|
What Is
Homeopathy?
I recently completed a medical textbook with the purpose of answering
this question. As that text could not fully answer the question,
my attempt here will be more than a little bit simplistic but hopefully
worthy of your attention.
Most essential
to homeopathy is the philosophy inherent in the name homeopathy
meaning "like suffering". This principle is also called "the doctrine
of similars" or using likes to cure likes. As an approach to healing,
this method predates the birth of the "founder" of homeopathic medicine
by millennia. Likes have been used to treat likes in many cultures
for thousands of years. Hahnemann's use of the principle as an essential
component of his entire system was uniquely exclusive. In all other
instances, the use of similars was only one part of a larger therapeutic
system. Additionally, most often the use of similars was unintentional,
founded on effectiveness not medical theory.
Conventional
medicine was labeled "allopathic" medicine by homeopaths nearly
200 years ago because the symptoms are so frequently identified
as the problem without looking further into the patient's health.
This is actually misleading though because, conventional medicine
includes many examples of what homeopaths would describe as "homeopathic"
treatments. Radiation and chemotherapy are known to cause cancer.
Ritalin stimulates patients who are already 'hyperactive". In small
doses aspirin is used to reduce fever but in large doses it raises
body temperature. Similarly, herbal medicine as commonly practiced,
includes both homeopathic and allopathic approaches.
Hahnemann was
a conventionally trained physician whose practice initially was
identical to that of his compatriots. He was a critical observer
though and soon recognized the harm that bleeding and using poisonous
doses of mercury, arsenic etc was causing his patients. He quit
practicing medicine for a time and earned his living translating
medical textbooks. Malaria was a big problem in Europe at the time
and the conventional treatment was the alternative medicine learned
from the natives of South and Central America quinine. One of the
most authoritative medical writers claimed that quinine worked,
in accord with the ancient Greek theory, because it was bitter and
astringent. Irritated by this uncritical thinking, after all other
bitter and astringent foods did not cure malaria, Hahnemann took
some quinine to test the theory.
When Hahnemann
took the quinine he was startled to experience the usual symptoms
of malaria. When he stopped the quinine the symptoms disappeared.
When he resumed the quinine the symptoms returned. Interestingly,
we still have no conventional understanding of the mechanism of
quinine action against malaria, only the homeopathic rationale.
This experience
echoed his reading from the founders of medicine. Hippocrates wrote
to "let likes cure likes" and Paracelsus' Doctrine of Signatures
spoke of the similarity between a patient and the plant or mineral
needed to cure his disease.
Establishing
the beginning of modern clinical pharmacology, Hahnemann began to
test various substances on healthy people to learn what symptoms
these agents produced. He then gave the medicines to patients based
upon these indications.
Patients did
not present to the homeopathic physicians suffering from all of
the symptoms each homeopathically tested medicine was known to produce.
However, when they began taking the homeopathic remedy, temporarily
they did develop these other symptoms. Hahnemann then decided to
give the patients less of the medicines hoping to reduce these temporary
side effects. At some point, for reasons he did not document, Hahnemann
began to use a process of serial dilution and succussion (pounding
the diluted remedy on a table). Paradoxically, it seemed to Hahnemann
and to most homeopaths since that time, that these diluted medicines
worked even better than the undiluted ones.
As these dilutions
are carried to an extreme, many physicians simply stop considering
the possibility that homeopathy might be effective as soon as they
learn of this method. While critical thinking is always wise, there
is considerable clinical research evidence demonstrating effectiveness
of homeopathy as well as basic science findings which might explain
how these super dilute medicines could retain biological activity.
Single Remedy
Another principle
of classical homeopathy is to use one homeopathic remedy at a time.
Many remedies are made from complex natural sources containing many
chemical constituents (whole plants for example). The remedy made
from this complex source is tested as a whole entity. For example,
calcium has many salts and remedies made from each of them have
been tested on people to ascertain their characteristic pattern
of symptoms. Phosphorus has one set of symptoms but Calcarea phophorica
has a complex of symptoms all its own.
The homeopathic
remedies you purchase in a health food store are usually combinations
of homeopathic remedies. They have almost never been tested to determine
definitively what the indications are for their use. They are designed
by guesswork based upon individual components. While they may work,
and eventually some have demonstrated effectiveness in clinical
trials as well as clinical experience, many homeopaths are uncomfortable
with the speculative nature of this approach.
Homeopathic Philosophy
One my favorite
aspects of homeopathic medicine is its underlying philosophy of
medicine. The Law of Cure applies to all healing interventions and
tells us how to determine if the response to a treatment will be
beneficial or suppressive. Homeopaths have a hierarchy of symptoms
which formally recognizes the relative importance of mental symptoms
compared to physical ones. Many homeopaths carry this hierarchy
further believing that spiritual well-being is an essential component
in health. Homeopathic philosophy has important lessons for all
of us including;
- Respect for
the bodies own healing processes
- Avoiding
needless medication
- Recognition
that every individual patient is unique
Further Reading
There are many
options for those of you who wish to learn more about Homeopathy.
If you feel up to reading a medical textbook, of course I think
the new text I edited and principally authored is the best reference.
CLASSICAL HOMEOPATHY - Fundamentals for Health Professionals,
will be published in September 2002 by Harcourt Health Sciences.
My other favorites
include books by George Vithoulkas, Jennifer Jacobs, Wayne Jonas,
Dana Ullman and the husband-wife team of Judyth Reichenberg-Ullman
and Robert Ullman.
top
|