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Bioforce
Santasapina Cough Syrup (ideal for children)
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Recommended
use:
Adults: 1 - 2 teaspoons (5-10ml)
throughout the day as required.
Childred: (2 12 years) Half adult dose.
Do not exceed the
recommended daily intake. Store out of reach of young children. Food
supplements must not be used as a substitute for a varied diet.
Although we take great care in what we say about products on this
site, you should always read the manufacturer's label on the actual
product carefully before taking supplements.
Also
see:
Drosinula
Syrup
Ivy-Thyme
Complex
Plantago
Echinaforce
Echinacea
Complex for Children
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Code
bf80722
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Size
100ml
syrup
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Price
£3.90
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Add to Basket
Piceae abietis (Spruce)
syrup and extract. Also contains unrefined sugar, honey and pear
juice concentrate. Alcohol content 3% v/v
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cough syrup contains the juice of fresh double spruce and honey which
gives it very good soothing properties. This is very appropriate when
suffering from the cold, catarrh, bronchitis or the flu. It is useful
for dry, tickly coughs, hoarseness and congestion. Ideal for children.
(please
read this important notice concerning supplement medical claims)
Any references, studies or testimonials on this website do not imply
that similar results will happen with your use of products referred to.
Our web pages are not intended to recommend any supplement as a drug, as
a diagnosis for specific illnesses or conditions, nor as a product to
eliminate diseases or other medical conditions or complications. We make
no medical claims as to the benefits of any of the products to improve
medical conditions.
We always recommend that you work in conjunction with your primary
medical advisor, particularly if you have an existing medical condition,
and that you do not take any products during pregnancy or breast-feeding
without first referring to your primary medical advisor. |
Herbs
For thousands of years, herbs have been used to help maintain many aspects of
health and wellness. Today, research and technology are bringing herbalism into
the modern age – with improved extraction, standardization, and farming
methods. Clinical studies are beginning to validate herbal therapies, so even
some in the medical community are starting to accept them.
Many of today’s
medicines were originally derived from botanicals. Aspirin once came from the
white willow tree, quinine from the bark of the cinchona tree, and digitalis
from foxglove. Herbs are still the basis for Chinese medicine and are important
constituents of many European natural remedies. As Hippocrates said, “Let they
food by thy medicine, thy medicine be thy food”.
Some of the herbs
available on this site are wild-crafted – grown in the wild – while others
are meticulously cultivated on herb farms.
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