tuberculosis - Tuberculosis vaccine, Tuberculosis - Animals, Tuberculosis - History, Tuberculosis - Tuberculosis in art literature history and film Read more here: » Tuberculosis: Encyclopedia II - Tuberculosis - History |
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 |  |  | Hippocrates health program: Encyclopedia II - Tuberculosis - HistoryTuberculosis has been present in humans since antiquity, as the origins of the disease are in the first domestication of cattle (which also gave humanity viral poxes). Skeletal remains show prehistoric humans (4000 BC) had TB and tubercular decay has been found in the spines of Egyptian mummies from 3000-2400 BC. There were references to TB in India around 2000 BC, and indications of lung scarring identical to that of modern-day TB sufferers in preserved bodies (such as mummies) suggests that TB was pr ...
See also:Tuberculosis, Tuberculosis - Other names for the disease, Tuberculosis - The bacterium, Tuberculosis - The disease, Tuberculosis - Transmission, Tuberculosis - Pathogenesis, Tuberculosis - Progression, Tuberculosis - Drug resistance, Tuberculosis - Diagnosis, Tuberculosis - Treatment, Tuberculosis - Prevention, Tuberculosis - BCG vaccine, Tuberculosis - Tuberculosis vaccine, Tuberculosis - Animals, Tuberculosis - History, Tuberculosis - Tuberculosis in art literature history and film Read more here: » Tuberculosis: Encyclopedia II - Tuberculosis - History |
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 |  |  | Hippocrates health program: Encyclopedia II - Post-traumatic stress disorder - PrevalencePTSD may be experienced following any traumatic experience, or series of experiences which satisfy the criteria, and that do not allow the victim to readily recuperate from the detrimental effects of stress. It is believed that of those exposed to traumatic conditions between 5% (life threatening disease such as cancer) and 80% (rape) will develop PTSD depending on the severity of the trauma and personal vulnerability.
In peacetime, 30% of those that suffer will go on to develop a chronic condition; ...
See also:Post-traumatic stress disorder, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Background, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Diagnostic Criteria, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Symptoms and their possible explanations, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Biology of PTSD, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Neurochemistry, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Neuroanatomy, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Prevalence, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Cancer as PTSD-trauma, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Treatment, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Law, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Fiction, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Movies, Post-traumatic stress disorder - Non-Fiction Read more here: » Post-traumatic stress disorder: Encyclopedia II - Post-traumatic stress disorder - Prevalence |
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 |  |  | Hippocrates health program: Encyclopedia II - Chiropractic - Criticism of chiropracticCritics, including many mainstream medical doctors and scientists, often reject the claims of some chiropractic associations and schools as pseudoscience, quackery, or fraud.
Advocates believe at least some of this criticism was encouraged by the American Medical Association during the 1970s and early 1980s in what they have labeled "anti-chiropractic prejudice". In a carefully worded statement, the judge in a trial against the AMA recognized that this skepticism was also the inspiration for the AMA's actions in instituting an illegal ...
See also:Chiropractic, Chiropractic - History, Chiropractic - Chiropractic subluxation, Chiropractic - Usage, Chiropractic - Scientific support for chiropractic, Chiropractic - Chiropractic education licensure and regulation, Chiropractic - United States, Chiropractic - Philosophical schools of chiropractic, Chiropractic - Criticism of chiropractic, Chiropractic - Safety concerns Read more here: » Chiropractic: Encyclopedia II - Chiropractic - Criticism of chiropractic |
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 |  |  | Hippocrates health program: Encyclopedia II - Weight training - SafetyWeight training can be one of the safest forms of exercise, especially when the movements are slow, controlled, and carefully defined. However, as with any form of exercise, improper execution can result in injury. When the exercise becomes difficult towards the end of a set, there is a temptation to "cheat", i.e. to use poor form to recruit other muscle groups to assist the effort. This may shift the effort to weaker muscles that cannot handle the weight. For example, the squat and the deadlift are used to exercise the largest ...
See also:Weight training, Weight training - History, Weight training - Basic principles, Weight training - Progressive overload, Weight training - Recovery, Weight training - Benefits, Weight training - Common concerns, Weight training - Is weight training the same as bodybuilding?, Weight training - Is nutrition relevant for weight trainers?, Weight training - Do women who train with weights look bulky?, Weight training - Are light high-repetition exercises effective for toning muscles?, Weight training - Is weight training safe for children?, Weight training - Can weight training help me slim down?, Weight training - Safety, Weight training - Types of exercises, Weight training - Isotonic Isometric and Plyometric exercises, Weight training - Isolation exercises vs compound exercises, Weight training - Free weights vs exercise machines, Weight training - Aerobic exercise vs anaerobic exercise, Weight training - Exercises for specific muscle groups, Weight training - Advanced techniques, Weight training - Bibliography, Weight training - Footnotes Read more here: » Weight training: Encyclopedia II - Weight training - Safety |
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