Discover the hidden benefits of Manuka Honey
  Navigation         Home Page              Site Directory              What Exactly is Honey?                Five Manuka Honey Tips

Hints on manuka flower

manuka flower
Locating bee venom for medicine
Involving manuka flower
Concerning honey and royal jelly


You might look purely on honey as a condiment to spread on your slice of buttered bread. Nonetheless it has many extra uses.

For many thousands of years honey has been known for its remedial properties. Ancient medical texts that it was widely known and used by the Ancient Egyptians and Greeks. Certainly the Egyptians had over five hundred medical uses for honey. The Greeks utilised it especially for skin conditions. Recorded history tells us that civilizations have employed bees honey for healing purposes as well as for its antibacterial attributes in handling wounds and burns.

Aristotle also recognised that honey collected from diverse areas and at particular days of the year had specific characteristics.

All the same with the use and development of modern antibiotics and penicillin its use fell by the wayside - a sad reflection on the medical profession.


Before we look at the uses of honey lets see what its made of.

Honey is made up of 80% sugars and it makes a decent change to saccharine in food and beverages, so long as its used carefully in moderation. It's also full of diverse essential oils, , minerals and vitamins (A,B,C,D, E and K) utilized by your body's system. Honey is fairly acidic and this helps combat the bacteria it finds.

Manuka Honey is created from the flowers of the Manuka Bush. Biochemist Professor Peter Molan has found that manuka honey has a very special component not to be found elsewhere. He has called it the UMF or Unique Manuka Factor.

Trials indicate that Manuka honey is more potent than ordinary honey in caring for many medical problems. Such as:

  • up-tp-date research shows that it could also be utilised to suppress the incubation of very infectious, drug-resistant bacteria.
  • Julie Betts, a nurse has effectively used honey to handle leg ulcers and pressure sores. And it facilitates healing following surgery - particularly for diabetic cases.
  • Cancer specialist Dr Glenys Round has also observed honey to be an effective therapy."We have used honey to treat fungating wounds, in which the cancer has come through the skin," she said. "The effects in that situation have been very promising."
  • Comvita has set up a brand new medical products division to bring hi-tech honey dressings developed by Peter Molan to the international marketplace. "It looks like a piece of rubber sheet, you can touch it without it feeling sticky at all. Wounds that were previously untreatable of many different types are today found to be medically treated by honey," said Ray Lewis from Comvita.
  • A Manchester cancer hospital is employing manuka honey from New Zealand to deal with post-surgical patients, as well as mouth, tongue and throat cancer.

Taken orally Manuka Honey has been used for:

Duodenal Ulcer

H. Pylori Treatment (Helicobacter Pylori)

Ulcerative Colitis

Gastritis

Stomach Ulcer

up-set Stomach

Irritable Bowel Syndrome

Esophageal Ulcer

External treatments using Active Manuka Honey include:

Diabetic Foot Ulcers

MRSA infected Wounds

Sores

Amputation Stump

old and new infected War Wounds

1st 2nd 3rd degree Burns

Bed Sores (Decubitus Ulcers)

Diabetic Leg ulcer

Wounds

Ulcers

How should you store honey?
Room temperature is best for honey. No refrigeration needed. Keep out of direct sunlight.

Please Note: Studies indicate that honey should not be given to babies.


What exactly is honey anyway?

5Tips for Manuka Honey