HomeopathyA
Brief Explanation of Homeopathy Homeopathy
started about 200 years ago with a discovery by a German doctor, Samuel Hahnemann.
Wondering why quinine was useful in malaria, he took the medicine himself and
found that, given to a healthy person, it temporarily produced the symptoms found
in malaria. When given to a malaria patient, however, it was curative. Homeopathy
means literally to treat with a similar disease. Its central principle,
Like cures like, contrasts with other medical approaches. The
term allopathic means to treat with other than the disease and is
used to denote the standard medical approach of today, which attempts to counteract
symptoms. For example, a patient with diarrhea may be given a drug that slows
intestinal motility. To
better understand how homeopathy works, it helps to consider two aspects of a
disease. First, there is the immediate cause, such as a bacteria, virus, toxin,
or internal immunological activity. Second, there is the patients response
their reaction and defenses, such as fever, inflammation and discharge.
These are the bodys attempts to eliminate pathogens and toxins and to heal
the tissue. While homeopaths do not ignore immediate causes, such as infection,
their primary focus is on the patients attempts to respond and heal. Their
aim is to strengthen the patients defenses and shift the balance in favor
of recovery. Dr.
Hahnemann found that substances could be used to stimulate healing by applying
the principle of like cures like in very specific ways. He would give
the patient a substance that would gently nudge their system in the direction
of the disease, reproducing the same (or almost the same) syndrome
or whole set of particular symptoms in a mild form. He found this to be a very
effective way to stimulate their natural defenses. It is almost as if the patients
defenses cannot distinguish between the natural disease and what the similar substance
is doing. Thus homeopaths fine-tune the use of medicines to enhance the patients
own attempts to overcome the disease. In
this manner, homeopathy employs hundreds of substances that have all been thoroughly
studied as to their unique effects on body, emotions and mind. Some of these are
common herbs; others are from poisonous plants; some remedies are made from toxins
and venoms. Homeopathic pharmacists carefully prepare these many substances in
a time-tested manner that enhances their usefulness while minimizing potential
harm. They carefully dilute them to eliminate toxic effects, at the same time
shaking or grinding them in a way that energizes their helpful effect. This use
of a dilute similar substance is somewhat similar to the use of vaccines or to
the method of allergy desensitization. In
summary, homeopathy stimulates the healing process through temporarily establishing
an artificial disturbance of health with medicines. This disturbance, when similar
to the disturbance caused by the disease, makes the body work harder to get well.
The healing changes that follow are the result of this stimulation. While simple
in theory, this process requires skill and experience, particularly in chronic
conditions. The homeopathic doctor carefully evaluates the changes that occur
after use of each homeopathic medicine. In this way, the patient can be guided
to recovery of their health over the weeks or months necessary for the body to
repel the disease and regrow damaged tissues.
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