Health Benefits of Ginger
We’ve
all experienced unrelenting nausea at some point or another. At these times,
you’re first instinct may be to turn to over the counter medications; however, ginger works as a simple, effective antidote.
For
thousands of years, Arabic, Indian, and Asian healers prized ginger as food and
medicine. This tropical plant, in the same botanical family as turmeric and
cardamom, was effectively used to relieve nausea and vomiting caused by illness
and seasickness.
Thanks
to the spice trade, the tradition caught on in Europe. As one sixteenth-century
physician put it: “Ginger does good for a bad stomach.” In The Family Herbal
from 1814, English physician Robert Thornton noted that “two or three cupfuls
for breakfast” will relieve “dyspepsia due to hard drinking.”
Modern
research later confirmed that ginger reduces
nausea and vomiting from multiple causes: morning sickness,
postoperative upset, chemotherapy treatments, and motion sickness.
The
studies on whether or not ginger prevents motion sickness are mixed. One study found
ginger to be as effective, with fewer side effects, as (Dramamine). Other studies indicate that, when added to anti nausea medications,
it further reduces vomiting from chemotherapy.
While
the best-researched use of ginger is in combating nausea and vomiting, studies
have shown that ginger is a multi-faceted remedy with at least six more
healing effects:
-It
reduces pain and inflammation, making it valuable in managing arthritis,
headaches, and menstrual cramps.
-It
has a warming effect and stimulates circulation.
-It
inhibits rhinovirus, which can cause the common cold.
-It inhibits such
bacteria as Salmonella, which cause diarrhea, and protozoa, such as
Trichinosis.
-In
the intestinal tract, it reduces gas and painful spasms.
-It
may prevent stomach ulcers caused by non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, such
as aspirin and ibuprofen.
You
can take ginger in whatever form appeals to you.
If
you’re pregnant: Try
it in tea, soup, or capsules — up to 250 milligram four times a day. If you
chose a carbonated beverage, make sure it’s made from real ginger. You can also
nibble crystallized ginger.
To
counter motion sickness: Taking
1 gram of dried, powdered, encapsulated ginger 30 minutes to two hours before
travel can help ease travel related nausea.
For
postoperative nausea: In a
recent study on the use of Ginger to thwart postoperative nausea, the dose was
500 milligrams 30 minutes before surgery and 500 milligrams 2 hours after
surgery. Otherwise, ginger is usually not recommended during the seven to ten
days leading up to surgery because of its effect on blood clotting.


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