Luvos
Private | |
Industry | Naturopathic medicine and cosmetics |
Founded | 1918 |
Founder | Adolf Just (1859–1936) |
Headquarters | Friedrichsdorf, Hesse, Germany |
Key people | Ariane Kaestner |
Products | Medicinal clay-based medicine and cosmetics |
Revenue | € 4 million (2005)[1] |
Number of employees | 15 |
Website | luvos.de |
Heilerde-Gesellschaft Luvos Just GmbH & Co. KG is a German manufacturer of medicinal clay (Heilerde, "healing earth")-based products for both internal and external application. Four different fineness grades of loess in both capsule and powder form are available from the company,[2] as well as cosmetics products.[3] The Luvos purified loess consists mainly of montmorillonite.[4]
Luvos was established by alternative medicine practitioner Adolf Just in Blankenburg in 1918. Previously, Just had founded the Jungborn in 1895, a center for alternative healing, where he had extolled and popularized the healing properties of certain clays.[5] The Jungborn was situated between Eckertal and Stapelburg in the Harz, an area which later became part of East Germany. Therefore, the Luvos company was relocated to Friedrichsdorf in the Taunus.[6][7][8]
In Germany, Luvos products are the only medicinal clay products recognized as pharmaceuticals, with the indications being diarrhea, heartburn, and acid-related stomach pain.[9]
During production, Luvos Heilerde is first dried, then sterilized at 130°C, and subsequently milled to achieve different fineness grades.[10] The three coarsest grades of Luvos—"1" (fine), "2" (coarse; external use), and "ultra-fine" (for children and those having weakened constitutions)—have been in production since the time of Just. In August 2010, an even finer grade, "micro-fine", was introduced, which is supposed to bind excess cholesterol and bile acids.[11]
In 2004, 90% of company revenue came from Germany, the rest was made with exports, primarily to Austria, Switzerland, Italy, Scandinavia, and America.[9]
The company is still family-owned today and run by Just's great-granddaughter Ariane Kaestner.[12]
Books by Adolf Just
- Return to Nature: Paradise Regained (1896), ISBN 0-7873-0485-9 — PDF
See also
References
- ↑ Linda Chapman: Wer und Was: Pharmazeutische Industrie (2005), Behr's Verlag, 299 pp. ISBN 3-89947-154-7
- ↑ http://luvos.de/prodlist.asp?lid=1&sdid=0&did0=48&wptid=1&wpid=36&ptid=1
- ↑ http://www.luvos.de/content.asp?lid=1&sdid=0&did0=73&wptid=1&wpid=99
- ↑ Kutsch, H.; Schoen, U. (2000). "A simplified HPTLC screening method for the estimation of the PAH content in soil samples". Fresenius' Journal of Analytical Chemistry 367: 279. doi:10.1007/s002160000332.
- ↑ German Wikipedia article about Adolf Just
- ↑ http://www.blankenburg.de/index.php?menuid=35&reporeid=76
- ↑ http://www.luvos.de/data/luvos/media/doc/zeitungsartikel-300dpi.pdf
- ↑ http://www.luvos.de/content.asp?lid=1&sdid=0&did0=1&did1=15&did2=18&wptid=1&wpid=52
- 1 2 Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung: Gegen Sodbrennen und Teenager-Akne (2006-02-23)
- ↑ Frankfurter Rundschau: Krisensichere Arznei (2009-08-08)
- ↑ http://www.luvos.de/content.asp?font_flg=0&lid=1&did0=6&did1=37&did2=64&cid=0&wpid=135
- ↑ Cosmia-Magazin 1/2010: Zu Gast bei Luvos: In Ur-Opas Fußstapfen