- Homeopathy: Real Medicine or Empty
Promises? pg 3
By: Isadora Stehlin
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Jennifer Jacobs, M.D., who has
a family practice and is licensed to practice homeopathy in Washington
state, spends at least an hour and a half with each new patient.
"What I do is review the lifetime history of the patient's
health," she explains. "Also I ask a lot of questions
about certain general symptoms such as food preferences and sleep
patterns that usually aren't seen as important in conventional
medicine. In looking to make the match between the person and
the remedy, I need to have all of this sort of information."
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Why does someone trained in conventional
medicine turn to homeopathy? "With chronic illnesses such
as arthritis and allergies, conventional medicine has solutions
that help control the symptoms but you don't really see the patients
getting better," says Jacobs. "What I have seen in
my homeopathic work is that it really does seem to help people
get better. I'm not saying I can cure everyone but I do see where
people's overall health is improved over the course of treatment."
Jacobs' hasn't abandoned conventional
medicine completely. "My daughter is 17 and she's never
taken antibiotics, but I would have no hesitation to use antibiotics
if she had pneumonia, or meningitis, or a kidney infection,"
says Jacobs.
About a third of Jacobs' practice
is children, and ear infections are one of the most common problems
she treats. "Ear infections are something that seems to
respond well to homeopathy," she says. |
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"Of course, if a child is not
better within two or three days, or if the child develops a high
fever, or if I feel that there's a serious complication setting
in, then of course I will use antibiotics. But I find that in
the majority of cases, ear infections do resolve without antibiotics."
In addition to treating patients,
Jacobs has conducted a clinical trial the results of which suggest
that homeopathic treatment might be useful in the treatment of
acute childhood diarrhea. The results were published in the May
1994 issue of Pediatrics.
In the article, Jacobs concluded
that further studies should be conducted to determine whether
her findings were accurate. A subsequent article appearing in
the November 1995 issue of Pediatrics indicated that Jacobs'
study was flawed in several ways.
Although Pediatrics is published
by the American Academy of Pediatrics, Jacobs' study and several
others published in such journals as The Lancet and the British
Medical Journal are considered "scanty at best" by
the academy. "Given the plethora of studies that are published
[on other topics] in scientific journals, I wouldn't say there
are a lot of articles coming out," says Joe M. Sanders Jr.,
M.D., the executive director of the academy. "Just because
an article appears in a scientific journal does not mean that
it's absolute fact and should be immediately incorporated into
therapeutic regimens. It just means that the study is [published]
for critique and review and hopefully people will use that as
a stepping stone for further research."
More studies are under way. For
example, the Office of Alternative Medicine at the National Institutes
of Health has awarded a grant for a clinical trial of the effects
of homeopathic treatment on mild traumatic brain injury.
Even with the dearth of clinical
research, homeopathy's popularity in the United States is growing.
The 1995 retail sales of homeopathic medicines in the United
States were estimated at $201 million and growing at a rate of
20 percent a year, according to the American Homeopathic Pharmaceutical
Association. The number of homeopathic practitioners in the United
States has increased from fewer than 200 in the 1970s to approximately
3,000 in 1996.
When looking for a homeopathic
practitioner, it's important to find someone who is licensed,
according to the National Center for Homeopathy. Each state has
its own licensing requirements. "Whether that person is
a medical doctor or a physician's assistant or a naturopathic
physician, I feel that anyone who's treating people who are sick
needs to have medical training," says Jacobs.
Real Medicine or Wishful Thinking?
Many who don't believe in homeopathy's
effectiveness say any successful treatments are due to the placebo
effect, or, in other words, positive thinking.
But homeopathy's supporters counter
that their medicine works in groups like infants and even animals
that can't be influenced by a pep talk. Jacobs adds that sometimes
she mistakenly gives a patient the wrong remedy and he or she
doesn't get better. "Then I give the right remedy, and the
person does get better," she says. "So it's not like
everybody gets better because it's all in their head. I think
it's only because we don't understand the mechanism of action
of homeopathy that so many people have trouble accepting it."
The American Medical Association
does not accept homeopathy, but it doesn't reject it either.
"The AMA encourages doctors to become aware of alternative
therapies and use them when and where appropriate," says
AMA spokesman Jim Fox.
Similarly, the American Academy
of Pediatrics has no specific policy on homeopathy. If an adult
asked the academy's Sanders about homeopathy, he would tell that
person to "do your own investigation. I don't personally
prescribe homeopathic remedies, but I would be open-minded."
That open-mindedness applies
only to adults, however. "I would have problems with somebody
imposing other than conventional medicine onto a child who's
incapable of making that decision," he says.
Even professionals who practice
homeopathy warn that nothing in medicine--either conventional
or alternative--is absolute. "I'm not saying we can cure
everyone (with homeopathy)," says Jacobs. |