Journals and magazines covering complementary, holistic, and integrated health care and wellness, such as acupuncture, chiropractic, herbalism, homeopathy, nutrition, osteopathy, and others.
Fact sheets and other reference entries covering dietary supplements and their ingredients, including vitamins, minerals, herbs and botanicals, probiotics, and more.
Drug, disease, and clinical reference information covering drug identification, IV compatibility, interactions, patient education, infectious diseases, alternative medicines, and more.
Information from the Food and Drug Administration covering a range of dietary supplements topics, including ingredients, labeling, recalls and warnings, industry-related procedures, and more.
This website includes an image gallery of herbs, articles on herbs, older classic texts in several languages, information on plant names and a blog. This is a freely available treasure chest of information.
This website is created and maintained by the College of Pharmacy at the University of Texas Al Paso and Austin. It includes scientific monographs, fact sheets, presentations, educational materials and information on Mexican products. Some of the information is also available in Spanish.
Patient handouts from the Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database are freely available here along with information provided by government agencies such as NCCAM, National Cancer Institute, CDC and more. Entries discuss the effectiveness, usual dosage, and drug interactions for herbs and dietary supplements
More than 7100 monographs are provided for prescription and over-the-counter drugs, as well as for corresponding brand-name drugs, herbals, and supplements. Drug images are also included.
(formerly NCCAM)
Highlights include news, herbs at a glance, and articles on health problems and their treatment with CAM therapies. Information is also available in Spanish.
Fact sheets on herb and supplement products. In addition they generate reports of supplements of interest or concern. A mobile app is available called My Dietary Supplements and numerous links take users to sources of additional information.
The Herbal Medicines Compendium (HMC), published by the U.S. Pharmacopeial Convention (USP), is a freely available, online resource that provides standards for herbal ingredients used in herbal medicines. Standards are expressed primarily in monographs.