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Grandma’s home remedies for 7 ailments
Grandma’s home remedies for 7 ailments
By Dr Mercola
When you look at the science, it turns out your grandmother wasn’t so far off on some of those home remedies she used to talk about. For example, it’s really true that olives can help stave off motion sickness – but only if you eat them when the first symptoms appear. That’s because olives contain tannin, which works to eliminate the saliva that triggers nausea.
It’s also absolutely true that oatmeal has anti-inflammatory properties, and that a finely ground paste of it can help soothe eczema. The neutralizing powers of yogurt and other probiotics also can help get rid of bad breath.
Gargle salt water for a sore throat, take a spoonful of sugar for hiccups, and chew on a pencil for a headache – they all have a scientific reason why they work.
And, although there are no studies to back up putting Vapor Rub on toenail fungus, enough people have reported success with the remedy to warrant giving it a try.
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Opioid-related hospitalizations in Georgia, Louisiana and West Virginia
AHRQ Stats: Cost Trends for Hospital Stays
From 2005 to 2014, the average inflation-adjusted cost of a hospital stay increased approximately 13 percent, from $9,500 to $10,900. Average costs for stays covered by Medicaid and private insurance increased 16 to 18 percent. Costs rose 8 percent for Medicare stays and 7 percent for uninsured stays. (AHRQ, Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project Statistical Brief #225: Trends in Hospital Inpatient Stays in the United States, 2005-2014.)
Today’s Headlines:
- New Interactive Map Highlights State-Specific Trends in Opioid-Related Hospital Stays
- Highlights From AHRQ’s Patient Safety Network
- AHRQ Analysis Estimates Costs of Adverse Drug Events in Hospitals
- New AHRQ Publications Support Management of Insomnia Disorder
- AHRQ’s “Questions Are the Answer” Offers Tools To Promote Patient Involvement
New Interactive Map Highlights State-Specific Trends in Opioid-Related Hospital Stays
A new interactive map from AHRQ allows users to explore state-specific information about opioid-related hospital stays. Users may find, for example:
- Opioid-related hospitalizations have increased most dramatically in Georgia, where rates nearly doubled between 2009 and 2014
- West Virginia reported the highest hospitalization rate for women in 2014 – 371 per 100,000 people
- Louisiana was the only state in which the highest-income communities had the highest opioid-related hospitalization rate in 2014
The map, which includes information on 44 states and the District of Columbia, highlights data from AHRQ’s Fast Stats, an online tool that offers national and state-specific data on hospital stays and emergency department visits, including data by age, gender, community-level income and urban versus rural residency. The map is the most recent example of AHRQ’s ongoing efforts to address the nation’s opioid epidemic.
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Motion Sickness
Bad Breath
Hiccups
Eczema
Toenail Fungus
Headache
Upper Respiratory Infections and Sore Throat
Connie’s comments: My grandma would burn rice for diarrhea and burn egg yolk as paste for ezcema or athlete’s foot.