Food poisoning remedy?

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big_swede

Native
Sep 22, 2006
1,452
8
41
W Yorkshire
Hi All!

Anybody got an viable natural remedy against food poisoning? Heard from a colleague at work that a serious case of food poisoning ruined his 2 week canoe trip, and thought "what would I have done?". I know coal/ashes can be forced down to cure the green apple splatter, but is there any better ways? If you happen to suffer from severe vomitting I imagine eating coal is the last thing you would want to do.

I'm talking natural remedies now, not carrying medications. We're men, aren't we? :D

So, enlighten me with your wisdom!

ps, I didn't really know were to put this one, maybe flora & fauna or food section? Feel free to move it.
 

spamel

Banned
Feb 15, 2005
6,833
21
48
Silkstone, Blighty!
The best way is to stop where you are and get over it. Keep hydrated by sipping water, strictly no food and be very careful with regards to sanitation. Ensure all water is boiled and clean if coming from a live source such as a stream, and the charcoal/chalk routine can be very helpful if your stomach is growling. Keep salt replenished by using diaoralyte type sachets in your water.

Apart from that, you've just got to grizz it. Hygiene would be the number one thing though, and of course prevention is better than cure at the end of the day. Ensure you cook all food thoroughly and don't leave anything out which flies can get amongst. Move camps regularly so that you don't start living amongst a load of flies and insects, keep the camp clean and sterilise your eating and drinking equipment before use with a sterile solution or if it is metal by passing through the flames of the fire for a few seconds to kill any nasties.
 

Pict

Settler
Jan 2, 2005
611
0
Central Brazil
clearblogs.com
I've had two episodes of severe food poisoning one in the US and one here in Brazil. The first time in the US I ended up missing two weeks of work and should have been hospitalized. I couldn't even keep down water for days. If I took a drink it came right back up. I should have been on IV fluids. I ended up drinking constantly, just tiny sips or sucking on ice but all the time. Dehydration is the worst effect. The body is trying desperately to eliminate the poison so you don't want that to stop.

My first day back at work my boss had me on light duty, I just had to weed a big flowerbed that didn't need to be weeded. They found me passed out in the grass.

Basically the body's reaction is to send everything out from both ends as fast as possible and that is the only natural remedy I know of. You have to keep the person hydrated while this is going on. If it ever happens again with me I'm going straight to the hospital to get stuck with a bag of something. Once the poison is in your system I don't think there is anything else to do about it.

To make oral rehydration fluid mix two tablespoons of honey or sugar, a 1/4 tsp of salt and a 1/4 tsp of bicarbonate of soda in one liter of water. If you don't have bicarbonate double the salt to one 1/2 tsp. Mix well and have the person drink as much as they can keep down. BTW this mix works wonders on ordinary heat induced dehydraton as well. Mac
 
I nearly died while working on a nature reserve I caught Salmonella B. The first signs were a feeling of faintness and gidyness, then shortly afterwards, very strong smelling farts :yuck: and then severe runs with sickness which lasted about 6 days non stop. I was hospitalised in an infectious diseases unit for ten days and given 26 bags of iv and nil by mouth over 8 days.:( Nothing natural would have helped with that. At the time I remember thinking to myself while lying in hospital "thank the gods I wasn't on a multi day canoe trip or I would never have made it out using my own steam. It left me with Reiter's for 3 months and unable to walk without the aid of crutches for those 3 months (reactive arthritis).

So this is not only life threatening but life changing afterwards with pretty serious consequences in some. In my case without IV, I wouldn't have made it. So to be realistic in many cases nothing in the wild is gonna help!
 

irishlostboy

Nomad
Dec 3, 2007
277
0
Eire
i had a nasty bit of food poisoning about five years ago. i got hot food from a deli counter while heading out the road to hitch the 30 miles home. i made the first leg of my journey fine. the food was down 20 minutes. i got dropped off on the intersection for the next leg of my journey and within a space of a minute went from feeling fine to being unconcious and vomiting (nasty mix) on the side of the road. i was found and brought home eventually, and was back in action the next day, but i had re-occuring sickness every two or three months since. i eat something totally harmless (other people eat same meal and are fine) and imediately get sick and pass out with the same simptoms as my food poisoning. but am fine the next day. even now i get this about every six months.
any idea what is with this?
 

firecrest

Full Member
Mar 16, 2008
2,496
4
uk
In the middle ages, people used to eat powered bird droppings before and after consuming some types of mushrooms, to neutralise the poison. I suspect that works the same way that eating clay or charcoal does.
Perhaps a good bit of advice, if you cant get medical attention, is to listen to your body. The body records the value of the foods you eat, that is why pregnant women crave certain things such as coal or sucking chalk and iron - they ONLY crave these things if they have tasted it before! (usually as babies) Thats why we dont see coal cravings so much anymore because most people do not have coal fires.
I remember being very young and when I felt sick I craved gingernut biscuits which I would suck on slowly, even though I dont really like them that much. I learned many years later ginger is often taken for sickness and travel sickness as well because its an antiemetic. Perhaps if you were feeling sick or had the runs and your body is craving something, you should go ahead and eat it. Likewise, if you dont want to eat anything and want to lie very still, its probably best respond to that as well. After all, responding to the bodies direct requests is how the rest of the animal kingdom deals with illness.
 

John Fenna

Lifetime Member & Maker
Oct 7, 2006
23,143
2,880
66
Pembrokeshire
Avoid Kebabs!
Aint that so Jed?:D
Otherwise - pepermint oil helps with some of the symptoms, clay helps absorb some poisons etc
but prevention is much better than cure!
I once had a bad go while climbing at Stanedge - being halfway up a route , strapped into a harness, is not a good place for having explosive guts!:confused: :Wow: :eek: :( :eek:
 

big_swede

Native
Sep 22, 2006
1,452
8
41
W Yorkshire
I nearly died while working on a nature reserve I caught Salmonella B. The first signs were a feeling of faintness and gidyness, then shortly afterwards, very strong smelling farts :yuck: and then severe runs with sickness which lasted about 6 days non stop. I was hospitalised in an infectious diseases unit for ten days and given 26 bags of iv and nil by mouth over 8 days.:( Nothing natural would have helped with that. At the time I remember thinking to myself while lying in hospital "thank the gods I wasn't on a multi day canoe trip or I would never have made it out using my own steam. It left me with Reiter's for 3 months and unable to walk without the aid of crutches for those 3 months (reactive arthritis).

So this is not only life threatening but life changing afterwards with pretty serious consequences in some. In my case without IV, I wouldn't have made it. So to be realistic in many cases nothing in the wild is gonna help!

Yes of course, medicine where medecine is due. Your and Picts cases are on the worst-thing-that-could-happen end of the scale, I was thinking in more subtle terms.

So far it's great reading here.
 

Grooveski

Native
Aug 9, 2005
1,707
10
53
Glasgow
Recognising that you've eaten something wrong and bringing it back up again might class a remedy I guess. Sometimes you just know that you've eaten something amiss.
Have never poisoned myself but last years little helicobacter encounter did leave me wondering what chance you stand if you're out and about instead of hooked to a drip.
 

Arth

Nomad
Sep 27, 2007
289
0
51
west sussex
Cold toilet paper or better still wet wipes. As everyone knows your seat can get a little sore with all that wiping.
 

littlebiglane

Native
May 30, 2007
1,651
1
52
Nr Dartmoor, Devon
My advice would be to start taking acidophilus before you go. This could help reduce the risk of stomach upsets. I use them when I go abroad and swear by them. I just had look out across the Channel and I would get a dicky tummy. Now when I travel abroad I take this and have (fingers-crossed) never gone done with a stomach upset since.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lactobacillus_acidophilus

I would also take s small supply of each of the following:

activated charcoal tablets

dioralyte - for proper rehydration

manuka honey (which has anti-bacterial properties) and good for energy and killing bugs in tummy/gut.

Oak bark tea - as previously mentioned is of some use...
 

firecrest

Full Member
Mar 16, 2008
2,496
4
uk
Ive heard that actimel and yakult have been shown to reduce the risk of upset stomach if taken for a week prior to departure, but their effects only last a week at best.
 
Nov 29, 2004
7,808
23
Scotland
When I'm traveling I always carry a few small tin foil sachets of 'wasabi' or Japanese horseradish and if I think my host has provided foodstuffs that my delicate western digestive system may have a problem with I'll swallow the contents of a sachet (ideally without the mixture touching my tongue in the process).

Not sure how the science of this solution works, but it has kept me healthy so far :)
 

mariobab

Tenderfoot
Oct 30, 2006
81
0
60
croatia
I always have rehydration powder and carbo medicinalis(charcoal).,but I've heard that clay neutralize poison.In our tradd. medicine recipe is;
2 tablespoon of clay in 1/2 liter of water,stir and drink during the day.Should be good for diarrhea,too.But I've never tried.
 

fishy1

Banned
Nov 29, 2007
792
0
sneck
To make oral rehydration fluid mix two tablespoons of honey or sugar, a 1/4 tsp of salt and a 1/4 tsp of bicarbonate of soda in one liter of water. If you don't have bicarbonate double the salt to one 1/2 tsp. Mix well and have the person drink as much as they can keep down. BTW this mix works wonders on ordinary heat induced dehydraton as well. Mac

Just wondered, what's the purpose of the bicarbonate? The only thing I could think of would be to neutralise excess acid in the stomach.
 

madelinew

Tenderfoot
Jun 1, 2008
73
0
Isle of Wight
Ensure you cook all food thoroughly and don't leave anything out which flies can get amongst. Move camps regularly so that you don't start living amongst a load of flies and insects, .

Just how dodgy are flies? Really. I used to live in Malaysia for a while and I've eaten the dodgiest of foods from the dodgiest of food stalls. The only time I got food poisoning out there was in hotels or airports from food that had been kept for long periods of time. I've bought food from markets which is very freshly killed but has flies buzzing around and dried fish that is left out in the sun and definitely has had flies around it.

Now I have a bit of a sensitive stomach but anything with flies hasn't affected me. I've also eaten roadkill.

An aside - I really miss Nasi Lemak for my brekkie from the foodstall down the road from my apartment in Kuala Lumpur :(
 

spamel

Banned
Feb 15, 2005
6,833
21
48
Silkstone, Blighty!
Depends on your hygiene. Flies spread disease, (so keep yours closed! :D) but if you have open latrines and rotting food near to your camp site, and more importantly your food prep area, then you increase the risk of flies tramping your own fecal matter over your halibut and chips! This will not go down at all well!
 

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