DawudTalut
Peace be upon you.
Peace be on you...Can Essential Oils / perfumes heal certain ailments? Any experience?
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It depends what active components are in said oils I would suppose. The homeopathic thing simply does not have a lot of credibility. Folks might temporarily feel better due to the placebo effect.
Homeopathy Listeni/ˌhoʊmiˈɒpəθi/ (also spelled homoeopathy or homopathy; from the Greek ὅμοιος hómoios "like-" and πάθος páthos "suffering") is a system of alternative medicine created in 1796 by Samuel Hahnemann, based on his doctrine of like cures like, according to which a substance that causes the symptoms of a disease in healthy people will cure similar symptoms in sick people.[1] Homeopathy is considered a pseudoscience,[2][3][4] and its remedies have been found to be no more effective than placebos.[5][6][7]
Folks might temporarily feel better due to the placebo effect.
Sometimes that's all it takes to cure an ailment.
Tom
Peace be on you...Can Essential Oils / perfumes heal certain ailments? Any experience?
Yes (both physiological and psychological), and yes. Was there something specific you were curious about?
Also, use of EOs isn't homeopathy. I'm not sure why that was brought up.
Sometimes that's all it takes to cure an ailment.
Tom
Bravo for actual answer. Better than I could do.Essential oils don't have a lot of scientific evidence supporting them. There's a rather low-volume collection of studies showing inconclusive effects, or slightly positive effects, or in some cases slightly negative effects. But at least unlike homeopathy where things are diluted to the point of uselessness, essential oils are actually strong compounds; many of them are poisonous to ingest even, because they are plant defenses against bugs and other things. Some of them do have measurably useful properties.
Tea tree oil is well evidenced to be a decent natural anti-septic, although not as good as some chemical ones. I have some soaps with tea tree oil, and I've put drops of tea tree oil on individual blemishes.
There are claims that aromatherapy is useful, but convincing scientific evidence is lacking or weak. Mostly I just use essential oils in the air for the way they smell, because they smell nice. Lavender, cinnamon, rose, etc.
And sometimes delaying real treatment by wasting time with fake panaceas like essential oils is all it takes to make an ailment much worse.
Who claims essential oils are panaceas?! I have never, ever seen anyone claim that. Nor have I ever heard anybody claim they are a total substitute for talking to your doctor or using contemporary medicine. Nor have I ever I heard people who are actually knowledgable on essential oils make outlandish claims about what they can do for you.