Spa Syifa with SG-2000
Welcome to SpaSyifa.com!
SpaSyifa.com offers SG-2000, a compact ultrasonic spa machine that can be installed easily in your bathroom. Other products such as aromatherapy oils and herbal salts are specially formulated to enhance the ultrasonic bubble bath. Please explore our website to learn how our home spa products have helped people.
SpaSyifa with SG-2000 offers you:
- A Complete Body Massage
- Disinfecting
- Detoxification
- Relieving Fatigue
- Cell Rejuvenation
- Enhance Physical Performance
- Beauty, Skin Care & Body Reshaping
We also provide excellent business opportunity for individuals or companies from all over the world to market our products in whichever countries you are familiar with. The compensation plan is excellent. Please contact us for more details.
Have a good day!
What is SPA?

The term is derived from the name of the town of Spa, Belgium, where since medieval times illnesses caused by iron deficiency were treated by drinking chalybeate (iron bearing) spring water. In 16th century England the old Roman ideas of medicinal bathing were revived at towns like Bath, and in 1571 William Slingsby who had been to the Belgian town (which he called Spaw) discovered a chalybeate spring in Yorkshire. He built an enclosed well at what became known as Harrogate, the first resort in England for drinking medicinal waters, then in 1596 Dr Timothy Bright The English Spaw, beginning the use of the word Spa as a generic description rather than as the place name of the Belgian town. At first this term referred specifically to resorts for water drinking rather than bathing, but this distinction was gradually lost and many spas offer external remedies. called the resort
It has been suggested, with no evidence, that the word is an acronym of various Latin phrases such as "Salus Per Aquam” or "Sanitas Per Aquam" meaning "health through water".

What is Hydrotherapy?
Hydrotherapy involves the use of water for soothing pains and treating diseases.
Its use has been recorded in ancient Egyptian, Greek and Roman civilizations. Egyptian royalty bathed with essential oils and flowers, while Romans had communal public baths for their citizens. Hippocrates prescribed bathing in spring water for sickness.
A Dominican monk, Sebastian Kneipp, again revived it during the 19th century. His book My Water Cure in 1886 was published and translated into many languages. Immersion in water and doing exercises in water has always been a popular therapy.

History of Hydrotherapy
- Modern times the development of hydrotherapy in Europe has been largely attributed to the English doctor Floyer (1649 - 1734)
- The German doctor Johann Sigmund Hahn (1696 - 1773)
- Professor Dr. Wilhelm Winternitz (1834 - 1917). University of Vienna is considered to be the founder of scientifically based hydrotherapy.
- Sebastian Kneipp (1821 - 1897) The Father of Wellness
Born in 1821, the son of a poor weaver in the Bavarian region of Germany, his ambition was to join the priesthood. During his theological studies Sebastian Kneipp was taken ill with pulmonary tuberculosis, at that time a fatal disease. By chance, a small book on hydrotherapy, authored in 1734 by Dr.Hahn, found its way into his hands, which motivated Sebastian Kneipp to take short full-immersion dips in the icy waters of the winter Danube. The treatment enabled him to stimulate his physical stamina, or immune system, so much. That his tuberculosis went into remission and he was able to complete his studies.
Dr. Sebastian Kneipp (Stephansried, Germany, May 17, 1821 - June 17, 1897 in Worishofen, Germany) was a Bavarian priest and one of the founders of the Naturopathic medicine movement. He is most commonly associated with the "Kneipp Cure" form of hydrotherapy, a system of healing involving the application of water through various methods, temperatures and pressures.
In Norway he is mostly known for his bread recipe, Kneipp Bread. Although most commonly associated with one area of Naturopathic medicine, Kneipp was the proponent of an entire system of healing, which rested on five main tenets:
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Hydrotherapy
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Herbalism - The use of botanical medicines
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Exercise
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Nutrition - A wholesome diet of whole grains, fruits & vegetables with limited meat
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Spirituality - Kneipp believed that a healthy mind begot a healthy person.
During his time in Bad Worishofen, Kneipp was able to counsel many people. Tens of thousands came from all over the world to receive his healing advice. He was the author of the books "My Water Cure", "Thus Shalt Thou Live", and "My Will".
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