The Home Doctor - Practical Medicine for Every Household: The Only Book You Need When Help is Not On The Way

 

The Home Doctor - Practical Medicine for Every Household:

The Only Book You Need When Help is Not On The Way






The Home Doctor - Practical Medicine for Every Household - is a 304 page doctor written and approved guide on how to manage most health situations when help is not on the way.

If you want to see what happens when things go south, all you have to do is look at Venezuela: no electricity, no running water, no law, no antibiotics, no painkillers, no anesthetics, no insulin or other important things.

But if you want to find out how you can still manage in a situation like this, you must also look to Venezuela and learn the ingenious ways they developed to cope.



About Dr. Maybell Nieves:


Dr. Maybell Nieves - head surgeon of the Unit of Breast Pathology and general surgeon at Caracas University Hospital in Venezuela, with over 10 years of experience in the operating room. She studied at the prestigious European Institute of Oncology in Milan, Italy.

Dr. Maybell is known for developing new, ingenious methods of treating patients after Venezuela's economy collapsed and hospitals and pharmacies ran out of medicines, supplies, electricity and running water.



The methods she developed and pioneered are now studied and applied in conflict zones all over the world.

Many of these protocols and procedures do not require medical assistance as they are specifically designed to be self-applied. That makes them extremely valuable if the medical system cannot be depended on, like during long term blackouts.



You can find some of these methods below! As you read them, you can easily understand why they are so useful and why every household and family should have them close by. She co-authored the book with Dr Rodrigo Alterio and Claude Davis.


Here’s just a small glimpse of what you’ll find in
The Home Doctor: Practical Medicine for Every Household:

his book is a unique guide for the layman that you can use when help is not on the way or to manage common ailments that don't require seeing a doctor.

Let me show you just some of the things you’ll find inside the Home Doctor:


How to Recognize a Heart Attack

and What to Do Next


Look at its four distinctive symptoms: first, chest discomfort that feels like uncomfortable pressure, squeezing, fullness, and pain in the middle of your chest that lasts for more than a few minutes.

The second symptom is discomfort or pain in one or both arms and your back, neck, jaw, or stomach.

The third symptom is shortness of breath.


The last thing you need to watch out for is breaking out in a cold sweat, nausea, and lightheadedness.

These don’t all come at once, but if you see even one or two, it’s time to call 911.

Another step you can take to improve your chances before the ambulance arrives is to chew on aspirin and pour a vial of nitroglycerin under your tongue. But you need to have these two items at home beforehand.

The Best Natural Painkiller That Grows in Your Own Backyard



Another thing you’ll discover is the best natural painkiller that probably grows in your own backyard.

This is the painkilling plant that many in Venezuela turned to after they couldn’t find relief at the pharmacy anymore…and it grows all over North America as well.


A Simple “At-Home” Method for the Flu and Other Respiratory Issues


During the flu season, a lot of people end up in the hospital with a high fever, coughing their lungs out.

So one of the things I want to give you is a simple protocol to deal with it at home if going to a hospital is off the table.


A Step-by-Step Approach to Deal With

Almost Every Skin Injury and Condition


In Chapter 3, Skin and Skin Appendages, you’ll find out all you need to know to manage conditions of the skin, such as corns, warts, athlete’s food, burns and scalds, dermatitis, fungal infections of the nails, insect bites and stings, abscesses, ulcers or open wounds…

You’ll also discover why you should put egg whites on second-degree burns, what over-the-counter medicines and creams to stockpile, and the exact process of cleaning, stitching, and treating an open wound at home


The Unnoticed Symptom

That May Point to an Internal Inflammation


You’ll find out how I deal with my back problems. Until I found this one-minute stretch routine, I often woke up like a hunchback and could barely walk to the bathroom. And it usually took me several hours to become functional again.

If this sounds at all familiar to you, you should learn this simple move.

A Natural DIY Antibiotic Salve Recipe to Keep Around





An antibiotic ointment is nice to have around when you need it.

The recipe found inside the Home Doctor aids in keeping a wound from becoming infected and help reduce scarring.










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