Homeopathy

carmen868

New member
Hello everyone. I was just wondering what you think about Homeopathy, whether any of you have tried it and if it yielded any good results. Many call it quackery but many people I know have said it's worked for them. There's this homeopath doctor who says he can treat my COPD. I really don't know what to think, so any suggestions or information from any of you will be greatly appreciated.

Thanks a lot.
Carmen
 

Jeannine

Pioneer Founding member
Carmen

I believe in homeopathic treatment. In fact several of the supplements I use are homeopathic. I'm sure it's worth a try because the docotrs pretty much just write us off and give us presciptions that often have more side effects than good.

If you decide to go and try homeopathy, please keep us posted on your progress.
 

barbara

Pioneer Founding member
Carmen - I agree with Jeannine. It's also a good possibility that homeopathic doctors think of allopathetic doctors as dangerous with all the medications they so freely prescribe. I have seen many articles claiming that homeopathic remedies produce nothing but placebo effects in patients, however, if one takes a good look at who is writing these articles, many times Big Pharma or traditional doctors are behind them.
I believe that if a person experiences good results using homeopathic remedies then all the more power to them and their homeopathic doctors for finding something that works.
 

pink7

New member
Yes ,it does help in many conditions.I know of chidren with Autism and CP being treated with homeopathy and showing good benefits.
 

carmen868

New member
Thank you

Thank you all for your inputs, I really appreciate it. I am meeting with the doctor tomorrow - have to answer a 6 page questionnaire first - very detailed. trouble is I don't remember every single disease I had but will do my best to be detailed.
 

barbara

Pioneer Founding member
Parliamentary panel says Britain should end state funding of homeopathic treatments

I guess the panel hasn't read the new evidence that says placebos may actually have a biological effect. I also wonder what the backgrounds of the panel members are. MD's, Big Pharma? It would be helpful to know in order to evaluate whether this is an unbiased panel. As long as individuals can still take advantage of homeopathic treatments without interference from the government, losing funding just shifts the responsibility of who pays for treatment which is not the end of the world.



Kate Kelland
LONDON
Mon Feb 22, 2010

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain should end its state funding for homeopathic treatments because they are "scientifically implausible" and work no better than placebos, an influential parliamentary panel said on Monday.

The Science and Technology committee said homeopathic products are not medicines and should no longer be licensed by medicines regulators.

Homeopathy producers should not be allowed to make medical claims on product labels without evidence they work, it added.

The committee accused the government of sending out mixed messages about homeopathic remedies by saying that while there is no evidence to back them, they can still be paid for by Britain's public National Health Service (NHS).

"It sets an unfortunate precedent for the department of health to consider that the existence of a community which believes that homeopathy works is 'evidence' enough to continue spending public money on it," committee chairman Phil Willis said in a statement. "This also sends out a confused message, and has potentially harmful consequences."

An election is due in Britain later this year and political leaders are under pressure to come up with any saving they can to bring down the country's ballooning public deficit.

Ministers estimate the NHS spends around 152,000 pounds ($235,000) -- a tiny fraction of its around 100 billion pound budget -- on homeopathic remedies each year.

In its report on homeopathy, the committee agreed with the government that evidence shows homeopathy is not efficacious -- meaning it works no better than a placebo, or dummy pill.

"Explanations for why homeopathy would work are scientifically implausible," it said.

"BAD MEDICINE"

Homeopathy, which originated in Germany in the 1700s, is based on a principle that "like cures like." The theory is that substances that prompt certain symptoms can also treat those same symptoms if given in a highly diluted form.

The practice is controversial because many of its central concepts do not accord with modern science. Many studies have found homeopathic remedies are no more effective than placebos.

Critics say the homeopathy industry has made millions out of selling little more than "sugar pills" to vulnerable patients.

Paula Ross, chief executive of the Society of Homeopaths, rejected the findings and accused the committee of wasting public money by turning its inquiry from one on the government's policy on homeopathy to one about whether homeopathy works -- a question she said the committee was ill-equipped to answer.

"We would have preferred to see the government put money into much needed research into how actually homeopathy works," she said in a statement.

She argued that evidence shows homeopathy is effective beyond placebo, but "scientists have yet to understand how."

The committee said homeopathy was "a placebo treatment" and the government should have a policy on placebos -- an area it said ministers were reluctant touch because prescribing placebos "usually relies on some degree of patient deception."

"Beyond ethical issues and the integrity of the doctor-patient relationship, prescribing pure placebos is bad medicine," it said.

(Editing by Michael Roddy)
 
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