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Oil of Oregano - Miracle Cure! PDF Print E-mail
Swift
Written by Bart Farkas   
Tuesday, 28 September 2010 17:33
My significant other works at a small professional office and not long after she started working there she found that her officemates were big boosters of ‘Oil of Oregano’ as a cure for, well, basically anything. Your child has a cold? Use Oil of Oregano. You have a headache? Oil of Oregano. Severed limb? Oil of Oregano!

Not being terribly familiar with Oil of Oregano I took to my books and the venerable but often misleading Internet to bone up on the subject. My previous experience with this told me that as a topical anti-bacterial, oil of oregano does indeed have some legitimate qualities that would probably be useful in a pinch if you had no other way to treat an external infection.

Giardia

Giardia is on the run

from Oil of Oregano?

The web, as it turns out, is chock full of interesting articles about this miracle cure, but unfortunately most of the articles are chock full of nothing more than anecdotes about how wonderful this oil is. In a brief search I found that oil of oregano is supposedly good for treatment of colds, flu, sore throat, bronchitis, sinusitis, asthma, bladder infections, kidney infections, peptic ulcers, fatigue,  headaches, allergies, bad breath, indigestion, parasites such as Giardia Lambia, cold sores, puncture wounds, dandruff, warts, athlete’s foot, boils, nail fungus, bed sores, head lice, ringworm, psoriasis, eczema, arthritis, back pain, and a whole lot more. In short, oil of oregano can not only make everyone multi-millionaires who are constantly happy and never pay taxes, but it can also ensure world peace.

Let’s face it, any time that a product has a list of ailments it can cure that is this long, one just has to raise an eyebrow and ask about how realistic something like this could possibly be. As it turns out, a great deal of the hullaballoo over oil of oregano stems from a few small studies done in test tubes. As the website sciencebasedpharmacy.com so eloquently puts it:

“Oil of oregano is a great example of how test tube studies can be misleadingly exaggerated to imply meaningful effects in humans. With oil of oregano, a few small studies have been conducted, mainly in the lab, and believers argue  we should expect the same thing when we take it orally.”


Ultimately there are a few studies that show that oil of oregano has some anti-bacterial properties in the test tube (or petrie dish as the case may be), but many of the naturopathic medical folks have connected dots between these few small studies and reality. In fact, when looking at the pro-oil of oregano websites one finds the same references to a University of Tennessee study cited over and over again as justification that this miracle cure can solve all medical problems equally well. Readers seem to be encouraged to ‘try it on what ails you’ and of course most of these sites also have links for you to purchase their oil of oregano products.

What strikes me as perhaps the most amusing aspect of this is that these office dwellers who are all educated but not in the sciences, believe that the delivery system that is most effective for Oil of Oregano is to rub it on one’s feet! I kid you not; for some reason the best way to deliver this wonder drug is through the well-established time-honored drug delivery system that is the soles of our feet.  This is so ridiculous I don’t even know where to begin.  All I can think is that at some point some reflexology therapists got themselves into the Oil of Oregano craze and decided that putting this oil on the bottoms of one’s feet is an effective way to delivery the drug to all parts of the body to enact the miracle cure that is surely forthcoming.

As with anything like this, the real danger lies in people foregoing western medicine for serious complaints, like Cancer, Asthma, or diabetes in favor of an oil of oregano cure/treatment. This can quite obviously lead to some serious problems, and for this reason if no other it’s important that we write blog posts like this to keep folks educated as much as possible. Even if one person is inspired to think twice, it’s a worthwhile endeavor.

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Side Effects
written by GusGus, September 28, 2010

As you know, all treatments have side effects. The side effect of putting oil of oregano on one's feet: Slipping out of one's shoes!
.
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@GusGus
written by Hierro, September 28, 2010
May also cause Anal Leakage!
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...
written by MadScientist, September 28, 2010
I put oregano into my spaghetti sauce and I've never suffered from giardia - it must work! And you don't even need much of it - what a miracle. Now if you'll excuse me, I've got some tiger repellent to sell around Central Park.
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...
written by Phildonnia, September 28, 2010
Miracle cure for bland pizza...
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..., Lowly rated comment [Show]
...
written by emily_combs, September 29, 2010
Your comments in the 2nd to last paragraph made me wonder if those "Detox Foot Pads" had oregano in them. They don't, but it makes just as much (or as little) sense to put them on your feet and hope for results. You can see the convincing before and after photos here: http://www.purifyyourbody.com/...ngredients The "after" definitely doesn't look like a poorly-used tea bag or anything...

And the disclaimer? "**This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. As in all health situations, your doctor should be consulted for any medical condition.**" Well, duh.

What does it take for people to learn?
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Venerable?
written by Wave, September 29, 2010
Venerable? The Internet? The American Heritage Dictionary lists two non-technical definitions of venerable: 1. Commanding respect by virtue of age, dignity, character, or position. 2. Worthy of reverence, especially by religious or historical association. No one could argue that the first applies, so I guess that the cult of the Almighty Internet must have sprung up while I was not paying attention.
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@Wave
written by philosaur, September 29, 2010
The American Heritage Dictionary defines irony as: 1.the use of words to convey a meaning that is the opposite of its literal meaning: the irony of her reply, “How nice!” when I said I had to work all weekend.

The Urban Dictionary (www.urbandictionary.com) defines whoosh as: Single word exclamation, accompanied by a gesture where the hand is swept palm down over the head from front to back with about three inches clearance. Indicates that the joke just told was too sophisticated for the listener and has gone "way over their head".
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Venerable
written by Bartmon, September 29, 2010
@Wave

Tongue-in-cheek my friend.

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Articles on Oil of Oregano
written by Bartmon, September 29, 2010
Ben Goldacre's dead cat,

You are absolutely correct. What I meant to say was that most of the sites I read on the subject of Oil of Oregano mentioned the same anti-bacterial studies and those same studies are mentioned (usually in an oblique way) again and again and again. My apologies.

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...
written by Otara, September 29, 2010
This is partly about how science is being communicated today. What makes news is 'possible new miracle cure' not 'cure has been validated by X other studies'.

And perhaps there is some progress occurring if actual studies with potential real benefit are being misused as references, rather than the usual 'quantum entanglement improves your aura' hokum?
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You Were SO Promising
written by Caller X, September 29, 2010
This article is just another space-filler.

As with anything like this, the real danger lies in people foregoing western medicine for serious complaints, like Cancer, Asthma, or diabetes in favor of an oil of oregano cure/treatment. This can quite obviously lead to some serious problems, and for this reason if no other it’s important that we write blog posts like this to keep folks educated as much as possible. Even if one person is inspired to think twice, it’s a worthwhile endeavor.


"Western medicine"? Naturopathy is Western medicine, licensed in 15 states and 5 Canadian provinces. Granted, it's nonsense, but so is this article... you're not educating anyone. Anyone who tries to use oregano to treat diabetes is going to realize their mistake in short order. You should know that.

"it’s important that we write blog posts like this" No, it's really not.
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...
written by DrMatt, September 30, 2010
"Giardia" sounds Italian.
Oregano.
Hm!
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...
written by philosaur, September 30, 2010
"Thank you for your correction." This is irony. It is also "tongue-in-cheek."

It's also "sarcasm". Thanks for the "heads-up". Otherwise, I might not have "comprehended".

The phrase "venerable but often misleading"...context.

You're trying too hard.
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That which we call a rose...
written by bigdoggy, October 01, 2010
This treatment has been around a long time, usually under the name 'Oil of Snake'.
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the end of theism
written by rosie, October 01, 2010
@ozoz
Thanks for writing in capitals. It is a bit loud, but it makes your posts so much easier to skip.
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Disagree with Caller X
written by Bartmon, October 04, 2010
Caller X,

I respectfully disagree with you. As a registered nurse I saw folks forgo standard treatments for cancer in favor of naturopathic treatments, in one case the patient waited nearly six months to begin treatment and instead treated the condition with alternative snake oil. The result was that a very treatable cancer, which likely would have been cured, was left to spread to other organs in the person's body. The result was a pelvic exoneration surgery and ultimately death from cancer including a great deal of suffering. Do we know for sure that this person would have been cured? No, but we know that statistically they likely would have been cured, and the cancer wouldn't have had six unhindered months to spread.

My point is that the assumption that 'anyone who uses oil of oregano to treat diabetes is going to realize their mistake' is exactly that, an assumption. It may seem nutty to you and me, but people actually do silly stuff like this. They want to believe in the alternative medicine so badly that they will ignore symptoms and carry the torch, sometimes until they are so sick they can't carry it anymore. That is anecdote, yes, but I've seen it happen and that's why I don't believe this article is worthless. As long as there are folks out there who are being misled, there is a need for blog posts like this.
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...
written by Caller X, October 04, 2010
What I wrote was, not necessarily in order and with my comments interspersed:

"Anyone who tries to use oregano to treat diabetes is going to realize their mistake in short order."

Yes, they WILL realize their mistake after a couple of days of living with untreated diabetes.

That takes care of your second paragraph, except for me to point out the obvious: nothing published in this venue is going to convince anyone of anything of this topic. How about you gin up a newspaper or magazine article? Something that people in general might read? Your credential as a registered nurse would give it some weight and you could tell the gruesome story. But be specific, don't just say "snake oil."

I stand by my point that "Naturopathy is Western medicine, licensed in 15 states and 5 Canadian provinces" because it IS western medicine, just not the good kind. It's certainly not Ayurveda or Unani, for instance. Founded in Europe, licensed in the U.S. and Canada. That makes it western medicine. And it is allopathic, in part. Some hospitals, and more importantly their institutional insurance companies, give NDs privileges.

Did you notice the part where I wrote "Granted, it's nonsense..."? I would think reading comprehension would be a good quality in a registered nurse.

You imply, but do not state, that you know of a naturopath who recommended oil of oregano. Which is it? That's the kind of detail I would expect in a good article, otherwise it's just a rant.
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Homeopathy
written by Bartmon, October 11, 2010
Caller X,

It wasn't oregano in the case of the person with cancer. It was homeopathy, and a bunch of other herbal-type naturopathic remedies. The patient made it very clear that they were not going to touch what they deemed 'western' medicine and instead used a naturopath, homeopathy etc.

I really can't say more because when you treat a patient it is confidential. I could tell you every detail about this person down to their name, but I don't feel like violating patient confidentiality.

So yes, I was bundling oil of oregano into the whole 'bunch' of naturopathic cures/treatments. In this case it wasn't oil of oregano that I know for sure. It could have been. It certainly was homeopathy and some sort of psychic surgery.

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Last Updated on Tuesday, 28 September 2010 17:51