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There isn't enough information to know how moneywort might work.
More evidence is needed to rate the effectiveness of moneywort for these uses.
At this time there is not enough scientific information to determine an appropriate range of doses for moneywort.
The appropriate dose of moneywort depends on several factors such as the user's age, health, and several other conditions.
Pregnancy and breast-feeding: Not enough is known about the use of moneywort during pregnancy and breast-feeding.
But you have metaphorical options, including moneywort, Lysimachia nummularia, a yellow flowered ground cover also known as creeping Jenny.
It is also of special interest for populations of two rare plants: Cornish moneywort and a liverwort known as bog earwort."
Other worthy plants include the strawberry geranium (Saxifraga stolonifera) and moneywort (Lysimachia nummularia).
Lysimachia nummularia - Creeping Jenny, Moneywort (Europe)
The Latin nummularia means "like a coin", referring to the shape and colour of the flowers; hence the common names, such as "moneywort", which also reference coins.
The meadows contain Cornish Moneywort (Sibthorpia europaea), a nationally scarce plant restricted to south west Britain.
My wife transplanted it into the middle of a clump of golden moneywort or Creeping Jenny (Lysimachia nummularia aurea).
The nationally scarce plants Cornish Moneywort Sibthorpia europaea and Yellow Bartsia Parentucellia viscosa are found at Boswednack.
Supernaturals are the disco plants - Cabomba, Bacopa, Anacharis, Ludwigia, Ambulia and Moneywort in Fluorescent orange, yellow, pink, red, blue, and luminous green.
The Cornish moneywort (Sibthorpia europaea) is found locally in south-west England, Wales and the south of Ireland; in the rest of southern England it is rare.
One of them, often called moneywort or creeping Jenny (Lysimachia nummularia) has a handsome gold-leaved form, but tends to crawl into other plants with abandon; it, at least, is relatively easy to pull up.
Another chartreuse-leafed plant of the very lowest tier, one that hugs the earth and never exceeds an inch in height, is burdened with the Latin name Lysimachia nummularia aurea, but the faint-hearted can call it golden creeping Jenny or golden moneywort.
Its common names include creeping jenny, moneywort, herb twopence and twopenny grass.
Lysimachia nemorum (Yellow pimpernel) is a flowering plant of the genus Lysimachia in the family Myrsinaceae.