Dr Edward Bach (September 24, 1886 - November 27 1936) developed Bach flower remedies, a form of alternative medicine inspired by the classical homeopathic traditions.
Before turning to alternative therapies, he was a House Surgeon and a casualty medical officer at University College Hospital; he was in charge of 400 beds during World War I; he worked at the National Temperance Hospital and had a successful practice at Harley Street. Later he worked at the London Homeopathic Hospital and he developed seven bacterial nosodes known as the seven Bach nosodes, which have received only limited recognition and their use has been mostly confined to British homeopathy practitioners.
These Bowel Nosodes were introduced by Bach and the British homeopaths, John Paterson (1890-1954) *" target="_blank" >in the 1920s. Their use is based on the variable bowel bacterial flora associated with persons of different homeopathic constitutional types: [http://www.homoeopathyclinic.com/articles/prescribing_9.htm
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In 1930, at the age of forty three, he decided to search for a new healing technique. He spent the spring and summer discovering and preparing new herbal remedies, and the winter treating patients for free. He advertised his remedies in two daily newspapers, but the General Medical Council disapproved of his advertising. In 1934, he moved to Mount Vernon in Oxfordshire.
In his treatise Heal Thyself he writes:
Homeopathy | Homeopaths | New Age | Metaphysics writers | Spiritual writers | 1886 births | 1936 deaths
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