Iowa Honey Producers Association

The Buzz Newsletter

January 2007

Iowa Honey Producers Association Home Page
The Buzz - Page 1
The Buzz - Page 2
The Buzz - Page 3
The Buzz - Page 4
The Buzz - Page 5
The Buzz - Page 6
The Buzz - Page 7
The Buzz - Page 8
The Buzz - Page 9
The Buzz - Page 10
The Buzz - Page 11
The Buzz - Classified Ads

 

 

Page 7

 

The Buzz Picture Contest
January

This picture was sent to us by Gordon Powell. This swarm was looking for a home in late September in the Woodburn, IA area. Honeybees sure seem to like those shallow pools of water like this convenient bird bath. Thanks Gordon! This is the picture of the month for January.

Remember that “The Buzz” is offering $10 for one picture each month. I know some of you will have good photo opportunities during the summer months. Entertain your fellow beekeepers and make some money at the same time. This offer does not pertain to pictures printed with articles. Submit you photo via e-mail to the Buzz at thebuzz@abuzzaboutbees.com


 

Apitherapy News ...
Researchers Taste Success With Honey Cure

August 8, 2006
Jennifer Harper
The Washington Times

It could be sweet news, indeed. German medical researchers have announced that honey -- yes, the breakfast favorite -- is more effective in healing problem wounds, ulcers and skin conditions than standard antibiotics.

"In hospitals today we are faced with germs which are resistant to almost all the current antibiotics," said Dr. Arne Simon, an oncologist with the Children's Hospital at the University of Bonn. "As a result, the medical use of honey is becoming attractive again for the treatment of wounds."

Dr. Simon is the first to acknowledge that honey is a "millennia old" panacea for all sorts of ills, from baldness to intestinal distress. But the emergence of multi-drug resistant bacteria in the last decade has generated new interest in an old remedy.

With cooperation from specialists in a dozen German hospitals, Dr. Simon is planning a large-scale study on honey's curative effects. He has already charted the success of traditional honey poultices on troublesome surgical wounds and skin conditions.

"Even chronic wounds infected with multi-drug resistant bacteria often healed within a few weeks," Dr. Simon noted, adding that the honey method was particularly helpful for young patients with weakened immune systems -- deeming it "astonishing." Honey also made dressings easier to change and even reduced distressing smells associated with some skin conditions.

Ancient Egyptians, soldiers in the field and assorted healers who have relied on honey over time may not have understood the science behind it all. The bees -- who typically visit 2 million flowers to produce a pound of honey -- may not know it either. It's the bees themselves who are the heroes, however. During the honey-making process, they add an enzyme called glucose-oxidase, ultimately generating a mild form of hydrogen peroxide -- an antibacterial agent.

In the last five years, researchers in Australia, New Zealand, Europe and the U.S. have found that honey is effective against about 60 strains of bacteria -- including staphylococcus and heliobacter pylori, which causes stomach ulcers. Honey is also thought to reduce inflammation and provide a source of cancer-fighting antioxidants.

None of this has escaped the commercial sector. "Medicalgrade honey" is now a reality.

MediHoney -- sterile, prepackaged applications of honey -- is now manufactured by Australia's Capilano Honey to treat stubborn surgical wounds, oral infections and skin conditions. New Zealand's Comvita annually sells $30 million worth of wound dressings that combine "medical-grade active manuka honey" -- made from a local plant -- and seaweed fibers.

British-based Medlock Medical and Advancis Medical also offer sterile honey dressings and creams, noting the only potential caution for patients is "known allergy to bee venom."

Will Americans have access? Perhaps. According to a recent report from CNN, MediHoney has applied for approval from the Food and Drug Administration and expects an answer late this year -- and a potential gateway into our annual $2.8 billion "wound care market."

 

IHPA Home Page | The Buzz Newsletter
IHPA Contacts | Beekeeping Resources
Information & Facts