tailieunhanh - National policy on traditional medicine and regulation of herbal medicines

Being the heir of universe’s top luxury product is not the entire story, though. Unconscious reading, with your eyes flying over a text at speeds of almost a line per second, cannot be acquired in a few months. Instead, it takes decades of training to tune up your brain to high-speed reading. At present, you read faster than you did at the age of 20; at 20, you read faster than at 15; at 15 faster than at 10; at 10 faster than at 8, and so on. Reading only one hour every day exposes your brain to some 20,000 words, or 7 million words per. | Please see the Table of Contents for access to the PDF files. National policy on traditional medicine and regulation of herbal medicines Report of a WHO global survey World Health Organization Geneva May 2005 WHO Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data National policy on traditional medicine and regulation of herbal medicines Report of a WHO global survey. LMedicine Herbal - standards Herbal - legislation Traditional therapies policy Medical Health Organization ISBN 92 4 159323 7 NLM Classification WB 925 World Health Organization 2005 All rights reserved. Publications of the World Health Organization can be obtained from WHO Press World Health Organization 20 Avenue Appia 1211 Geneva 27 Switzerland tel 41 22 791 2476 fax 41 22 791 4857 email bookorders@ . Requests for permission to reproduce or translate WHO publications - whether for sale or for noncommercial distribution - should be addressed to WHO Press at the above address fax 41 22 791 4806 email permissions@ . The designations employed and the presentation of the material in this publication do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the World Health Organization concerning the legal status of any country territory city or area or of its authorities or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Dotted lines on maps represent approximate border lines for which there may not yet be full agreement. The mention of specific companies or of certain manufacturers products does not imply that they are endorsed or recommended by the World Health Organization in preference to others of a similar nature that are not mentioned. Errors and omissions excepted the names of proprietary products are distinguished by initial capital letters. All reasonable precautions have been taken by the World Health Organization to verify the information contained in this publication. However the published .