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The People's Pharmacy

Show 1297: How Chimps Treat Wounds Sheds Light on Home Remedies

The People's Pharmacy

Joe and Terry Graedon

Alternative Health, Kids & Family, Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.61.2K Ratings

🗓️ 11 April 2022

⏱️ 63 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In our nationally syndicated radio show we are live this week for the first time in more than two years. First, we speak with biologist Simone Pika about her very interesting observations of chimpanzees treating wounds. Wild chimps at the Ozouga Chimpanzee Project in Gabon have been observed catching insects, mashing them between their lips and applying them to wounds. We don’t know yet exactly which insects they choose or how insect components affect healing, but the chimps seem to think it will help. What can we learn from how chimps treat wounds?

How Chimps Treat Wounds and the Implications for Humans:

Dr. Pika is clear that this behavior is shared by more than one or two chimps. Further research is needed to answer questions like “Does this work?” or “How might it work?”

We will also invite listener calls about home remedies they’ve found useful. We’ll ask questions like “Does this work?” and “How might it work?” For a lot of home remedies, we don’t have answers to those questions beyond the reports of listeners. But for some home remedies that were previously a complete mystery, we may now have at least tentative explanations. Instead of “Stump the Chumps” (a game listeners of Car Talk might remember), we’ll challenge you to top the chimps. Tell us about a home remedy that works for you that we haven’t heard before.

Some of Our Favorite Home Remedies:

We’ve learned a lot about home remedies from our listeners. It was a listener who called to tell us that a spoonful of plain yellow mustard can stop muscle cramps in a minute. Another one made it clear that cold yellow mustard can help prevent blistering from a kitchen burn.

Speaking of burns, we have heard so many stories about the benefits of soy sauce on a burn (after cold tap water). We first learned about this remedy from a listener who’d been using it for decades. And then we started getting calls, including one from a former Marine who was burned in a training accident. What did the medic use? Soy sauce!

The Elements of a Good Home Remedy:

Very few remedies are ever assessed with a randomized placebo-controlled trial. Consequently, we need to use common sense in evaluating them. We like to use three criteria (which we also learned from a listener, in this case a nurse). 1) It might help. Reportedly it has helped some people. 2) It won’t hurt. This is very important. We don’t want to promote any remedies that can cause harm. 3) It doesn’t cost too much. This too is crucial, because it is often why a remedy might be chosen rather than a medication.

Are Home Remedies Held to a Higher Standard?

Sometimes it seems as though people want more proof regarding a remedy than they do for medicines. Perhaps they simply assume that drugs work, because the FDA has required the company to demonstrate safety and efficacy. Maybe they also assume that something that sounds crazy, like swallowing a spoonful of sugar to get rid of hiccups, couldn’t possibly work. (Did I fool you? That one was actually published in a medical journal! Check out the reference below.)

This Week’s Guest:

Simone Pika, PhD, is a cognitive biologist at the University of Osnabrück in Germany, where she is the head of the research group Comparative BioCognition at the Institute of Cognitive Science. Dr. Pika has spent over a decade studying the diversity of animals’ communicative systems and underlying cognitive mechanisms in captive and natural settings with a special focus on primates and corvids. She is also the Co-director of the Ozouga Chimpanzee Project. www.ozouga.org
https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(21)01732-2

https://www.comparative-biocognition.de/cbc/about-cbc

You’ll find Carol and Little Grey’s photos and profiles posted at www.ozouga.org

Listen to the Podcast:

The podcast of this program will be available Monday, April 11, 2022, after broadcast on April 9. You can stream the show from this site and download the podcast for free.

Download the mp3

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

I'm Joe Gradyton and I'm Terry Grady. Welcome to this podcast of the People's Pharmacy.

0:06.1

You can find previous podcasts and more information on a range of health topics at people's pharmacy.com.

0:15.0

Chimpanzies in the wild have been observed catching insects,

0:19.0

mashing them, and applying them to skin wounds.

0:22.0

This is the people's Pharmacy with Terry and Joe Grady. What are the chimps doing with those bugs? We talk with a researcher who's been observing their behavior.

0:40.0

Should we consider this wound care a kind of home remedy? We live in the age of

0:46.1

evidence-based medicine. Can chimps teach us about experience-based therapy?

0:51.3

How do home remedies compare to FDA-approved medications?

0:55.0

Today we welcome your stories about your best home remedies.

1:00.0

Coming up on the People's Pharmacy, we consider interesting and unusual home remedies for chimps and humans. In the People's Pharmacy Health Headlines, about 6 million Americans have heart failure

1:20.1

in which the heart does not pump blood strongly enough to supply the entire body with the oxygen it needs.

1:26.0

Symptoms may include shortness of breath, swelling in the feet and legs, fatigue or weakness, and cough while lying down.

1:33.6

In addition to prescribing medication,

1:36.1

doctors have advised most of these people to throw away their salt shakers.

1:40.3

The recommendation is to limit sodium intake to less than 1500 milligrams a day.

1:45.0

In theory, this cuts down on the amount of fluid in the body so the heart doesn't have to work so hard.

1:51.0

A new study examined whether this type of dietary

1:54.7

sodium restriction reduces hospitalization, trips to the emergency

1:59.4

department or deaths. Between 2014 and 2020, researchers randomly assigned 800 patients to a low sodium

2:08.5

diet or usual care. Although people in the low sodium intervention group actually did reduce the amount of sodium they consumed,

2:17.0

they were no less likely to land in the ER, be hospitalized, for cardiovascular problems, or die from any cause.

2:25.0

They did report slightly better quality of life, however.

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