Salt is not just a condiment or an ingredient used in cooking – it can also help you recover from chronic illness, including cancer. This is done through halotherapy, which uses naturally occurring salt caverns for healing respiratory conditions, as well as skin ailments. It is also used to energize the mind and was practiced by monks in Europe for centuries.
Halo is the Greek term for “salt.” Salt therapy traces its origins to Europe. In the 1840s, a Polish occupational health doctor, Felix Bochkowsky, noted that salt miners were healthier than the average person, as well as their counterparts in the metal and coal industries.
Salt mines were likewise used as bomb shelters in Germany in World War II. When asthmatic refugees re-emerged from the mines, they were healthier and were able to breathe easier. In the 1950s, Russian-based research studies further verified the health benefits of salt, which led to the mass opening of halotherapy chambers in Eastern Europe.
Nowadays, modern practitioners are applying the same philosophy to healing respiratory illnesses, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), asthma, and other conditions caused by air pollution.
The rise of modern salt caves
These days, one does not need to go to Europe and seek out a salt cave to enjoy the healing benefits of salt. There are numerous modern “salt rooms” called halotherapy or speleotherapy clinics that use therapeutic, dry saline aerosol microclimate technology to ionize the air in special rooms, saturating them with low levels of salt. This means that the temperature, humidity, and level of salt concentration are tailored to the specific needs of patients by trained professionals through convenient, hi-tech computers.
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These clinics are found throughout Eastern Europe, including Austria, Germany, Hungary, Russia, and Poland, as well as in the U.S. in many spas and beauty centers.