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Homeopathy is a system of Complementary and Alternative Medicine that strives to treat "like with like"; its remedies involve treating an illness with an infinitesimally small dose of a substance that, at bigger doses, can cause symptoms like those of the illness. Homeopaths believe that the "potency" of a remedy can be increased by serial dilution, when combined with vigorous shaking. The word "homeopathy" was coined by the German physician Christian Friedrich Samuel Hahnemann (1755-1843) and first appeared in print in 1807. Hahnemann, born in Meissen, studied medicine in Leipzig and Vienna, and became eminent as a linguist, as a practical physician and as a notably enlightened public health reformer before creating his new health system, a system that he believed to be humane and effective[1], but which was received by the establishment with derision and contempt[2]

File:Samuel Hahnemann.png
Samuel Hahnemann(1755-1843), the "father" of homeopathy

Homeopathy (also spelled homœopathy or homoeopathy, from the Greek όμοιος, hómoios (similar) and πάθος, páthos (suffering)) regards diseases as "morbid derangements of the organism", that involve some disturbance in a "vital force." Homeopaths reject the standard medical diagnoses of named diseases; each case of sickness is a strictly individual phenomenon — "It is the man that is sick and to be restored to health, not his body, not the tissues".[3]

The Principle of Similars

The idea that the four "humours" (blood, black bile, yellow bile and phlegm) were key to understanding disease dates back to the early Greek physician Hippocrates of Cos, who lived at about 400 BC [12], but it persisted through the influence of Galen (131-201 AD) until at least 1858, when Rudolf Virchow's theories of cellular pathology were published. Diseases, or so it was thought, were the result of some "imbalance" of the humours, and conventional medicine still focused on restoring that balance, either by attempting to remove an excess of a humour, or by suppressing the symptoms "Bloodletting, fever remedies, tepid baths, lowering drinks, weakening diet, blood cleansing and everlasting aperients and clysters (enemas) form the circle in which the ordinary German physician turns round unceasingly", wrote Hahnemann while translating into German the Treatise on Materia Medica (1789) by the Edinburgh physician William Cullen. By contrast, Hahnemann believed that diseases are not caused "...any disease matter, but that they are solely spirit-like derangements of the spirit-like power that animates the human body." Modern medicine recognizes that bacteria and viruses as the causes of many diseases, but some homeopaths still regard these as effects, not causes, of disease.

Hahnemann based homeopathy on the 'Principle of Similars', expressed by him as similia similibus curentur or 'let likes cure likes'. On reading Cullen's remark that Cinchona bark (which contains quinine) was effective because it was bitter, he felt that this was implausible; other substances that were as bitter had no therapeutic value. To understand the effects of Cinchona bark, he took it himself, and observed that its effects on him were similar to the symptoms of the diseases that it was prescribed for. This notion was not novel; others before Hahnemann, including Anton von Störck (1731-1803), had advocated "treatment by cautious use of poisons." Hahnemann had studied briefly in Vienna, where Störck eventually became head of the University. [4]

Homepathic remedies are found by 'provings', in which volunteers are given substances, the effects of which are recorded as a 'Drug Picture'. Of his first proving, Hahnemann said: "with this first trial broke upon me the dawn that has since brightened into the most brilliant day of the medical art; that it is only in virtue of their power to make the healthy human being ill that medicines can cure morbid states, and indeed, only such morbid states are composed of symptoms which the drug to be selected for them can itself produce in similarity on the healthy." At first, Hahnemann tested substances that were then used as medicines, such as antimony and rhubarb, and poisons, like arsenic, mercury and Belladonna. He recorded his first provings of 27 drugs in the Fragmenta de viribus in 1805 and later in his Materia Medica Pura, which contained 65 drugs.

Nearly as important as Hahnemann to the development of homeopathy was James Tyler Kent (1849-1921), whose Lectures on Homoeopathic Materia Medica (1905) lists 217 remedies. Kent's influence in the USA was limited, but in the UK, his ideas became homeopathic orthodoxy by the end of the First World War. Kent sought to re-emphasize the metaphysical and clinical aspects of Hahnemann's teachings's; he insisted on the core doctrines of miasm and vital force, and emphasized the importance of spiritual factors as the cause of disease.[5]

"...for it goes to the very primitive wrong of the human race, the very first sickness of the human race that is the spiritual sickness... which in turn laid the foundation for other diseases."

Today, homeopathy uses about 3000 remedies; about 300 are based on Materia Medica information, 1500 on fragmentary knowledge, and the rest speculatively. Homeopathy uses many animal, plant, mineral, and synthetic substances, including Natrum muriaticum (sodium chloride or table salt), Lachesis muta (the venom of the bushmaster snake), Opium, and Thyroidinum (thyroid hormone). Other 'isopathic' remedies' involve dilution of the agent or product of the disease. Rabies nosode, for example, is made from the saliva of a rabid dog. Some homeopaths use more esoteric substances, known as "imponderables" because they originate from electromagnetic energy "captured" by alcohol or lactose (X-ray, Sol (sunlight), Positronium, and (electricity)Electricitas, or with a telescope (Polaris). Recent ventures into even more esoteric remedies include Tempesta (thunderstorm), and Berlin wall.

The law of similars is not a scientific law, and a failure to cure can always be attributed to the wrong choice of remedy; in Kent's words, "I have often heard physicians tell me that it was due to suggestion that my medicines acted so well; but my answer to this is, that I suggest just as strongly with my wrong remedy as with the right one, and my patients improve only when they have received the similar or correct remedy".[6] There are many ways to find the most-similar remedy (the simillimum), and homeopaths sometimes disagree. This is partly due to the complexity of the 'totality of symptoms' concept; homeopaths decide, from their knowledge and experience, which symptoms are the most characteristic: the Drug Picture in the Materia Medica is always more comprehensive than the symptoms of any individual. Other ways are through medical dowsing or other psychic powers, but these are not accepted by most homeopaths. [7]

Preparation of similars

Vijzel

The most characteristic—and controversial—principle of homeopathy is that the potency of a remedy can be enhanced (and the side-effects diminished) by dilution, in a procedure known as dynamization or potentization. Liquids are progressively diluted (with water or alcohol) and shaken by ten hard strikes against an elastic body (succussion). For this, Hahnemann had a saddlemaker construct a special wooden striking board covered in leather on one side and stuffed with horsehair. Insoluble solids, such as quartz and oyster shell, are diluted by grinding them with lactose (trituration). The original serial dilutions by Hahnemann used a 1 part in 100 or centesimal scale, or 1 part in 50,000 or Quintamillesimal (LM or Q potencies). The dilution factor at each stage is 1:10 ('D' or 'X' potencies) or 1:100 ('C' potencies); Hahnemann advocated 30C dilutions for most purposes (i.e. dilution by a factor of 10030 = 1060). As Avogadro's number is only 6.02 × 1023 particles/mole, the chance that there is even one molecule of the original substance in a 15C solution is small, and it is extremely unlikely that one molecule would be present in a 30C dilution. There are about 1032 molecules of water in an Olympic size swimming pool, so to get one molecule of the original substance in a 15C solution would need about 25 metric tons of water. Thus, homeopathic remedies of a high "potency" contain just water, but water that, according to homeopaths, retains some 'essential property' of one of the substances that it has contacted in the past. [8]

Alternative methods

High potency remedies were first produced in the 1830s. Although Hahnemann wished to see 30c as standard potency in homeopathy, most of his contemporaries preferred tinctures and 3x, while others, like the powerfully-built horse-trainer, Caspar Julius Jenichen (1787-1849), General Korsakoff (1788-1853) and Dr N Schreter (1803-1864), were busy raising potency to extremes:

Jenichen sat or stood stripped naked to the waist, holding the bottle in his fist in an oblique direction from left to right, and shook it in a vertical direction. The fluid, at every stroke, emitted a sound like the ringing of silver coins. He paused after every 25th potency, and the muscles of his naked arm vibrated...he was latterly able to give 8400 strokes in an hour. [9]

Such high potencies could not be made by traditional methods, but required succussion without dilution, higher dilution factors (LM potencies are diluted by a factor of 50,000), or "Korsakoff machines" [13] that continuously combine dilution and succussion. Such machines[14][15] are still sold today; some manufacturers claim that undefined "vibrations" produce the healing effect and, that when the correct vibration is selected, only water need be added to produce a remedy. Today, radionics devices are used by many homeopaths to prepare remedies, based on the work of the British engineer, Malcolm Rae (1913-1979) and devices he developed in the 1960s[16]. Another technique involves a "paper remedy" - "finds out what they need, writes the remedy down on a piece of paper, they put it in their pocket and it works."[10]

Miasms

By 1816, Hahnemann was concerned at the failure of homeopathic remedies to produce lasting cures for chronic diseases: "...the non-venereal chronic diseases, after being time and again removed homoeopathically … always returned in a more or less varied form and with new symptoms." He introduced the theory that three fundamental "miasms" underlie of all the chronic diseases of mankind: Syphilis, Sycosis (suppressed gonorrhoea), and Psora. Miasma, from the Greek for 'stain', was an old medical concept, used for "pestiferous exhalations". The sense of this is indicated by Hahnemann's Note 2 to §11 of the Organon: "...a child with small-pox or measles communicates to a near, untouched healthy child in an invisible manner (dynamically) the small-pox or measles, … in the same way as the magnet communicated to the near needle the magnetic property..."

According to Hahnemann, miasmatic infection causes local symptoms, usually in the skin. If these are suppressed by medication, the sickness goes deeper, and emerges later as organ pathologies. In the Organon he asserted that Psora was the cause of such diseases as epilepsy, cyphosis, cancer, jaundice, deafness, and cataract. However, even in his own time, many of his followers, including Hering, made almost no reference to Hahnemann’s concept of chronic diseases. Today, some homeopathic practitioners find Hahnemann’s theory difficult to reconcile with current scientific knowledge, as it seems to ignore the importance of genetic, metabolic, nutritional, and degenerative factors in sickness, and fails to differentiate between the many different infectious diseases. Nevertheless, most homeopaths believe that the core of his theory is valid: that the fundamental causes of disease are internal and constitutional and that it is contrary to good health to suppress symptoms, and they accept the concept of "latent Psora", the early signs of an organism’s imbalance which indicate that treatment is needed.

The miasm theory is not the 'be all and end all' of homeopathy. Hahnemann advocated good hygiene, fresh air, regular exercise, good nutrition as precursors of good health (see his 1792 essay: The Friend of Health); he was also a pioneer in 1792-3 of humane treatment of the insane (1796, Description of Klockenbring During his Insanity) a year before William Tuke and Philippe Pinel, and he published tracts in which he described the cause of cholera as "excessively minute, invisible, living creatures", indicating his acceptance of ideas of infectious disease.[11]

The Spread of Homeopathy

Homeopathy is popular in Europe and India, but less so in the USA, where non-orthodox therapies have been more tightly regulated. Stricter regulations have also been implemented recently in the EC. There are estimated to be more than 100,000 practitioners of homeopathy worldwide, and 500 million people receiving treatment. More than 12,000 medical doctors and licensed health care practitioners administer homeopathic treatments in the UK, France, and Germany. In Germany, homeopathy, anthroposophically extended medicine and herbalism were recognized as "special forms of therapy" in 1978, meaning that their remedies are freed from the usual requirement to prove efficacy, but, since January 1, 2004, most homeopathic remedies are no longer covered by public health insurance. In Switzerland, homeopathic remedies were covered by the basic health insurance system, if prescribed by a physician, until June 2005, when the Government, after a 5-year trial, withdrew insurance coverage for homoeopathy and four other complementary treatments, as they did not meet efficacy and cost-effectiveness criteria.[12]

In the UK, homeopathy was established by Dr Frederick Quin (1799-1878) at around 1827. (Two Italian homeopathic doctors (Drs Romani and Roberta) had been employed two years previously by the Earl of Shrewsbury, but had quickly returned to Naples as they could not tolerate the damp English climate.) Homeopathy became the preferred treatment of the upper classes: the Dukes of Edinburgh and Beaufort were among Quin's patients, and he became physician to the Duchess of Cambridge. At its peak in the 1870s, there were large hospitals in Liverpool, Birmingham, Glasgow, London and Bristol; the Bristol hospital was funded by the W.D. & H.O. Wills tobacco family, while the Hahnemann Hospital in Liverpool was built by members of the Tate family of sugar importers, who also funded the Tate Gallery in London. Today, homeopathic remedies are sold over the counter, and there are five homeopathic hospitals funded by the National Health Service and many regional clinics. Homeopathy is not practised by most of the medical profession, but is supported by the Prince of Wales and other members of the royal family. The Society of Homeopaths, founded in 1978, has 1300 members.[13]

Homeopathy came to India with Dr Martin Honigberger (1795-1869) in Lahore, in 1829-30 India has the largest homeopathic infrastructure in the world, with 300,000 qualified homeopaths, 180 colleges, 7500 government clinics, and 307 hospitals. The Indian "Association of Qualified Homoeopaths" is the largest of its kind, and 10% of the population are estimated to use homeopathy exclusively for their medical needs. [14]

Homeopathy was established in the USA by Dr Hans Burch Gram (1787-1840)in 1825 and gained popularity, partly because of the excesses of conventional medicine, and partly due to Constantine Hering (1800-1880), who immigrated to America in 1833 and became known as the "father of American homeopathy. By 1900, hardly any city with a population of more than 50,000 was without a homeopathic hospital and many smaller communities could claim them. In the 1930s, the popularity of homeopathy waned, partly due to the Flexner Report of 1910, which led to the closure of virtually all medical schools teaching alternative medicine, and by the 1950s, homeopathy had almost disappeared. Nevertheless, in 1995 sales of homeopathic remedies were estimated at US$201 million, and the number of homeopaths increased from less than 200 in the 1970s to about 3,000 in 1996; however, a recent study indicates that the percentage of people seeking homeopathic treatment in the USA fell from 3.4% in 1997 to 1.7% in 2002 [15]

Scientific testing of homeopathic remedies

In the USA, homeopathic remedies are, like all health-care products, regulated by the Food and Drug Administration, but unlike conventional medicines, homeopathic remedies need not be approved by the FDA before sale, nor do they need to be proved either safe or effective, nor to be labeled with an expiry date, or undergo finished product testing. Unlike conventional medicines, homeopathic remedies do not have to identify their active ingredients as they have few or no active ingredients.

From the very beginnings of homeopathy, its claims were treated with skepticism by the medical and scientific establishments. Sir John Forbes (1787-1861), physician to Queen Victoria, declared in 1861 that most cases of disease which recover under homeopathy "recover by means of the curative powers of Nature alone." He concluded that homeopathy is "one of the greatest delusions...of the healing art" and the only good it brings is by lessening "the monstrous polypharmacy which has always been the disgrace of our art - by at once diminishing the frequency of administration of drugs and lessening their dose." [16] Professor Sir James Young Simpson said, of the highly diluted drugs, that there is "no poison, however strong or powerful, the billionth or decillionth of which would in the least degree affect a man or harm a fly." [17]

As homeopathic remedies at potencies higher than about D23 (10-23) contain no detectable ingredients apart from the diluent (water, alcohol or sugar), there is no known basis for these preparations having medicinal action. However, attempts to replicate these studies on leukocytes failed.</ref> A recent review concludeed that "...there are some hints from experimental research that homeopathic substances diluted and succussed beyond Avogadro’s number are biologically active but there are no consistent effects from independently reproducible models." Although some patients report benefits from homeopathic preparations[17], scientists usually attribute these to the Placebo Effect, the regression fallacy and/or the Forer effect[18].

Evidence-based medicine

There is wide consensus that evidence based medicine is the best way to assess the efficacy and safety of health-care practices. Ideally, drugs are tested in large, multi-centre, randomised, placebo-controlled double-blind trials, to test whether the drug has an effect that is better than either a placebo or a different treatment. Some trials that partially meet these criteria have investigated homeopathy, and some have indicated efficacy above placebo. However, many are technically flawed or involve samples too small to allow firm conclusions to be drawn. Systematic reviews by the [www.cochrane.org The Cochrane Collaboration] found insufficient evidence that homeopathy is beneficial for asthma, dementia, or induction of labor They also found no evidence that homeopathic treatment prevents influenza, but reported that it appears to shorten the duration of the disease. Overall, systematic reviews have found no clear evidence of the efficacy of homeopathic remedies, but often the evidence has been too flawed to exclude possible beneficial effects either.[19].

In 2005, The Lancet published a meta-analysis of 110 placebo-controlled homoeopathy trials and 110 matched conventional-medicine trials based upon the Swiss government's "Program for Evaluating Complementary Medicine". The outcome suggested that the clinical effects of homeopathic remedies are likely to be placebo effects. The Lancet paper is notable for its design, as a "global" meta analysis of homeopathy, not an analysis of particular remedies, i.e. it tested a "global hypothesis" , the hypothesis that all of the reported effects of homeopathic remedies are placebo effects. If so, then reports of positive effects reflect publication bias (the tendency to publish results when they show a positive effect but not when they are negative), and the magnitude of such effects should diminish with sample size and study quality. They analysed an equal number of conventional medicine trials in the same way; these showed a real effect of treatments, in that the size of the reported effect was independent of sample size, but the trials of homeopathy remedies did not. The study does not prove that homeopathy is never effective, but is consistent with the interpretation that all reported effects are placebo effects. The Lancet article was accompanied by invited editorials, and some critical correspondence. [20]

Medical organizations' attitudes towards homeopathy

The National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, part of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, funds research into homeopathy. According to its statement on homeopathy, "the results of individual, controlled clinical trials of homeopathy have been contradictory. In some trials, homeopathy appeared to be no more helpful than a placebo; in other studies, some benefits were seen that the researchers believed were greater than one would expect from a placebo." Nevertheless, "Some people feel that if homeopathy appears to be helpful and safe, then scientifically valid explanations or proofs of this alternative system of medicine are not necessary."

According to The UK National Health Service there have been about 200 randomised controlled trials evaluating homeopathy, but they have not produced clear clinical evidence that homeopathy works. "Many studies suggest that any effectiveness that homeopathy may have is due to the placebo effect, where the act of receiving treatment is more effective than the treatment itself."

In 1997, the American Medical Association(AMA) adopted the following policy statement after a report on several alternative therapies including homeopathy: "There is little evidence to confirm the safety or efficacy of most alternative therapies. Much of the information currently known about these therapies makes it clear that many have not been shown to be efficacious. Well-designed, stringently controlled research should be done to evaluate the efficacy of alternative therapies" [21]

The Indian Ministry of Health and Family Welfare states that:"Homeopathy has been recognised as one of the National Systems of Medicine and plays an important role in providing health care to a large number of people. Its strength lies in its evident effectiveness as it takes a holistic approach towards the sick individual through promotion of inner balance at mental, emotional, spiritual and physical levels."

Homeopathy and vaccination (See also Isopathy)

Homeopathy is superficially like vaccination, in that vaccines contain a small dose of the "disease" against which they offer protection (a vaccine is usually made from a bacterium or virus that is either dead or weakened so that it cannot produce symptoms, while still providing enough information to the immune system to generate antibody production). However, to most homeopaths, vaccination is not consistent with the principles of homeopathy; even if it is a crude application of the law of similars, they believe that vaccination has serious short and long-term (health) consequences, and might arouse latent inherited and constitutional weaknesses. In Hahnemann's words "...to use a human morbific matter (a Psorin taken from the itch in man) as a remedy for the same itch or for evils arisen therefrom, stay away from it! Nothing can result from this but trouble and aggravation of the disease."

Safety of homeopathic treatment

The United States Food & Drug Administration's view of homeopathy is that there is no real concern over the safety of most homeopathic products "because they have little or no pharmacologically active ingredients". There have been few reports of illness associated with the use of homeopathic products, but in cases that they reviewed, the FDA concluded the homeopathic product was not the cause of the adverse reactions. The main concern about the safety of homeopathy arises not from the products themselves, but from the possible withholding of more efficacious treatment, or from misdiagnosis of dangerous conditions by a non-medically qualified homeopath. For example, a 2006 survey by the UK charitable trust "Sense About Science," revealed homeopathic practices which were advising travelers against taking conventional anti-malarial drugs, instead providing them with a homeopathic dilution of quinine. Even the director of the The Royal London Homeopathic Hospital condemned this:

"I'm very angry about it because people are going to get malaria - there is absolutely no reason to think that homeopathy works to prevent malaria and you won't find that in any textbook or journal of homeopathy so people will get malaria, people may even die of malaria if they follow this advice." [22].

Several scientists said the homeopaths' advice was reprehensible and likely to endanger lives. Professor Pasvol, a tropical medicine expert at Imperial College, London was reported as saying "Medical practitioners would be sued, taken to court and found guilty for far less. What this investigation has unearthed is appalling." [23]

Notes

  1. Hahnemann S (1796) translated into English as "Essay on a New Principle". Hahnemann's[http://www.homeopathyhome.com/reference/organon/organon.html Organon der Heilkunst] in English translation.
  2. Dean ME (2001) Homeopathy and the progress of science Hist Scixxxix
  3. Kent JT Lectures on homoeopathic philosophy. Lecture 1; "The Sick"
  4. At least one writer has suggested that Hahnemann was hypersensitive to quinine, and may have had an allergic reaction Thomas WE "The basis of homeopathy"; Lichocka Z "Chemical Analysis as a Method of Discovery in Pharmacy in the Age of Enlightenment in Europe" Halina
  5. Campbell A, Kentian Homeopathy, Chapter 8 of Homeopathy in Perspective ; Morrell P Kent's influence on British homeopathy
  6. Kent JT (1926) New Remedies, Lesser Writings and Aphorisms & Precepts, quoted in Treuherz F (1984) Origins of Kent's homeopathy J Amer Inst Homeo 77:130-49
  7. Diagnostic dowsing machines; "Medical dowsing"
  8. Hahnemann's board can be seen at the Hahnemann Museum in Stuttgart; Water Structure and Behaviour has references to current scientific understanding of water, with entries on "memory effects" and homeopathy
  9. Biography of Caspar Julius Jenichen (1787-1849)
  10. see Editorial, the New Zealand Homoeopathic Society [1] The Toronto Chapter of the Canadian Society of Dowsers[2]
  11. Hahnemann S (1831) Asiatic Cholera
  12. Fisher P, Ward A (1994) Medicine in Europe: Complementary medicine in Europe BMJ 309:107-111[3]; Homeopathy was regulated by the European Union in 2001, by Directive 2001/83/EC. European Directorate for the Quality of Medicines
  13. Leary B et al (1998) It Wont Do Any Harm: Practice & People At The London Homeopathic Hospital, 1889-1923, in Juette R et al (1998) Eds. Culture, Knowledge And Healing: Historical Perspectives On Homeopathy In Europe And North America Sheffield Univ. Press, UK Homéopathe International The English language version see [4] [5] [6]
  14. Kishore J (1973) About entry of homeopathy into India Bull Ind Hist Med 3:76-8; Indian Hopeopathic Medical Association; Manchanda RK, Kulashreshtha M, Cost Effectiveness and Efficacy of Homeopathy in Primary Health Care Units of Government of Delhi- A study [7]; Indian Ministry of Health and Family Welfarehomeopathy page
  15. Questions and Answers About Homeopathy NCCAM, National Institutes of Health; "Homeopathy spread first in Germany, then France, and England. Its greatest popularity, however, was in America." Flinn LB (1976) Homeopathic influences in the Delaware community A retrospective reassessment Del Med J 48:418-428; "...by the early 1840s American homeopathic practitioners were gaining considerable influence and prestige", in Warner JH (1977) The nature-trusting heresy, Perspectives on American History 11:291-324; A condensed history of homeopathy [8]
  16. Agnew RAL (2005). John Forbes FRS (1787-1861). The James Lind Library; [9]
  17. Simpson JY (1853) Homoeopathy, Its Tenets and Tendencies, Theoretical, Theological and Therapeutical Edinburgh: Sutherland & Knox 11
  18. American Council on Science and Health,The Scientific Evidence on Homeopathy There have been occasional reports of effects of highly diluted solutions on organic processes, including on histamine release by leukocytes, reported by Davenas E et al Human basophil degranulation triggered by very dilute antiserum against IgE Nature 333:816-8; Walach et al (2005) Research on Homeopathy: State of the Art J Alt Comp Medicine 11:813–29
  19. "Declaration of Helsinki should be strengthened" BMJ 2000;321:442-445; Jonas WB et al(2003) A critical overview of homeopathy" Ann Intern Med 138:393-399 Jonas WB et al (2001). "A systematic review of the quality of homeopathic clinical trials". BMC Complement Altern Med 1: 12. PMID 11801202.
  20. Shang A et al (2005). "Are the clinical effects of homoeopathy placebo effects? Comparative study of placebo-controlled trials of homoeopathy and allopathy". Lancet 366: 726-32. PMID 16125589.
    Fisher P (2006) Homeopathy and The Lancet eCAM 3:145-47; Jobst KA (2005) Homeopathy, Hahnemann, and The Lancet 250 Years On
    A Case of the Emperor's New Clothes? J Alt Comp Med 11:751-54.[10]
  21. Report 12 of the American Medical Association Council on Scientific Affairs alternative theories including homeopathy. American Medical Association.
  22. Homeopathic practices "risk lives" Pallab Ghosh, BBC News
  23. Homeopaths 'endangering lives' by offering malaria remedies Alok Jha, Friday July 14 2006, The Guardian; Science and Technology - Sixth Report Science and Technology Committee Publications [11]

External links

  • BBC's Horizon on homeopathy
  • Complementary Medicine - Therapies: Homeopathy[18] BBC's "Complementary Medicine" article on Homeopathy
  • Homeopathy In Perspective — critical online book, covering the history and present state of homeopathy
  • Homeopathy Timeline[19]
  • Magical Thinking in Complementary and Alternative Medicine[20]
  • A Skeptical Guide to Homeopathic History, Theories, and Current Practices

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