The book is from the AREs listing of transcriptions. Most of it is based on homepathic cures of the time (none of which have been demonstrated to work) and common sense medicine (with some mystical explanations thrown in for good measure).
The 'cures' are from the transcriptions of reading that he did. The problem being that these readings are a mix of inaccuracies, homepathic recommendations, and actual science. The transcriptions don't say if it the 'cure' was from Cayce or an assistant, or if it actually worked.
The 'cures' are from the transcriptions of reading that he did. The problem being that these readings are a mix of inaccuracies, homepathic recommendations, and actual science. The transcriptions don't say if it the 'cure' was from Cayce or an assistant, or if it actually worked.