Health Benefits of Honey

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Honey has been used by countless cultures all around the world over the past 2,500 years. While the numerous health benefits of honey have made it an important element of traditional medicines such as Ayurvedic treatments, scientists are also researching the benefits of honey in relation to modern medicine, particularly in the healing of wounds.

It is known as Honig in German, Miele in Italian, Shahad in Hindi, Miel in French and Spanish, Mel in Portuguese, мед in Russian, Honing in Dutch, and μελι in Greek; there is almost no part in the world where honey is not widely used and celebrated as a part of the cultural diet.
But what makes honey so popular? Most likely, it is the ease with which it can be consumed. One can eat honey directly, put it on bread like a jam, mix it with juice or any drink instead of sugar, or mix it with warm water, lime juice, cinnamon and other herbs to make a medicine. It is savored by all due to its taste as well as health benefits, making it extremely useful and versatile.
Health Benefits of Honey
The health benefits of honey include the following treatments, taken from both traditional and modern medical experts.
Sweetener: Sugar can be substituted with honey in many food and drinks. Honey contains about 69% glucose and fructose, enabling it to be used as a sweetener that is better for your overall health than normal white sugar.
Weight Loss: Though honey has more calories than sugar, when honey is consumed with warm water, it helps in digesting the fat stored in your body. Similarly, honey and lemon juice as well as honey and cinnamon help in reducing weight.
Energy Source: According to the USDA, honey contains about 64 calories per tablespoon. Therefore, honey is used by many people as a source of energy. On the other hand, one tablespoon of sugar will give you about 15 calories. Furthermore, the carbohydrates in honey can be easily converted into glucose by even the most sensitive stomachs, since it is very easy for the body to digest this pure, natural substance.
HoneyImproving Athletic Performance: Recent research has shown that honey is an excellent ergogenic aid and helps in boosting the performance of athletes. Honey is a great way to maintain blood sugar levels, muscle recuperation and glycogen restoration after a workout, as well as regulating the amount of insulin in the body, as well as energy expenditure.
Source of Vitamins and Minerals: Honey contains a variety of vitamins and minerals. The type of vitamins and minerals and their quantity depends on the type of flowers used for apiculture. Commonly, honey contains Vitamin C, Calcium and Iron. If you check the vitamin and mineral content in regular sugar from any other source, you will find it to be completely absent or insignificant.
Antibacterial and Antifungal Properties: Honey has anti-bacterial and anti-fungal properties, so it is often used as a natural antiseptic in traditional medicines.
Antioxidants: Honey contains nutraceuticals, which are very effective for the removal of free radicals from the body. As a result, our body immunity is improved against many conditions, even potentially fatal ones like cancer or heart disease.
honeySkin Care with Milk and Honey: Milk and honey are often served together, since both of these ingredients help in creating smooth, beautiful skin. Consuming milk and honey every morning is a common practice in many countries for this very reason.
Honey in Wound Management:  Significant research is being carried out to study the benefits of honey in the treatment of wounds. The Nursing Standard explains some of these benefits of honey in wound management in the document. These have been listed below:
Honey possesses antimicrobial properties.
It helps in promoting autolytic debridement.
It deodorizes malodorous wounds.
It speeds up the healing process by stimulating wound tissues.
It helps in initiating the healing process in dormant wounds.
Honey also helps in promoting moist wound healing.
The healing powers of honey are not overstated. The Waikato Honey Research Unit provides details about the world-wide research that is being carried out on the benefits of honey in medicine. Furthermore, BBC reported in July of 2006 that doctors at the Christie Hospital in Didsbury, Manchester are planning to use honey for faster recovery of cancer patients after surgery. Such research will provide scientific evidence for the so-called “beliefs” held by honey lovers all over the world and will help in propagating the benefits of honey to more people.
Now that you know the benefits of honey, how do you eat it? You can eat it raw, add it to water or different beverages and you can also add it to several recipes. Organic Facts has actually published an eBook on quick and easy honey recipes.
Factors Governing the Benefits of Honey
As mentioned above, there are numerous health benefits that can be gained from honey. It can be used as an antioxidant, it has antimicrobial, antibacterial and anti-fungal properties, it boosts athletic performance, and it is a rich source of vitamins and minerals. Milk and honey are used by many for their skin care benefits. However, the benefits of honey that we get greatly depend on its quality. Not all honey is created equally, so quality is different, and subsequently, the various types do necessarily provide the same benefits.
Both the price and the health benefits of honey are dependent on its quality, so it has become very important for both honey manufacturers and consumers to understand the various factors that affect the quality of honey. Some of these factors include the type of flowers used in the formation of the honeycombs, the blending process, storage conditions, temperature of heating, and many more. These factors have been explained in more detail below:
Type of flowers: According to the Honey Research Center at the University of Waikato, New Zealand, there is not enough evidence to draw conclusions on the properties of honey, especially the antimicrobial properties, based on the type of flowers used for the honey’s production. However, extensive research has been carried out on honeydew honey obtained from the conifer forests in the central European mountains and manuka honey obtained from New Zealand. The above mentioned honeydew honey has been found to have high microbial activity while manuka honey has been found to have high non-peroxide activity.
Blending: It is also believed that polyfloral honey (honey obtained from more than one flower) provides more benefits than monofloral honey. Hence many companies sell blended honey. Blended honey offers the benefits from a variety of honey varieties and is therefore considered to be healthier than non-blended honey.
Storage: When stored for a long duration, honey becomes darker in color. It loses some of its properties and may also ferment if the water content is too high. Therefore, prolonged storage of honey should be avoided, while newly harvested honey is almost always preferred.
Heating: Heating honey leads to drastic changes in its chemical composition. As a result, heating to high temperatures reduces the benefits of honey. It is no wonder many people prefer raw honey or organic honey or raw organic honey. While raw honey by definition signifies less processing (and no heating), organic honey is prepared using stringent organic honey production and processing standards, in which heating to high temperatures is not allowed.
Water Content: Honey can also undergo fermentation. If the water content of honey is high (above 19%), the chances of it becoming fermented are high. You can measure the water content of honey using a refractometer. Furthermore, freely flowing honey either contains higher water content or has been heated to disturb the natural crystallization process, thereby reducing the benefits it will confer to you.
Color of honey: The color of honey is a very useful tool to judge its quality. Light colored honey is more valued than dark colored honey as the former has a delicate flavor. Honey becomes darker upon storage and heating.
Filtration: Most of the benefits of honey are due to the presence of the pollen within the honey. Without the pollen, honey is a glucose-fructose solution, and is just as bad for you as sugar. Unfortunately, companies market the transparent clear honey as good honey, while in reality, ultra-filtered honey does not have many health benefits at all. That being said, you should be very cautious while consuming pollen-rich honey. If you have pollen allergy, avoid consuming it.
What is Organic Honey?
Some people have the opinion that all honey available in the market is natural honey obtained from the wild. Others feel that honey production carried out on chemically sprayed farms cannot get contaminated with the pesticides sprayed on the crops and weeds.
However, the truth is that honey bees may also get affected by the extensive pesticide usage which goes on in the chemically treated farms. The issue is so severe that the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, warned Barack Obama in May 2013 that if the excessive control of pesticides is not reduced, it could lead to a globally volatile situation as the bee population throughout the world becomes more and more affected. If pesticides can kill honey bees, how can they not affect the honey produced by these bees? Moreover, non-organic honey production involves extensive usage of antibiotics for disease control. It should also be noted that so far, there is no “scientific” proof that organic honey is healthier than non-organic honey.
Then why should you eat organic honey? Well, many people prefer to be cautious. Most of our decisions are based on our beliefs and conscience. Since organic honey production involves following stringent guidelines, people feel secure when they eat organic honey as compared to when they eat non-organic honey. Given below are some of the ways in which pesticide and antibiotic contamination of honey can take place:
Contamination of Pesticides in Honey
Honey can be contaminated with the pesticides sprayed on crops through one or more of the following ways:
-In some cases, when the plants and weeds containing flowers have been sprayed with pesticides, the honey bees are poisoned with pesticides.
-At times, the pesticide is sprayed on the honey bees directly.
-In many cases, honey bees collect nectar and pollen that has been contaminated with pesticides.
-When pesticides are sprayed, part of the amount is accumulated in water on or near the plants. When honey bees drink this water, they are also contaminated.
-On some occasions, the pesticide gets sprayed on the honey bee hives or gets transported to it from the sprayed plants.
Residues of Antibiotics in Honey
Conventional honey bees are given large doses of antibiotics to help protect them from diseases, but unfortunately, the honey also becomes contaminated with these antibiotics. In 2002, samples of Chinese honey were tested for the presence of antibiotics in Europe. Several samples were found to contain traces of antibiotics, which led to a ban on imports of Chinese honey in Europe. The ban was later removed in 2004 due to improvements in Chinese veterinary standards and imports of honey from China were resumed.
What leads to this antibiotics contamination? Unlike organic honey production, conventional honey production does not involve stringent guidelines for the quantity and mode of transmission of antibiotics to the honey bees. As a result, apiculturists have a free hand when using these antibiotics. When farmers use excessive quantities of antibiotics the chance of contamination increases.
What is the problem with residues of antibiotics being found in honey? The antibiotics given to the honey bees are veterinary antibiotics such as chloramphenicol, streptomycin and sulfonamides. Large doses of chloramphenicol administered into the human beings may cause cancer and aplastic anemia. Similarly, high doses of streptomycin and sulfonamides are harmful to the human body.
Many countries have not banned the usage of these harmful drugs in apiculture. The EU has banned all three while the US has thus far only banned chloramphenicol.
ManukaHow is Manuka Honey Different?
Honey has been used for many years by people all over the world; references to honey can be traced back centuries, and in fact, honey is often referred to as an ancient luxury food! Over the years people have also realized that honey has far more properties and can also be used in the medicinal world. This realization of the therapeutic aspects of honey has been recently rediscovered by the modern world and is now seen as one of the modern miracles of science as we return to nature in our fight against super bugs.
Manuka Honey is one such branch of the honey family whose properties have recently been rediscovered. This indigenous plant of New Zealand only grows in certain uncultivated areas which makes it quite rare. This rarity is possibly why its properties have not been recognized before.
Throughout history, honey has been used for wound dressing, and recent hospital trials have shown it to be effective in our modern times as well. These same trials that investigate the usefulness of honey and its application in the modern medical world have revealed some interesting insights into how we can use honey and benefit from it. The trials discovered that manuka honey has numerous unique antibiotic properties. Due to these trials, manuka honey is now being considered for digestive uses and treating skin surface-related ailments.
In order to understand the importance of manuka honey in the medical world, it is necessary to know about honey in greater detail. Honey contains chemical hydrogen peroxide, which is antibacterial in nature. This is produced by enzymes within the honey itself. Any exposure to heat, light and bodily fluids can destroy the enzymes, and honey will then lose its antibacterial properties. Certain rare honeys like  manuka honey are thought to have antibacterial properties, which means that manuka honey has more stable and persistent antibacterial properties. If you want to learn more about the miraculous abilities of all the varieties of honey, check out the additional information below!
Further Reading:
Ban on Imports of Chinese Honey: BBC reported the ban on imports of Chinese honey in 2002.
EU lifts ban on Chinese Honey: BBC reported the lifting of ban on imports of Chinese honey in 2004.
Honey Processing, Properties of Honey Used in Healing, Antimicrobial Benefits of Honey



Health Benefits of Honey  Health Benefits of Honey Reviewed by Adecy Julio on June 16, 2016 Rating: 5

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