Dr Eward Bach
Dr. Edward Bach was born on September 24, 1886 and grew up in Birmingham,
England. He studied medicine at the University College Hospital (UCLH) a
teaching hospital in London, England and obtained a Diploma of Public Health
(DPH) from the University of Cambridge. He became a senior member of the
surgical UCLH staff responsible for the execution of the attending surgeon's
orders. During World War I he was a casualty medical office at UCLH with charge
over 400 hospital beds. During his medical practice at UCLH he was influenced by
Samuel Hahnemann's medical system of Homoeopathy. He also worked as a
bacteriologist and pathologist working with vaccines and developing homoeopathic
nosodes.
Dr. Eward Bach worked in general practice on
Harley Street, a road in Westminister, London synonymous with private medical
care in the United Kingdom. In 1930, he left his general practice on Harley
Street and devoted the rest of his to the development of a newer, gentle
approach to the practice of medicine and the healing of the whole person. He had
found that allopathic medicine and the homoeopathic nosodes were too harsh for
the effective treatment of disease conditions. And this became eminently clear
when seriously considering the mental and emotional states of a patient.
Dr. Edward Bach used his intuition to find and prove the effectiveness of flower essences for the treatment of disease. Dr. Bach intuit and found that disease is the result of conflict between the soul and mind. This conflict, the cause of disease, leads to a negative emotional, mental state that leads to physical disease. The cause of disease could be treated when the personalities and feelings of his patients were treated by the subtle healing energy of flower essences acted upon the natural healing potential in a patient's body.
Dr. Eward Bach passed away on November 27th, 1936 and gifted us with an
effective system of medicine.
detox your mind and your body.
Photos by Amy Matarese and Don Bryant Hargis
©2009 Bach Flower Synergy. All Rights Reserved.
Terms of Use Privacy Policy
