ANSWERS: 7
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Interesting article Chris! I'll keep it in mind next time I visit a friend in hospital :)
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The article is right that the soul benefits. But potted plants are generally not allowed in patient rooms because of polluting the sterile environment with those unseen microbes living in the soil. At least that is my experience having worked in a German hospital for 10 years.
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Only if properly planted in the wound. A healthy, vibrant symbiosis can ONLY be obtained if the root system is capable of reaching deeply into the circulation system so that it can rapidly spread throughout the body and affect repairs. Also, if not properly fertilized or not given enough light, the plant will draw excessively from the body's resources, causing necrosis and converting the resulting tissue into nourishing plant food. This will have a debillitating effect on the patients health and may, in fact, end with him being a vegetable for the rest of his (short) life. So make sure you drive your fertilizer stakes deeply into the flesh surrounding the wound.
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Yes plants help when the patients have left the hospital and are home, plants distract them and make them feel very much better thus gardening is great for patients as long as their surgery wound is totally closed.
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My instincts say yes, i also beleive that having surgery on the new moon helps any type of growth or recovery;0)
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I would think that they did, or at least would in some people, due to the fact that they bring an atmosphere of "joy" and "life" and "happy colors" into the room and thus cheer the person up, and cheering a person up, is proven to help speed recovery
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Any action that relaxes you will speed up recovery.
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