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  2. Halotherapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halotherapy

    Halotherapy is an unproven treatment that lacks scientific credibility. [1] Spa owners attribute a wide range of health benefits to halotherapy. [2] Norman Edelman of the American Lung Association suggests that, for people with obstructive lung diseases, halotherapy might be more than placebo effect. [3]

  3. Talk:Halotherapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Halotherapy

    Salt therapy, halotherapy or speleotherapy[1] is the therapeutic use of salt mines, caves or other forms of exposure to salt air." The reference does not mention either Salt Therapy or Halotherapy and only mentions Speleotherapy in relation to a salt mine. No mention of caves or salt air at all thus WP:SYN.

  4. Thalassotherapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thalassotherapy

    Halotherapy, the medical use of salts; Water cure (therapy) Dead Sea; Gurney's Seawater Spa and Thalasso Center, the only one of its kind in the continental US. Climatotherapy; Lydia Sarfati, who introduced seaweed skin treatments to United States

  5. Doctors Explain If Red Light Therapy Really Works for ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/doctors-explain-red-light...

    Does it work well for weight loss? There is some data to support using red light therapy for weight loss, but it’s not consistent or robust. At baseline, red light therapy is designed to break ...

  6. Red light therapy is going viral for skin, hair and exercise ...

    www.aol.com/news/red-light-therapy-going-viral...

    Does red light therapy work? Red light therapy is relatively new and its potential applications and benefits are an ongoing area of research, the experts note. While it has shown to be promising ...

  7. Do Red-Light Therapy Tools *Actually* Work? I Tested Them Out

    www.aol.com/red-light-therapy-tools-actually...

    Yes, you can do red-light therapy at home with a wand, mask, or panel. At home, red-light therapy devices utilize low energy, compared to the high-energy treatments you’d get in-office.

  8. List of unproven and disproven cancer treatments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_unproven_and...

    According to the American Cancer Society, "available scientific evidence does not support claims that these complementary and alternative methods, when used without mainstream or conventional medicine, are effective in treating cancer or any other disease". [9] Homeopathy – a pseudoscientific system of medicine based on ultra-diluted ...

  9. Intense pulsed light - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intense_pulsed_light

    Intense pulsed light (IPL) is a technology used by cosmetic and medical practitioners to perform various skin treatments for aesthetic and therapeutic purposes, including hair removal, photorejuvenation (e.g. the treatment of skin pigmentation, sun damage, and thread veins) as well as to alleviate dermatologic diseases such as acne.