Collecting medicinal herbs requires careful attention to ensure the efficacy of the herbs as medicines. Here are some rules for medicinal herbs collection: 1. Correct Identification: The herb must be identified correctly. Good knowledge of all the characters and characteristics of plants is requiredRead more
Collecting medicinal herbs requires careful attention to ensure the efficacy of the herbs as medicines. Here are some rules for medicinal herbs collection:
1. Correct Identification: The herb must be identified correctly. Good knowledge of all the characters and characteristics of plants is required.
2. Optimum Time of Harvest: The correct time of collecting has to be known. The World Health Organization’s criteria for good herbal drug preparation include the optimum time of harvest.
3. Post-Harvest Handling: After harvesting, the herbs need to be handled properly.
4. Drying and Preservation: The correct way of drying and keeping the herb is crucial. The herbs should be stored in a way that preserves their medicinal properties.
5. Sustainable Practices: For the restoration, reproduction, and protection of medicinal herbs, do not disassemble the plants, do not tear them with a stem or a STEM, as well as endings.
6. Quality Assurance: Stick to these rules, and you can be sure that the plants you pick will be of the finest quality.
Remember, these rules are general guidelines and the specific practices can vary depending on the particular herb and its traditional uses.
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Here’s a concise rundown of the fundamental “rules of pharmacy” in homeopathy—i.e. the do’s and don’ts that ensure your medicines are potent, pure, stable and safe from preparation all the way to dispensing: 1. Material-Purity and Identification • Use only pharmacopeial-grade raw substances (plants,Read more
Here’s a concise rundown of the fundamental “rules of pharmacy” in homeopathy—i.e. the do’s and don’ts that ensure your medicines are potent, pure, stable and safe from preparation all the way to dispensing:
1. Material-Purity and Identification
• Use only pharmacopeial-grade raw substances (plants, minerals, nosodes, etc.) whose identity, source and batch have been verified.
• Keep a strict “first-in, first-out” record so nothing goes past its expiry or gets mis-identified.
2. Accuracy of Proportions
• For triturations, always weigh powders on a calibrated balance—never eyeball it. Typical ratios are 1:9 for D triturations, 1:99 for C triturations.
• When making liquid dilutions (centesimal or decimal), measure vehicle (alcohol, glycerin or water) with graduated glassware to ±2% accuracy.
3. Succussion and Trituration Technique
• Triturations: use a clean, dry porcelain mortar & pestle; wipe surfaces between compounds to avoid cross-contamination.
• Succussion: each potency step must receive the prescribed number of vigorous strokes (e.g. 10 “hard knocks” for D-potencies, 100 for C-potencies) against a leather pad.
4. Equipment and Environment
• Work in a dust-free, odor-free space; keep windows closed and avoid perfumes, smoking or strong chemicals nearby.
• Glass bottles and stoppers only—metal can catalyze reactions; always label bottles before adding remedy.
5. Single-Remedy Principle
• Prepare and dispense one remedy per container. Never premix different potencies or different remedia in the same bottle.
• If multiple remedies are needed (e.g. alternation), keep them strictly segregated.
6. Labeling and Documentation
• Every container must show: remedy name, potency, date of preparation, manufacturer/pharmacist name, and shelf-life.
• Maintain a logbook (or electronic record) of every batch, including raw-material lot numbers and processing details.
7. Storage and Stability
• Store finished remedies in dark, airtight bottles, upright, at room temperature (15–25 °C), away from direct sunlight, heat sources, strong odors and magnetic fields.
• Follow pharmacopeial shelf-life (usually 2 years for dilutions, 5 years for dry triturations) and discard any past that date.
8. Hygiene and Cross-Contamination Prevention
• Wash hands and change gloves between handling different substances.
• Clean all glassware and equipment immediately after use with mild detergent and hot water—never leave residues.
9. Quality-Control Checks
• Periodically test intermediate dilutions for clarity, odor or precipitates—for C-potencies, the tincture should remain limpid.
• If a preparation shows turbidity, color change or precipitate, quarantine and investigate before release.
10. Patient-Facing Dispensing Rules
• Use fresh, labelled medicine vials for each prescription.
• Teach the patient how to store, dose (e.g. number of pellets, number of succussions), and when to discard the bottle.
Adhering to these rules guarantees that every homeopathic remedy you prepare or dispense faithfully carries the exact dynamis Hahnemann intended—pure, precise and ready to act.
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