Essiac Tea: Can You Cleanse Toxins With Essiac?


by Robert Scheer - Date: 2007-04-11 - Word Count: 410 Share This!

Essiac herbal tea has been used for more than 80 years by people looking for an alternative cancer treatment. But more recently, Essiac is being consumed for other reasons. Look at the covers of the popular magazines on display in any supermarket check-out line and you will very likely see the words "detox" or "detoxify." This is because people are growing increasingly aware of the presence of toxic materials that build up in their systems as a result of environmental toxins such as second-hand cigarette smoke, chemical residues in the food chain, and off-gases from synthetic home furnishings, to name only a few.

Essiac is brewed from the herbs: Slippery Elm inner bark, Burdock root, Sheep Sorrel and Indian Rhubarb Root. The herbal tea is said to look like apple cider but taste more like dry wood.

The Essiac formula was developed by Rene Caisse, a Canadian nurse. But Ms. Caisse did not invent the herbal tea formula. Instead, she said the recipe originated with Native Indians. In the 1920s, Caisse met a woman who told her she once was diagnosed with breast cancer, but it was cured by drinking herbal tea, the formula for which was given to her by an elderly Ojibwa medicine man in northern Ontario. The woman gave the formula to Caisse, who went on to use it to treat thousands of patients in the cancer clinic she established in Bracebridge, Ontario. The name she gave to the herbal tea formula, Essiac, is her own last name spelled backwards.

Although current laws forbid claims that Essiac can cure any illness, the formula has been endorsed by such notable doctors as Frederick J. Banting, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1923 for the discovery of insulin, and Dr. Charles Brusch, who was President John F. Kennedy's physician.

As cancer rates rise, so does the interest in alternative treatments for this dreaded disease. Hundreds of so-called cures are available from sources that range from well-intentioned to less than trustworthy.

Many consumers wishing to cleanse away the toxins that build up in their bodies are selecting Essiac because of the beneficial properties attributed to the natural herbs that go into the herbal tea formula. Scientific research has proven that Slippery Elm inner bark, Burdock root, Sheep Sorrel and Indian Rhubarb root have many positive benefits.

In addition to its reported ability to assist the body in removing toxins, Essiac is also said to be useful in the treatment of diabetes.

Related Tags: cleanse, detox, detoxify, essiac, essiac tea

Robert Scheer is a freelance writer and consultant for the Essiac Review web site. For more information visit www.essiacreview.com.

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