Dear Stephen,
I have a 10 year old son that has been treated for lyme for about 5 years with antibiotics and he was doing very well. He has been off all medicine and only on samento for over a year now. In the last couple of months however he is starting to have symptoms again. Just wondering if your herbs are safe for him? He weighs 77 pounds and can only take tincture forms since he has a hard time swallowing pills. Can he take cat’s claw and Japanese knotweed, and how much? Thanks for your help.
Stephen’s response:
Yes, he can take them. Start him with 10 drops 3x daily of the tincture and see how that goes. If okay, you can increase them a bit to 15 drops 4x daily if necessary. If his symptoms are primarily arthritic, use teasel root tincture as well.
Stephen
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Stephen Harrod Buhner was an Earth poet and an award-winning author of twenty-four books on nature, indigenous cultures, the environment, and herbal medicine including the acclaimed book Healing Lyme: Natural Healing & Prevention of Lyme Borreliosis & Its Co-infections.
Stephen came from a long line of healers including Leroy Burney, Surgeon General of the United States under Eisenhower and Kennedy, and Elizabeth Lusterheide, a midwife and herbalist who worked in rural Indiana in the early nineteenth century. The greatest influence on his work, however, was his great-grandfather C.G. Harrod who primarily used botanical medicines, also in rural Indiana, when he began his work as a physician in 1911.
Stephen’s work has appeared or been profiled in publications throughout North America and Europe including Common Boundary, Apotheosis, Shaman’s Drum, The New York Times, CNN, and Good Morning America. Stephen lectured yearly throughout the United States on herbal medicine, the sacredness of plants, the intelligence of Nature, and the states of mind necessary for successful habitation of Earth.
He was a tireless advocate for the reincorporation of the exploratory artist, independent scholar, amateur naturalist, and citizen scientist in American society – especially as a counterweight to the influence of corporate science and technology.
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