Spice Up Your Life
Spice Up Your Life
Cough syrup is under attack, and rightly so. Parents’ organizations have been concerned about the hallucinogen dextromethorphan (DM), an ingredient in several popular over the counter cough remedies, which has created a subculture of teens and preteens who get high on cough medicine. Moreover a recent study published in the journal Pediatrics reported that neither dextromethorphan nor diphenhydramine (another popular ingredient) was more effective than placebo in improving the nighttime cough or sleep of 100 youngsters with upper-respiratory infections.
Setting limits
The American College of Chest Physicians has issued guidelines strongly urging that over-the-counter cough and cold medications not be used for children younger than 14. The FDA warned parents not to give non-prescription cough and cold medicines to children under two years of age.
A better alternative
Spice Syrup adds plant oils to a maple syrup base, specifically clove bud oil, coriander oil, peppermint oil, nutmeg oil, white thyme oil, and fennel oil. All of these oils possess powerful anti-bacterial properties, and are effective against most of the 25 strains of bacteria. The bottom line is that many plant oils are better than prescription antibiotics in terms of efficacy, safety, and resistance. The maple syrup is soothing, and the plant oils kill bacteria. But even if you are not coughing, the formula is very effective for sore throats and germ-caused bad breath. In the stomach safe healthy Spice Syrup combats food poisoning from Salmonella and in the intestine it kills parasites. Spice Syrup can also be applied topically as a disinfectant on cuts, or on a fungal infection.
How germs spread
The two main ways that germs are spread are: (1) by contact, (2) in a droplet or through very small remains of droplets that float in the air. Contact transmission is the most common way that germs are spread. Droplet transmission happens when germs are spread in a tiny drop of liquid. When a person talks, sings, coughs or sneezes, thousands of invisible droplets are created. These often germ-laden droplets can be broadcast as far as three feet through the air from the person who is doing the sneezing. The droplets may land in another person’s eyes, nose or mouth. But it doesn’t end there. The invisible droplets can be carried by wind for hundreds, even thousands of miles.
Safe healthy Spice Syrup
The point is, you don’t have to be near the person who is sneezing or coughing. That’s why it’s important to take Spice Syrup, not just when you have a cold or a cough, but at the very first sign of a sore throat or a cold. Be attentive, act quickly and you will nip a cold in the bud. Choose Spice Syrup and you have a powerful, safe, proven, protection against illness. As opposed to the big drug companies’ commercial brands, mostly ineffective and many of which are laced with the hallucinogenic drug, dextromethoriphan.