≡ ▼
ABC Homeopathy Forum

 

The ABC Homeopathy Forum

Step B in urine while pregnant

I'm 13 weeks with my 5th. At 12 week app did urine screening. Dr. called and said they detected Strep B in my urine and wants me to start an antibiotic immediately. I declined and want to fight it naturally.
I have NO symptoms.

I'm taking all sorts of herbs and probiotics and I'm going to be retested in 2 weeks.
I read here a recommendation of
"take a couple of doses of Thuja 30c on following days. Then follow that with Silica 6x twice a day for a week"

Can anyone confirm and clarify these instructions for the Thuja? How many days? Do I dose in water?

Thank you for all your help! My plan is to try and test negative at my 35 week appointment too.
 
  nmbarden on 2016-10-02
This is just a forum. Assume posts are not from medical professionals.
day 1 and day 2

Thuja 30 twice a day.
In my opinion Ignatia 30 may work well in this case. Still you may go ahead with Thuja 30.

One dose means
If the medicine is in pills form 2 pills. Don't touch pills with hand. Use cap of bottle to take pills.
If the medicine is in liquid dilution form, 2 drops in some 20 ml water. Sip up slowly.


day 3 to day 10

3 pellets/tablets of Silicea 6x twice a day.


Please follow homeo restrictions like no coffee, no raw onion/garlic, no strong perfumes, don't eat or drink anything within 30 minutes before or after taking medicine.
[message edited by kadwa on Mon, 03 Oct 2016 07:13:23 UTC]
 
kadwa 8 years ago

Post ReplyTo post a reply, you must first LOG ON or Register

 

Important
Information given in this forum is given by way of exchange of views only, and those views are not necessarily those of ABC Homeopathy. It is not to be treated as a medical diagnosis or prescription, and should not be used as a substitute for a consultation with a qualified homeopath or physician. It is possible that advice given here may be dangerous, and you should make your own checks that it is safe. If symptoms persist, seek professional medical attention. Bear in mind that even minor symptoms can be a sign of a more serious underlying condition, and a timely diagnosis by your doctor could save your life.