- Homeopathy: Real Medicine or Empty Promises?
by Isadora
Stehlin
Some of the medicines of homeopathy
evoke positive images--chamomile, marigold, daisy, onion. But
even some of Mother Nature's cruelest creations--poison ivy,
mercury, arsenic, pit viper venom, hemlock--are part of homeopathic
care.
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Homeopathy is a medical theory
and practice that developed in reaction to the bloodletting,
blistering, purging, and other harsh procedures of conventional
medicine as it was practiced more than 200 years ago. Remedies
made from many sources--including plants, minerals or animals--are
prescribed based on both a person's symptoms and personality.
Patients receiving homeopathic care frequently feel worse before
they get better because homeopathic medicines often stimulate,
rather than suppress, symptoms. This seeming reversal of logic
is a relevant part of homeopathy because symptoms are viewed
as the body's effort to restore health.
The Food and Drug Administration
regulates homeopathic remedies under provisions of the Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act.
Kinder, Gentler Medicine
In the late 1700s, the most popular
therapy for most ailments was bloodletting. |
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Some doctors had so much faith in
bleeding that they were willing to remove up to four-fifths of
the patient's blood. Other therapies of choice included blistering--placing
caustic or hot substances on the skin to draw out infections--and
administering dangerous chemicals to induce vomiting or purge
the bowels.
Massive doses of a mercury-containing
drug called calomel cleansed the bowels, but at the same time
caused teeth to loosen, hair to fall out, and other symptoms
of acute mercury poisoning.
The word homeopathy is derived
from the Greek words for like (homoios) and suffering (pathos).
With the law of similars, Hahnemann theorized that if a large
amount of a substance causes certain symptoms in a healthy person,
smaller amounts of the same substance can treat those symptoms
in someone who is ill. The basis of his theory took shape after
a strong dose of the malaria treatment quinine caused his healthy
body to develop symptoms similar to ones caused by the disease.
He continued to test his theory on himself as well as family
and friends with different herbs, minerals and other substances.
He called these experiments "provings."
But, as might be expected, the
intensity of the symptoms caused by the original proving was
harrowing. So Hahnemann began decreasing the doses to see how
little of a substance could still produce signs of healing.
With the minimum dose, or law
of infinitesimals, Hahnemann believed that a substance's strength
and effectiveness increased the more it was diluted. Minuscule
doses were prepared by repeatedly diluting the active ingredient
by factors of 10. A "6X" preparation (the X is the
Roman numeral for 10) is a 1-to-10 dilution repeated six times,
leaving the active ingredient as one part per million. Essential
to the process of increasing potency while decreasing the actual
amount of the active ingredient is vigorous shaking after each
dilution.
Some homeopathic remedies are
so dilute, no molecules of the healing substance remain. Even
with sophisticated technology now available, analytical chemists
may find it difficult or impossible to identify any active ingredient.
But the homeopathic belief is that the substance has left its
imprint or a spirit-like essence that stimulates the body to
heal itself.
Finally, a homeopathic physician
generally prescribes only a single remedy to cover all symptoms--mental
as well as physical--the patient is experiencing. However, the
use of multi-ingredient remedies is recognized as part of homeopathic
practice.
FDA Regulation
In 1938, Sen. Royal Copeland
of New York, the chief sponsor of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic
Act and a homeopathic physician, wrote into the law a recognition
of any product listed in the Homeopathic Pharmacopeia of the
United States. The Homeopathic Pharmacopeia includes a compilation
of standards for source, composition and preparation of homeopathic
drugs.
FDA regulates homeopathic drugs
in several significantly different ways from other drugs. Manufacturers
of homeopathic drugs are deferred from submitting new drug applications
to FDA. Their products are exempt from good manufacturing practice
requirements related to expiration dating and from finished product
testing for identity and strength. Homeopathic drugs in solid
oral dosage form must have an imprint that identifies the manufacturer
and indicates that the drug is homeopathic. The imprint on conventional
products, unless specifically exempt, must identify the active
ingredient and dosage strength as well as the manufacturer. |