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Beta blockers? 10 herbs to consider

  • Simon Mills
    Simon Mills

    I am a Cambridge medical sciences graduate and have been a herbal practitioner in Exeter since 1977. In that time I have led the main professional and trade organizations for herbal medicine in the UK and served on Government and House of Lords committees. I have written standard textbooks used by herbal practitioners around the world, including with Professor Kerry Bone from Australia.

    I was involved in academic work for many years, co-founding the University of Exeter pioneering Centre for Complementary Health Studies in 1987 (where we built a complementary research and postgraduate teaching programme from scratch), then at Peninsula the first integrated health course at a UK medical school, and the first Masters degree in herbal medicine in the USA, at the Maryland University of Integrative Health.

    I am particularly fascinated by the insights we can distill from the millions of intelligent people who over many centuries needed plants to survive. Mostly I want to learn and share the old skills, to experience healing plants as characters, that can help us fend off ill health. My passion for offering people tools to look after themselves and their families has led me to work with the founders of the College of Medicine on pioneering national self care and social prescribing projects. I am now the College Self Care Lead and also Herbal Strategist at Pukka Herbs.

    Listen to our Herbcast podcast with Simon Mills as the host.

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  • Stress & Sleep
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Beta blockers are pharmaceuticals used to manage abnormal heart rhythms, and to prevent heart attacks. In this article we highlight how they work, and discuss plants that support heart health.

Beta-blockers are used to dampen down the effect of stress and nervous tension on the heart and circulation, for example to steady the heart and reduce high blood pressure.

There is no herb that does the same job but some have similar effects. One may be able to use such herbs to head off a beta blocker prescription.

With the cooperation of the prescriber, and where there is no imminent health threat of cardiovascular disease, it is also possible to use such herbs alongside or even instead of a prescription, especially if beta blockers are found not to have been as helpful as hoped and now that doubts have been cast on their long-term benefits.

Simon Mills

I am a Cambridge medical sciences graduate and have been a herbal practitioner in Exeter since 1977. In that time I have led the main professional and trade organizations for herbal medicine in the... Read more

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