Herbal Medicine: Roots, Shoots, Leaves and Flowers

Herbal Medicine: Roots, Shoots, Leaves and Flowers

Transcript of an interview with Medical Herbalist Susan Siegenthaler, director and founder of Wildcrafted Herbal Products

Susan Siegenthaler is a Medical Herbalist with over 25 years of clinical experience in private practice. She also has qualifications as a Medical Aromatherapist and holds a Bachelor of Science degree with Honours in Biology.

Susan is a long-standing member of Australia?s largest Natural Therapies Association (ATMS ? Australian Traditional Medicine Society) and is the founder of Wildcrafted Herbal Products, a company specialising in making therapeutic herbal products and a large, handmade range of therapeutic grade natural and organic skin care products.

A local reporter caught up with her recently to ask her a few questions about her beginnings as a herbalist and how starting as a herbalist lead to her being involved in running a company and producing unique range of products.

Interviewer: Susan, please tell us a bit about the beginnings of your carrier as a herbalist?

Susan: Well, after graduating in 1978 as a Herbalist from the Dorothy Hall College and studying Herbal Medicine with Denis Stewart, I started my first clinic on the northern beaches of Sydney. It was a small clinic, tucked away in an arcade in Newport and with virtually no money for advertising or experience in how to run and manage a business, I opened the doors, and luckily for me, the patients started coming.

Interviewer: So, what does a herbalist actually do?

Susan: As a Herbalist, basically you find out what the problems are that the patient is experiencing and once a disease pattern has been identified, a herbalist will use a mixture of herbal extracts that will help to address the disease pattern, and all going well, the patient will start to get better.

Interviewer: Okay, so you mix up individualized herbal extracts to treat your patient, and if I understand the process correctly, no two mixes are the same – so how does that lead to starting a company making herbal products?

Susan: Yes, that is a little strange, but you see what started to happen was that I would see a patient and make them up a particular mixture for their problem. They would go away, use it up and come back to get a second or third lot of their particular mixture from me. What started to happen though, was that suddenly people whom I?ve never seen as patients before would walk into my clinic with an empty bottle of herbs and say that their friend gave them what was left in the bottle because their friend had been ?cured’. They would say to me “my friend knew I sufferd from a similar problem and gave me what was left, suggesting it might help too”. They would happily tell me what a big difference it had made for them and ask if they could get some more.

This is not how it’s supposed to work, but it started to happen on an every increasing basis and started to take a lot of time away from my seeing patients.

Interviewer: So you ended up spending too much time mixing up herbs instead of seeing patients?

Susan: That?s right, it started to restrict me from seeing patients and instead I was in the dispensary mixing up the same formulas over and over again.

Interviewer: Is that how Wildcrafted Herbal Products come about?

Susan: No, not at that stage. What I did do was I started to think about the basic formulas I was making time and time again and tried to streamline this in order to save time.

What I started to do was to make up basic mixtures. For example, I?d make up a Lung mixture that formed the basis of treating most of the common Lung problems such as bronchitis, asthma, coughs, colds, etc., and to these basic mixtures I could then easily and quickly add additional herbs that would make the basic mix more patient specific. In this way, I could save myself quite a lot of time and focus on seeing patients rather than making up herbal mixtures.

Interviewer: So how did Wildcrafted Herbal Products come about?

Well, in the beginning my system of the basic herbal mixtures worked okay, but after a while even that wasn?t keeping me out of the dispensary long enough, so I re-examined the basic formulas to see if I could make them specific enough to address various problems within a particular range ? so for example, I developed a Cough & Colds compound that anyone with a cold could take and get good results.

Similarly, I developed the Female Compound that would address most common menstrual problems experienced by women.

Over time I developed quite a few off-the-self formulas that seemed to get very good results, to the point where people from all over Australia and even New Zealand were ordering my creams and compounds.

Interviewer: You just said creams, how do creams come into it?

Susan: The creams were an adjunct to the herbal mixtures which people took internally. For instance, someone might have presented with Arthritis and I would give them a herbal mixture that they took internally, but I would also give them a cream to rub onto the painful and inflamed joints.

Or someone may have had a car accident and still had deep bruising and tender muscles and joints for which I would give them the Analgeze Cream, which works really well on these types of residual aches and pains.

Another patient might present with haemorrhoids for which they would get a herbal mix to take internally that addressed the underlying health problems which resulted in them getting haemorrhoids in the first place, plus I?d give them a cream to apply directly to the haemorrhoids to get rid of them more quickly.

In this way I was able to help a lot more people without spending most of my day in the dispensary making up herbal creams and compounds. And that was how Wildcrafted Herbal Products come into existence, because I had to put some sort of label on the bottles and jars that identified them as coming from my business.

Interviewer: How did that lead to your range of natural and organic skin and personal care products?

That primarily originated with my female patients, members of my family and myself. You see, back in the late 70?s and early 80?s the only type of skin or personal care products that were easily available were the ones you bought at the local chemist or the department stores, you know, the high profile cosmetic brands. Problem was, my own skin did not react well to them and many of my female patients presented to me with skin problems after using some of these brands.

I had made products for myself and my family for a while and as more patients with skin sensitivities and irritations presented to me I suggested I?d make them a moisturiser that they could use instead and see how they go.

At first I?d make these for nothing and give them to my patients to try ? after a while, when I started to get good feedback, I followed the same principles with the skin care range as I had done with my herbal compounds.

Interviewer: How did you come up with the formulations for the skin care range?

Well, that was actually both reasonably easy and quite difficult. You see as a medical herbalist, you know how the skin works, you understand the physiology behind it and know how herbs and essential oils can influence the functions of the skin. So, if you know all that, then it is relatively easy to develop effective skin care products.

But to develop a range of products that can easily and safely be sold to the general public is an entirely different ball game.

Interviewer: Why is that?

Because now you are no longer dealing with people you know, patients, family members, but you are making products that anyone can use. You don?t know if these people have underlying health problems that may or may not be related to their skin problem. They may have allergies to even the most natural of substances, etc. All these things have to be considered and taken into account when making up the formulations.

At the same time you don?t want to make a ?wishy-washy? product that does little or nothing other then moisturise the skin. The products I was making for myself, my friends, patients and my family worked more like therapeutic creams rather than just a simple moisturiser and I did not want to lose that quality.

Interviewer: So how did you over come this challenge?

There were several things that helped. You see, I?ve always been a Hippy at heart and as such I prefer to use natural products, natural fibre clothing and I was always into health foods. So if there was a natural version of a product, I would prefer to use it and if not, I?d make a natural version of it for myself.

What helped me a lot was that my patients were quite willing to try my products as I was not charging them and they were very happy to give me feedback, make comments and give me ideas.

After a few years the skin care products I was making had been used on hundreds of patients, friends and members of my family, and they had shown themselves to be safe and effective. By then I knew what would work and what wouldn?t.

Also my knowledge as a herbalist gave me the understanding not just of the human body, it?s organs and their functions, but also the insight into the plants that I was using to treat my

Source: http://newhealth.articlesinside.co.cc/herbal-medicine-roots-shoots-leaves-and-flowers

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