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Natural Care bioAllers Outdoor Allergies -- 60 Tablets


Natural Care bioAllers Outdoor Allergies
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Natural Care bioAllers Outdoor Allergies -- 60 Tablets

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Natural Care bioAllers Outdoor Allergies Description

  • Homeopathic
  • May Help Relieve
    • Sneezing & Congestion
    • Runny Nose
    • Itchy, Watery Eyes
  • Leading Allergy Brand
  • All Region Formula

Natural Care bioAllers® Outdoor Allergies is designed using homeopathic principles and may help provide general relief for outdoor allergy symptoms.

 

Homeopathic theory is that symptom relief is attained through stimulation of the natural healing response. Precise levels of homeopathic ingredients are included in this formula.

  • Advanced formulations
  • Non-drowsy formulas
  • No excessive dryness or thirst

Natural Care bioAllers® Outdoor Allergies  is dedicated to producing advanced, health products formulated and manufactured to the highest quality standards.

 

Uses may help temporarily relieve allergy and hay fever symptoms • runny nose • sneezing • itchy, watery eyes • sinus pressure • headache


Directions

Adults and children over the age of 12, take 2 tablets every 2 hours for 2 doses, then reduce to 1 tablet every 4 hours. For continued relief take 2 tablets 3 times daily.

 

Children 4-12 years take on half the adult dosage.

 

For children under 4 years consult a health provider.

Sensitive persons and asthma sufferers consult a health care practitioner. If symptoms or asthma worsen discontinue use.

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.


Ingredients: Active Ingredients: Decongestant: Adrenalinum 6X, Allergy Symptom Relief: Acontium napellus 6X HPUS, Allium cepa 6X, Arsenicum iodatum 6X, Euphrasia officinalis 6X, Sabadilla 6X, Silicea 6X Anthistamine: Histaminum hydrochloricum 12X, Ambrosia artemisiaefolia (ragweed) 12X, Artemisia vulgaris (mugwort) 12X, Brassica napus (mustard) 12X, Chenopodium album (wormseed) 12X, Lolium perenne (goldenrod) 12X, medicago sativa (alfalfa) 12X, PHleum pratanse (timothy grass) 12X, Rumex crispus (yellow dock) 12X, Taraxacum officinale (dandelion) 12X, Trifolium spp (clover) 12X, Xanthium strumarium (cocklebur) 12X.
Inactive Ingredients: Cellulose, dextrose, lactose, magnesium stearate.
Warnings

Stop use and ask a doctor if symptoms do not improve in 5 days or new symptoms appear; you are an asthma sufferer with severe allergies.

If pregnant or breast-feeding, ask a health professional before use.

In case of overdose, get medical help or contact a Poison Control Center right away.

The product you receive may contain additional details or differ from what is shown on this page, or the product may have additional information revealed by partially peeling back the label. We recommend you reference the complete information included with your product before consumption and do not rely solely on the details shown on this page. For more information, please see our full disclaimer.
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How Spending Time in Nature Can Benefit Your Health

In our modern lives—with constant Internet access, superfast computers and smart phones and nonstop immersion in a maelstrom of tweets, emails and updates— connectivity is key. But this type of connectivity comes at a huge price. Our connectedness to nature, to seasons, plants and wildlife becomes eroded.

Woman Relaxing by Lake Beach Enjoying the Health Benefits of Nature | www.vitacost.com/blog

But technology and nature need not be mutually exclusive—if both are given equal priority. Richard Louv, author of Last Child in the Woods, in his recent book The Nature Principle, writes about how turning away from nature may be “the outdated dogma of our time.” His latest book urges people to reclaim an old-fashioned immersive experience—one not of pixels but of plants.

The gist of Louv's Nature Principle is that reconnecting to the natural world is “fundamental to human health, well-being, spirit and survival.” But the Nature Principle is not about ditching our computers and heading for the hills. It's about balancing the virtual with the real.

“We need to realize how detrimental all the screen time is, and how important it is to break up that screen time with nature,” says Eva Selhub, coauthor of Your Brain on Nature. “The more time you spend cut off from nature, in front of a computer, disconnected, the chance of depression increases,” she says.

“In our book, we discuss the importance of supplementing with Vitamin G, loosely defined as anything green—plants, mountains, water, even pets. We are wired to recognize beauty in the context of nature. We become both more alert in nature as well as more relaxed—‘smell chemicals’ like those in pine cones and lavender in fact trigger relaxation.”

Most of us, though technologically savvy, suffer from acute “plant blindness,” a term coined by James Wandersee and Elizabeth Schussler, both botanists. Defined as the “inability to see or notice plants in one's own environment,” our neglect of the natural world prevents us from entering a meaningful dialogue with the world around us. But by starting to pay more attention and spending more time outside, says Selhub, we develop our capacity to develop empathy for our environment.

There are multitudes of reasons to connect with nature: increased productivity and creative thinking, a deepened sense of community, heightened sensory awareness and a strengthened imperative to sustain, restore and expand our botanical footprint. Or as my daughter is keenly aware of, there is simply the sheer pleasure of the wind in our hair and the sun on our face. But time spent in nature can significantly impact our physical and emotional well-being in surprising ways. What follows are just a few benefits our connection to nature can have on health.

Decrease stress

“Exercising in nature is a huge stress buffer,” says Selhub. “It's exercise squared.” A January 2007 study published in Public Health found people who walked regularly in a forest had greatly improved mood, less anxiety and depression, and less production of the “stress hormone” cortisol than people who walked in areas of light suburban development.

Reduce depression

Biophilia, or our innate emotional affiliation to other living organisms, gets tamped down when we remove ourselves from nature. We forget how soothing and expansive a direct experience of nature can be. And it's easier to go from shut in to shut down than we realize. A national survey conducted in 2007 by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that assessed the health of the country (known as the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, or BRFSS) suggested that living in rural areas reduced the risk of suffering from psychological disturbance by 17 percent, compared to the risk for urban residents.

Uplift mood

Being outside can make you feel better in ways that an active workout in a gym just can't touch. A review of studies comparing the benefits of outdoor exercise versus indoor, published in the February 2011 issue of Environmental Science & Technology, found that exercising in natural environments was associated with greater feelings of revitalization and positive engagement; decreases in tension, confusion, anger and depression; and increased energy.

Improves longevity

The more green around you, the longer you live. A study published in the May 2008 International Journal of Health Geographics showed that green space offered measurable protection from the risk of strokes, while areas sparse in green were associated with a high risk of stroke mortality.

Bolsters immune response

Sometimes a window can be worth a thousand vitamins. Not only meandering through forests, but also merely gazing at them, can help strengthen the body's immune response. A 1984 study by Roger Ulrich, a pioneer of healthcare design, observed patients recovering from gallbladder surgery. In one group, patients looked out at a brick wall, while members of another group had a natural, green vista. The patients able to view nature recovered faster and had fewer complications than the patients who had a view of a building.

Don't think you have to move to a different state to find yourself in nature's sweet spot. A walk in a park, along the ocean or even among urban greenery can do the trick. Selhub recommends short doses—but of at least 20 minutes duration—of being in green spaces to allow your brain to resync with the natural world.

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