Talk:Homeopathy/Archive 13: Difference between revisions

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== Some ground rules (please do not delete from top of the page) ==
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Here are some brief comments that I hope will help reinforce our ground rules. I'm sorry I don't have time for more detailed engagement right now.


Some Citizens have complained to me that homeopathy's advocates on this page are tending to purge criticisms.  On this I will absolutely put my foot down.  You may not do so.  You may maintain that (and say in the article ''how'') homeopaths reject the criticisms, but you may not simply delete points, and source material, simply because you disagree with them or you think they are misinformed.  If you have a strong disagreement about a published criticism, you should voice it in the article, rather than removing the criticism.  There may be exceptions to this rule, but (I understand) not in several recent cases in the present article.
==APPROVED Version 1.1==


Of course, the "reply, don't delete" rule assumes that a source and criticism are important enough ''from the point of view of homeopathy's critics'' to be included. While they can have input of course, this is not ultimately a matter that homeopathy's defenders are best placed to decide.
<div class="usermessage plainlinks">Discussion for Version 1.1 stopped here. Please continue further discussion under this break. </div>


The word "skeptic" ''should not'' be used, pejoratively, to identify those who reject homeopathy in the article.  If there is a need repeatedly to identify the skeptics of homeopathy, you ''may not'' use a term that the skeptics themselves reject.  You ''must'' find a mutually agreeable term. I suggest "mainstream physicians."  "Allopaths" won't do, either, although it certainly can be introduced, and it should be.
The Approval includes two copyedits [http://en.citizendium.org/wiki?title=Homeopathy&diff=100587554&oldid=100587549] [[User:Hayford Peirce|Hayford Peirce]] 19:13, 11 October 2009 (UTC)


It should not be necessary for me to point out that the article can neither endorse nor roundly condemn homeopathy.  The article does not take a stand; it presents both (or all) sides on all controversial issues it presents, and leaves it up to the reader to decide for himself. ''The article does not endorse a position.''
:I'm not sure how to add yet another archive and get things to show up properly in the header here. Could someone do so? [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 19:22, 11 October 2009 (UTC)


Precisely because homeopathy happens to be a minority viewpoint when it comes to the health issues it discusses, criticism of homeopathy does ''not'' belong in a separate "criticisms" section of the article. I have my doubts whether there is any need for a "criticisms" section at all, but I can't say so until I've read the current version, which I haven't done.
== Beginning with semi-lower-case editorial... ==


Selective and uncritical reporting of references is contrary to CZ's neutrality policy: this makes it appear that ''we officially think'' the literature says such-and-such, when there is legitimate disagreement about whether it does say that.  When, therefore, a "skeptic" raises a question about a statistic such as 18% of Americans, we must absolutely deal with this question.  I am very uncomfortable publishing information about the percentage of Americans who accept homeopathy, when it has not been made clear what "acceptance" amounts to ''in the survey that was performed.''  Therefore, either this essential interpretive information must be included in the article, or the information about the statistic must be excluded.  Anything else would be, quite simply, misleading and unscientific.
As a first step, I'm going to all footnotes that contain other than bibliographic material or definitions, and either moving the substantive text into the main article, or, in some cases, linking to a subarticle.


More generally, on a topic with this much disagreement, we simply cannot add heaps of studies and statistics to the article ''without adequate explanation'' and without critical responses where such may exist or be possibleUncritical reportage of the results of disputed studies has an inherently biasing effect.
While it may be reasonable, in a printed book or journal, to have bottom-of-the-page notes, in this format, the content of the notes will not be seen unless the reader clicks on them. How many readers do that? In effect, the text is being hidden. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 19:37, 11 October 2009 (UTC)


Finally, I want to underscore that if ''anyone'' repeatedly reverts significant parts of the text without explaining and defending his actions here on the talk page, I will consider banning that person.  I would ask those who are following the article more closely to make a list of such unexplained reversions, and provide it to me privately.  On the basis of such information I will either issue a warning or, if the problem is very serious, a temporary ban.
== A balanced blog post on the subject ==


Let me finish on a positive note.  Despite the amount of struggle over this article, or perhaps because of it, this article has grown and in many ways improved, and other articles have spun off. This is a good thing. As I like to say, if everybody is equally frustrated, that means that work is getting done and the article isn't ''too'' biased one way or the other.  Still, if we can all follow the above ground rules, I think we'll get along quite a bit better. --[[User:Larry Sanger|Larry Sanger]] 16:22, 20 October 2008 (UTC)
can be found [http://scienceblogs.com/neurotopia/2009/12/homeopathy_the_basics.php here]. --[[User:Daniel Mietchen|Daniel Mietchen]] 09:21, 16 December 2009 (UTC)


I want to add another point.  While I do not endorse Wikipedia's inane and abusable rule "assume good faith," I do want to suggest that we need something a little like thatI might say, instead, "Assume your opponent is reasonable enough to be open to compromise."  If you make ''that'' assumption, you will yourself be much more likely to propose a compromise, and to be open to one. Then, if the other person shows himself to be completely closed to any compromise, whether yours or any that he might propose, the matter suddenly becomes much clearer. Then you can contact me, saying, "Look, I proposed a compromise, so-and-so did not accept it or propose any compromise in response. What do we do?" --[[User:Larry Sanger|Larry Sanger]] 15:17, 24 October 2008 (UTC)
:I added a comment, as did PaulTruly delightful, however, is <blockquote>Personally, I would really like to see a homeopathic treatment for dehydration. You'd have to have a compound that causes dehydration, but what would you dilute it in? you can't dilute it in water or saline, because those will rehydrate, and in homeopathy, you have to CAUSE dehydration to cure it...but you can't having anything that CAUSES dehydration because it would have to be diluted to the point where none of the dehydrating agent remains...</blockquote>


</td></tr></table>
:It should be noted that some camping supply stores, in the same aisle as freeze-dried foods, offer cans of "dehydrated water". Ethical staff makes sure that new users understand the purpose of same. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 15:06, 16 December 2009 (UTC)


== 'Mad' Ennis ==


Should'nt we have a bit on this?
Howard, you gave the wrong link for Sympathetic magic. It's http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Sympathetic_magic  And make sure the period at the end does not get connected to the link.  [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 15:26, 16 December 2009 (UTC)


MADELEINE Ennis, a pharmacologist at Queen's University, Belfast, was the scourge of homeopathy. She railed against its claims that a chemical remedy could be diluted to the point where a sample was unlikely to contain a single molecule of anything but water, and yet still have a healing effect. Until, that is, she set out to prove once and for all that homeopathy was bunkum. Ennis and her team found that ultra-dilute solutions of histamine – so dilute that they probably didn't contain a single histamine molecule – worked on the human body just like histamine. The study, replicated in four different labs, forced Ennis to admit that something inexplicable is going on with homeopathy.  
That's a reasonable way to look at it, which is unusual for a blog. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 18:43, 16 December 2009 (UTC)
And now some eminent chemists are weighing into the debate, claiming that our “understanding” of the properties of water is based on false assumptions: water, they say, has such peculiar quantum mechanical properties that we really do need to go back to the drawing board when it comes to our understanding of this root of life.


:*As a chemist who (co)authored some papers on the quantum mechanical properties of water, I'm naturally interested  in the names of the ''eminent chemists  who are weighing into the debate'' and also where this debate is taking place. Thank you in advance for your giving me the names and place(s). --[[User:Paul Wormer|Paul Wormer]] 10:25, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
::Put it into the External Links. --[[User:Daniel Mietchen|Daniel Mietchen]] 19:27, 16 December 2009 (UTC)


[summarised from '13 Things that Don't Make Sense', (2008) by Michael Brooks]
== Ramanand's changes ==


I see the 'other place' mentions Ennis but dismisses her research in line with the BBC's 'debunking'. Brooks is linked to the BBC.
First, the word " most <u>biased</u> medical " is argumentative, does not fit the language of the lede, and is clearly advocacy.


I read an article 'somewhere' about two weeks ago on good, solid evidence of 'memory' in liquids - but blow me - now I can't find it!
The statement supporting homeopathy in the lede, even if the references were solid, belongs, stylistically, in a later section on the mechanisms of homeopathy. One reference is, as far as I can tell, from a Brazilian university with a site in, presumably, Portuguese, which I do not read. We generally don't use non-English references, especially when they are not clearly from peer-reviewed journals or otherwise reviewed sources.


[[User:Martin Cohen|Martin Cohen]] 17:22, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
The other reference is from Khuda-Bukhsh, whom, I believe, has been in the memory of water controversy, is a review of possible molecular mechanisms of action. On first glance, it's an interesting paper, but does not talk at all about efficacy &mdash; just how homeopathic remedies may work, if they work. It doesn't belong in the lede, although it's not unreasonable to use it as a reference in a later section.


: Welcome Martin! 
Neither addition works where it is. The first is advocacy and non-neutral. --[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 17:45, 7 January 2010 (UTC)
: Yes, Ennis' work IS important for several reasons. First, initially, she was a skeptic. Second, her study was replicated by 3 other university laboratories.  And NO (!), her work was NOT debunked by the BBC or ABC News.  For details about this "TV junk science," read Ennis' letter to me about how different this tv "study" was from hers: http://www.homeopathic.com/articles/view,55  and see also http://www.homeopathic.com/articles/view,58
:The use of "biased" is definitely adversarial. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 21:12, 7 January 2010 (UTC)
: As for articles on the memory of water in liquid, there are several good articles, though I am not certain to which you refer.  I am certain that you will find whatever you may want on THIS subject here at the site of Professor Martin Chaplin:  http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/memory.html  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 17:55, 30 November 2008 (UTC)
:With regard to the rebuttal (it works, and we know how), I am loath to see this article head down the direction of he says, she says tit for tat. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 21:21, 7 January 2010 (UTC)


:: This work is already covered in [[Memory of water]][[User:Gareth Leng|Gareth Leng]] 13:06, 1 December 2008 (UTC)
::The whole article is full of oxymorons, containng both viewpoints, so I don't see anything wrong with what I've inserted, unless the critics' statement is also removed (about what scientists feel). I'm fine if the word <u>biased</u> is removed, if it seems adversarial. The Portuguese and French is only in the references section and shouldn't be a problem.—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 10:28, 8 January 2010 (UTC)


::: How about some reference or links here! [[User:Martin Cohen|Martin Cohen]] 14:54, 13 December 2008 (UTC)
:::Well, Ramanand, the general CZ, policy, especially in the Charter, is that articles don't equally present all views. They present the preponderance of the expert views, and, in this case, the experts are in health sciences; there isn't a unifying discipline among healing arts. Not all healing arts support homeopathy.


::::Martin, Gareth and Dana are both subject matter Editors. Almost two weeks or so have gone by since they commented. Dana has not challenged Martin's opinion. When the Editors have reached an apparent consensus, it's usually time to move to some of the other open issues. Further, if you demand references or links, it is helful to state the specific point or question you wish them to address. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 15:08, 13 December 2008 (UTC)
::::Everyone needs to [[CZ:Neutrality Policy|Neutrally]] present all views. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 02:31, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
==Net problems==
Hit technical problems at the weekend - first CZ went down here just as I was starting, then my net service went down, so apologies - I'd scarcely begun; I'll get vback when I can but life is now tight for the next week or so. However, the article is too large in my view and I'd suggest moving the bulk of material on the efficacy into a focussed article on Testing the efficacy of homeopathy. Comments?[[User:Gareth Leng|Gareth Leng]] 13:04, 1 December 2008 (UTC)


Hi Gareth (and everybody), whenever CZ goes down, please send me an e-mail ASAP.  Often I'm the only person available who can do anything about the problem, and while I typically visit CZ several times a day, there are often gaps of many hours... --[[User:Larry Sanger|Larry Sanger]] 14:41, 1 December 2008 (UTC)
::The foreign language citations have been a problem in many other articles, not just here.  


== Gareth's extensive editing ==
:I think you mean contradictions or rather or challenges, not oxymorons. An oxymoron would be a "heroically large dose of a homeopathic simillum." An oxymoron is a contradiction in terms.


A very nice job! As you know, I had given up on this article several weeks ago and proposed that it simply be put in mothballs for at least a year. Thanks to the goodwill on many people's part, and particularly your own expertise in rewriting, I may have changed my mind. A *fine* article may yet come out of this.... [[User:Hayford Peirce|Hayford Peirce]] 02:49, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
:Sorry, I'm in favor of removing both additions. You will need to face the reality that the article will not be as pro-homeopathy as you want, just as others wish it weren't here at all. It's a compromise. --[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 15:48, 8 January 2010 (UTC)


: Gareth, I have only just begun to review your work, though my initial review is also quite positive.  I am, however, concerned that the section "Contrasting views of homeopathy and conventional medicine" is placed even before "The basics of homeopathy."  It seems odd to provide a critique of homeopathy BEFORE describing what homeopathy is!  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 03:20, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
::I applaud, encourage and appreciate collaborative efforts to work toward improvements, but I think this lead still needs significant work to add any substantial improvement to the approved version's lead. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 02:28, 9 January 2010 (UTC)


:I agree - I've been more concerned not to lose text that I take out of sections and haven't given close thought to the order of sections.[[User:Gareth Leng|Gareth Leng]] 17:24, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
:::I forgot to wish all of you a Happy (belated) New Year. The presently approved article's Lead isn't 'neutal' at the moment. It should either explain homeopathy plainly or if y'all want criticism in the Lead, it should contain both viewpoints. Where's Dana, by the way, in Germany again?—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 09:14, 9 January 2010 (UTC)


On Testing - I've moved this, agree fully with Chris that there needs to be a succinct summary here, that should also be the lead of the new article.
:::: Happy New Year to you, too! Please let me know where you think the present Approved version lead (as opposed to the draft lead) is lacking and I'll be glad to take a look.  Dana approved the current lead, too, but I'm sure he'd take a look if we asked him.  [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 15:00, 9 January 2010 (UTC)


There is still a lot to be done, especially reorganisation! I have just started really, but will have to do my bit intermittently. [[User:Gareth Leng|Gareth Leng]] 17:49, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
:::::I'd posted a whole lot of links to homeopathic articles, late last year, but did not have the time to add it in the article. I was expecting someone here to do it, but no one did (not even Dana)! I already wrote what I wanted above, "It should either explain homeopathy plainly (without criticism in the very 1st sentence) or if y'all want criticism in the Lead, it should contain both viewpoints."[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 08:34, 12 January 2010 (UTC)
:I agree the organisation needs some work. The "Professional homeopaths: who are they?" section is currently a hodge podge of stuff that does not necessarily connect well. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 18:04, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
::Several things in this section need to be written carefully. While there are homeopaths with full medical credentials, there are also CAM practitioners that have only classical homeopathic training. When physicians express concern about homeopaths, the concern is most likely about pure homeopathic approaches; it is not fair to imply that all homeopaths are medically qualified and only select homeopathic treatment after a considered balancing of approaches.


:Again, there may be much valuable material available in the interpersonal dynamics. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 18:12, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
::::::We certainly can't add every link ever written to this article.  This is the overview article in an encyclopedia type format and summarizes homeopathy pretty well, I think.  Again, don't confuse the lead in the Draft with the lead in the main [[Homeopathy]] article.  I agree the lead in the draft needs more work and is not an improvement in its current form. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 12:45, 12 January 2010 (UTC)


== Safety and Vaccine Issues ==
:::::::If nothing else, bibliographic links not directly related to the text belong on the bibliography page, preferably in articles. Also, in other articles, there is some selectivity. In some cases, reviews are more appropriate than small primary studies. In other cases, peer review and responsible publications are appropriate. In yet other cases, there is more leeway on publications but the reason needs to be explained.
Under the section on "Safety," there is this paragraph which I recommend that we delete, except for the 1st sentence (or that we rewrite entirely. The reference does not say that the chickenpox vaccine reduces incidence of herpes zoster (there seems to be a separate vaccine for that).  


"Such advice is generally considered irresponsible by public health professionals. Adult herpes zoster infection is a reactivation of childhood chickenpox, which recurs along nerve paths, affects 1 in 3 adults, and can cause chronic, severe nerve pain of postherpetic neuralgia in 10-18% of cases, and eye involvement in 10-25% of cases. Chickenpox immunization prevents adult herpes zoster; a herpes zoster vaccine is now recommended for all adults 60 years and older. [69] Childhood immunization against chickenpox prevents herpes zoster. Measles is not a major killer in the western world, where the vast majority of children are vaccinated against the disease at about two years old. However, in less developed countries the death toll is much higher, and in 1999 there were 875,000 deaths from measles worldwide, mostly in Africa. In 2001, a "Measles Initiative" was initiated involving organisations such as the American Red Cross, UNICEF and the World Health Organization, and between 1999 and 2005 more than 360 million children across the world were vaccinated. By 2005 the death toll had dropped by 60% to 345,000. [70]"  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 05:38, 3 December 2008 (UTC)
:::::::It's not necessarily reasonable to assume someone else will edit and add articles with which they aren't familiar, or with which they might disagree.  


:To clarify the specific, herpes zoster is a reactivation of childhood chickenpox, where the virus has entered cutaneous nerves and become dormant. If chickenpox is prevented, than the vulnerability for adult herpes zoster never develops. Both vaccines target the same virus, but in different manifestations &mdash; symptom complexes if you will. Now, Neustadter, a homeopath, wrote that the only benefit for chickenpox immunization is economic, variously keeping parents from losing time from work, and generating revenue for vaccine makers.
:::::::What principles of homeopathy are in not in the lead?  It should go without saying that homeopathists believe what they are doing, or the article wouldn't be here at all. Having a small number of dissenting comments from people who question hematology simply establish it isn't universally accepted, and the details and pros and cons should be in the article, but later. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 13:27, 12 January 2010 (UTC)


:Neustadter, although well published in non-scientific circles as a critic of vaccines, does not, in any of his material I have read, seems to understadnd the relationship between herpes zoster (chickenpox) and herpes zoster (shingles). His biography shows training in oriental medicine and homeopathy, but nothing from a biomedical perspective. I didn't bring in his work in the first place; homeopaths did. His work, stands as a very good example of the sort of thing that frightens medical scientists and physicians about alternative practitioners that do not have the knowledge to understand the potential implications of what they claim. Now, if Neustadter had denied the relationship between these different viral diseases, it would be one thing, but it is, to me, telling that a prominent homeopathic author doesn't even seem to know it exists.
::::::::RE: provided references from Ramanand, [http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Talk:Homeopathy/Archive_11#Long_time_no_see_.28post.29.21 this must be the list] and I do remember it, but it's mostly primary research.  They could be used for a more detailed article to support a specific claim where reviews aren't available, but to cite them here would result in too much detail for the general nature of this article. Primary research doesn't belong in a bibliography eitherI'm not sure that we have a subpage that would be appropriate for primary research, though it's an interesting idea for some other project, or way in the future for this one.  Otherwise, I'd think it would be a problem with [[CZ:Maintainability]]. There are other sites that do list all the research for each particular subject. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 14:51, 12 January 2010 (UTC)


:Dana, are you saying the materials about more generic anti-vaccine claims also be dropped? It was my understanding that Neustadter objected to it because "in part because some childhood infectious diseases may actually strengthen immune response, thereby reducing the incidence of certain chronic ailments such as asthma."  Now, if he were to say "strengthen vital force", I'd say that is homeopathic art and I'd accept it as valid within the homeopathic system. As soon as the words "immune system", however, are mentioned, that seems far to ask about precisely what measurable immune factors are improved by childhood diseases. Generically, for example, are some protective of T4 lymphocytes?  To deal with asthma specifically, I'd certainly hesitate to say a "strengthened" immune response reduces [[asthma]], because the mechanism of asthma is hyperreactivity in immune system cells called [[basophil]]s and mast cells, or their hypersensitization by [[immunoglobulin]]-generating lymphocytes. Conventional treatment deliberately weakens these hypersensitive immune components, blocking the release of [[histamine]] and other inflammatory factors that cause, among other things the [[bronchospasm]] of asthma.  How does not giving childhood vaccines reduce inappropriate immunoglobin production or basophil/mast cell degranulation? If I made comments about similliums, a homeopath would have every justification to demand I explain my apparently superficial reason. Turnabout seems perfectly neutral fair play, presenting a claim in the context of the other discipline.
:::::::::This is one page ([[Homeopathy/Trials]]) that exists with a tabulated summary of some of the voluminous primary literature. I agree maintainability is an issue.  I bet there are hundreds of articles like this and the main problem is reducing it to the most important articles in the field. If that could be done well it might make a good catalog. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 17:18, 12 January 2010 (UTC)


:So, after all this time the assorted vaccine-related things have been brought in as homeopathic arguments, and not removed, or even questions raised from concerned homeopaths, these words seem a perfect example of the sort of issue that concerns physicians about homeopaths objecting to treatments that may very well have long-term serious consequences. Further explanation might help, but removing the material now would appear covering up very public homeopathic statements that show a lack of understanding of the knowledge a trained conventional physician should have. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 07:43, 3 December 2008 (UTC)
:::::::::Matt, I made some time to read the entire (presently) approved article. I don't see any sentence saying there is evidence for homeopathy (the feg pdf document I've inserted in the present draft is accepted by 'mainstream' scientists as well). I object to the term 'placebo' in the lead (Edzard Ernst is known to be a ridiculed homeopathic baiter in the U.K.). I also object to the term 'fraud' in the Overview section<blockquote>They also are interested in whether positive results against expectation sometimes reflect manipulation of data or perhaps even fraud. </blockquote>. Like you said, can we edit the (presently) approved article?—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 17:34, 23 January 2010 (UTC)
:::::::::David (Ellis), can you please tell me what objections you have to the feg pdf document?—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 17:42, 23 January 2010 (UTC)


: Sorry, I can't get back to consider this before the weekend; for now I've done some trimming and tightening; whether its needed depends on phrasing elsewhere I think. [[User:Gareth Leng|Gareth Leng]] 08:51, 3 December 2008 (UTC)
(undent)
Placebo in the lead is perfectly appropriate; conventional medicine routinely accepts the placebo effect as a component of therapies.


== Question: is there no homeopathic pollution problem? ==
Fraud is mentioned gently as a possibility by some observers, seemingly far more gently than some of the homeopathic claims of the danger of medicine. Sorry, it's not unbalanced.  Please do not go to "known" homeopathic baiters anywhere, else that you start having people bring in medical baiters from homeopathy. The problem with bait is that it often has a hook inside.


I often wondered what happens to the medicinal water that is necessarily  discarded during the preparation of a, say, 30C solution. I would guess that this water, having medicinal/healing properties, is not safe to simply  flush  into a city sewer system. Isn't there a pollution problem here? Storing and saving the whole batch cannot solve the problem either, because, suppose we start preparation from 1 (one)  microliter (10<sup>&minus;6</sup> L) of tincture, then a 30C dilution, i.e., dilution by a factor 10<sup>60</sup>, gives 10<sup>54</sup> L. The volume of the Earth is 10<sup>24</sup> L, so we need 10<sup>30</sup> times the volume of the Earth to store all the succussed water that has been in contact with the medicinal substance during preparation. Hence it seems to me that discarding large volumes of the intermediate solutions is the only way out.  
By edit the presently approved article, no, other than for typos, it's frozen. It is possible to edit the draft, and eventually to have the edited draft become the newly approved.  


I wonder, are by any chance the more concentrated intermediate solutions less powerful so that  flushing them is safe? Or do the concentrated solutions lose their essential healing properties sooner than the "beyond Avogadro" solutions? Or is there some mechanism in the sewer that annihilates the healing property of concentrated solutions and makes them safe? I hope that the homeopathic industry investigated this and found a solution (no pun), I don't like my drinking water contaminated with medicinal water. --[[User:Paul Wormer|Paul Wormer]] 13:31, 3 December 2008 (UTC)
Again, what specific principles of homeopathy '''are not'' in the lede? --[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 18:03, 23 January 2010 (UTC)


: Paul, no one knows with certainty what good or bad that dispensed homeopathic water has, though the premise of homeopathy suggests that only those biological systems that will react to a specific homeopathic medicine will be those that have some similarity or resonance to itAlso, heat and extreme cold as well as various fragrant substances have been known to neutralize homeopathic medicines, so whatever effects may happen in nature are usually undone.  I file this subject under:  interesting to investigate (if possible) but probably no big deal.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 06:32, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
:Friends, it has been a while since I check-in here.  I have not re-read most of the new draft, but I can tell you that I do not like the lede paragraph.  It is simply not encyclopedic or impartialAnyway, we only recently spent a lot of time approving the previous edition.  I suggest that we let it sit for 3-6 months or more before we re-do it.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 05:28, 1 February 2010 (UTC)


:: I am not clear how long the below paragraph has been in this article as is, but it is full of spectulation and straw man thinking. A weak and incorrect description of the memory of water theory is provided. Also, whoever wrote this does not seem to understand that ALL homeopathic medicines are made with a double-distilled water.  This pharmaceutical grade water creates a standard for water which responds to the unsubstantiated concerns about "pollution" in the water used in homeopathy.  Further, the ideas expressed below about the extreme views of the "memory of water" are quite slopply intellectually and have no basis as being a problem. The statement about memory from "contact" is not even accurate because homeopathic medicines are made by contact, dilution, and succussion (vigorous shaking). Because of all this, I have deleted this paragraph because it seems not worthy. 
::Dana, I hope you can insert sentences that read something like, "there is scientific evidence for homeopathy", using the PDF for "Scientific framework of homeopathy: evidence-based homeopathy" available at http://www.feg.unesp.br/~ojs/index.php/ijhdr/article/viewFile/286/354 wherever appropriate.—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 08:21, 2 March 2010 (UTC)


::"Non-homeopaths question if homepathic theory is logically consistent, pointing out what appear to be inconsistency. The theory assumes that water is imprinted by the properties of molecules that it once came in contact with, even when the molecules are diluted away. If so, then where did the pure water used in this process come from? The water that homeopaths use was once in contact with other chemicals, including chemical wastes, radioactive metals, dinosaur urine, and various poisons. According to this interpretation of homeopathic theory, all water in the world should remember its contact with millions of chemical substances and not just the properties of the chemicals that the homeopath claims will be useful.[61] Homeopaths respond by asserting that homeopathic manufacturers use a double-distilled water which may clear the "memory" of past water history." [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 07:03, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
=== British House of Commons Science and Technology Committee report ===


Has anyone studied the half life of homeopathic medicines? How long can they stay on a stores shelf before they become inactive? [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 13:36, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
The committee commissioned by the British government has reassessed homeopathy as a treatment option under the national health service. It's enquiry sought written evidence and submissions from concerned parties (See [http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/story.asp?sectioncode=26&storycode=408852&c=1 News in brief: Homeopathic assessment] and [http://www.parliament.uk/parliamentary_committees/science_technology/s_t_pn05_091020.cfm Evidence check: Homeopathy]). Both sides of the debate were represented and presented written evidence to the committee. In addition there were oral presentations from the following individuals:


:Half-life determinations, normally part of FDA Good Manufacturing Practices, are explicitly waived for homeopathic medicines. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 13:39, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
*Mr Mike O'Brien QC MP, Minister for Health Services, Department of Health;
*Professor David Harper CBE, Director General, Health Improvement and Protection, and Chief Scientist, Department of Health;
*Professor Kent Woods, Chief Executive, Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency
*Professor Jayne Lawrence, Chief Scientific Adviser, Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain;
*Robert Wilson, Chairman, British Association of Homeopathic Manufacturers;
*Paul Bennett, Professional Standards Director, Boots;
*Tracey Brown, Managing Director, Sense About Science;
*Dr Ben Goldacre, Journalist.
*Dr Peter Fisher, Director of Research, Royal London Homeopathic Hospital;
*Professor Edzard Ernst, Director, Complementary Medicine Group, Peninsula Medical School;
*Dr James Thallon, Medical Director, NHS West Kent;
*Dr Robert Mathie, Research Development Adviser, British Homeopathic Association.


::So the homeopathic medicines don't become inactive? Or does FDA just classify them as inactive? As for the latter, is that why the FDA does not regulate homeopathic medicine or is their stated reason that there are no serious side effects? [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 13:47, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
A summary statement from the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee was released with the report in Feb 2010:
{{quote|... the NHS should cease funding homeopathy. It also concludes that the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) should not allow homeopathic product labels to make medical claims without evidence of efficacy. As they are not medicines, homeopathic products should no longer be licensed by the MHRA.


:::Unfortunately, and without trying to be snarky, this is politics rather than science. The enabling legislation was enacted in 1938, when there was very little science of pharamacology. There was the Elixir Sulfanilamide disaster, which was the trigger. During debate, Sen. Royal Copeland, a homeopathic physician  but apparently an objective man, did not want to see homeopathic medicines that had "passed the test of time" be subject to the the newfangled rules. As FDA and related regulatory organizations passed Good Manufacturing Processes, [[New Drug Application]] clinical trials, and the rest, homeopathy always managed to be grandfathered; I can't testify if that was a scientific determination of stability, a scientific determination that there was nothing to degrade, or a political maneuver.
The Committee concurred with the Government that the evidence base shows that homeopathy is not efficacious (that is, it does not work beyond the placebo effect) and that explanations for why homeopathy would work are scientifically implausible.  


:::In other words, Chris, there's never been a serious U.S., scientifically mediated discussion about the points you raise. It is clear that homeopathic drugs, for whatever reasons, are in a sanctuary from oversight except in egregious cases of misbranding. To some extent, the laws of other Western countries have some parallels. Is this valid material for the article?  Should there be a stronger link to [[New Drug Application]] with compare-and-contrast?[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 13:59, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
The Committee concluded - given that the existing scientific literature showed no good evidence of efficacy - that further clinical trials of homeopathy could not be justified.


::::I'm not sure where it should be, possibly history, but these are things that have always intrigued me with regard to homeopathy. I think it would be good if CZ had this material somewhere. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 14:23, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
In the Committee’s view, homeopathy is a placebo treatment and the Government should have a policy on prescribing placebos. The Government is reluctant to address the appropriateness and ethics of prescribing placebos to patients, which usually relies on some degree of patient deception. Prescribing of placebos is not consistent with informed patient choice-which the Government claims is very important-as it means patients do not have all the information needed to make choice meaningful.


Howard, you didn't try too hard to avoid being snarky.  If you are going to say or suggest something about "newfangled rules" (a very snarky reference), please quote and reference it. It would be more accurate to say that Copeland understood that the paradigm of homeopathy was different than that of allopathic pharmacology...therefore, grandfathering was perfectly appropriate. Please know that the manufacture of homeopathic medicines are strictly enforced.  Manufacturers receive regular and unannounced visits, and the level of review is much more significant than the people here realize...and it is obvious that people here are not speaking/writing from real knowledge but just guesswork.  Let's get beyond this... [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 03:41, 5 December 2008 (UTC)
Beyond ethical issues and the integrity of the doctor-patient relationship, prescribing pure placebos is bad medicine. Their effect is unreliable and unpredictable and cannot form the sole basis of any treatment on the NHS. <br/>'''Source:''' UK Parliamentary Committee Science and Technology Committee - [http://www.parliament.uk/parliamentary_committees/science_technology/s_t_homeopathy_inquiry.cfm "Evidence Check 2: Homeopathy"]}}
:"''the level of review is much more significant than the people here realize...''". But it is not in this article, shouldn't it be? Especially if everyone is ignorant in this area. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 03:46, 5 December 2008 (UTC)
===The Code of Federal Regulations is snarky?===
I'm not going to argue whether Coleman's 1938 insight is appropriate for today. Further, there is little if any allopathic manufacturing today, since allopathy is an obsolete term in medicine, except when being used in a historic derogatory manner by homeopaths. Again, I'll remind you that Osler said that both allopathy and homeopathy needed to be succeeded by science-based medicine.


Want a quote? Nevertheless, the good manufacturing product is hardly guesswork; I suggest an apology is in order. Or did you want more of the actual language of the regulations?
From the full report the committee also stated:
{{quote|
We conclude that placebos should not be routinely prescribed on the NHS. The funding of homeopathic hospitals — hospitals that specialise in the administration of placebos — should not continue, and NHS doctors should not refer patients to homeopaths.<br/>'''Source:''' [http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmsctech/45/45.pdf Evidence Check 2: Homeopathy, Fourth Report of Session 2009–10], House of Commons Science and Technology Committee, 20 October 2009, parliament.uk}}


21 Code of Federal Regulations: CURRENT GOOD MANUFACTURING PRACTICE IN MANUFACTURING, PROCESSING, PACKING, OR HOLDING OF DRUGS; GENERAL PART 211  - CURRENT GOOD MANUFACTURING PRACTICE FOR FINISHED PHARMACEUTICALS:
In conclusion the chairman of the committee said:
* § 211.137 - Expiration dating.
{{quote|
**(a) To assure that a drug product meets applicable standards of identity, strength, quality, and purity at the time of use, it shall bear an expiration date determined by appropriate stability testing described in 211.166.
This was a challenging inquiry which provoked strong reactions. We were seeking to determine whether the Government's policies on homeopathy are evidence based on current evidence. They are not.
**(b) Expiration dates shall be related to any storage conditions stated on the labeling, as determined by stability studies described in 211.166.
**(c) If the drug product is to be reconstituted at the time of dispensing, its labeling shall bear expiration information for both the reconstituted and unreconstituted drug products.
**(d) Expiration dates shall appear on labeling in accordance with the requirements of 201.17 of this chapter.
**(e) ''Homeopathic drug products shall be exempt from the requirements of this section.''


If part (e) is not clear, homeopathic products are exempt from stability studies and expiration dating. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 03:53, 5 December 2008 (UTC)
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. This also sends out a confused message, and has potentially harmful consequences. We await the Government's response to our report with interest.<br/>'''Source:''' UK Parliamentary Committee Science and Technology Committee - [http://www.parliament.uk/parliamentary_committees/science_technology/s_t_homeopathy_inquiry.cfm "Evidence Check 2: Homeopathy"]}}


===Apropos of double-distilled water===
: The Evidence Check definitely needs to be in the article. It has been hilarious watching the homeopaths squirming around trying to explain it away by butchering the quote from Cucherat's systematic review. It is like those reviews you see on movie posters where it says something like "Tremendous, Exciting (Evening Standard)" and then you go and look and see what the Evening Standard actually say and it is "A tremendous waste of time and money, has difficulty exciting all but the clinically insane". –[[User:Tom Morris|Tom Morris]] 15:12, 3 March 2010 (UTC)
From direct laboratory experience, double-distilled water isn't a panacea. When we prepared it for physical chemistry of protein, the bottles always had to be under soda lime locks to prevent carbon dioxide uptake, or had to be hermetically sealed with the reaction under inert gas.


Double distillation, without additional measures, does not prevent other gases from entering the water. IIRC, the first clanthrates involved xenon, and double distillation would be unlikely to exclude it.  
:: For some reason, I couldn't access Citizendium yesterday at this time. Meanwhile, I got a reply from Dr Peter Fisher to my e-mail in which he says that the individual specific rules of Homeopathy were not followed in prescribing/administering the Homeopathic remedy, so I hope good sense prevails over the 'UK Parliamentary Committee Science and Technology Committee'.—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 13:43, 12 March 2010 (UTC)


Until the early 1940s, intravenous fluids were not safe even if prepared from double-distilled water. It turned out that pyrogens leached even from good-grade laboratory grade glass containers, and, until this was discovered and special containers (as well as tubing) developed, IVs could cause fevers of unknown origin. It is not an accident that most IV units are of a plastic very carefully designed not to leach impurities. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 14:06, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
:::With regard to "the individual specific rules of Homeopathy were not followed in prescribing/administering the Homeopathic remedy" what is Peter Fisher referring to? How does that impact the report? [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 16:25, 12 March 2010 (UTC)


== 5-45 ==
::::As I understand it, the individual specific rules of homeopathy mean that every patient is unique and the remedies appropriate for one will not be appropriate for another. Let's assume this is exactly correct. That would make classic randomized clinical trials, in which there is a standard treatment arm and a control arm, inappropriate, because there is no homeopathic standard.


In "with 5-45 minute follow-up consultations" does this mean there are typically five consultations that are 45 minutes long, or that there is an indeterminate number of follow-up consultations that range from 5 to 45 minutes long? --[[User:Larry Sanger|Larry Sanger]] 18:13, 3 December 2008 (UTC)
::::A very similar problem, however, applies to highly individualized [[pharmacogenomics|pharmacogenomic]] therapies: within a cohort of patients with, say, metastatic breast adenocarcinoma, the experimental hypothesis may be that a given treatment is applicable only to those patients with a specific BRCA gene coding. Panaceamycin is only expected to be effective in patients with that characteristic, and the others should get an aromatase inhibitor, the standard of care. Given there is a treatment, a placebo control is ethically unacceptable.


: It was meant as 5 to 45 minute follow-up consultations (some consults are very short and others take more time)[[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 06:25, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
::::RCT's have been designed that still have statistical power, but are testing the diagnostic and treatment model, not panaceamycinThe clinician selects the treatment and sends an order to the pharmacy, where the pharmacist opens the next blind assignment envelope. If the patient is assigned to the experimental arm, the IV drug unit sent back to the care unit has panaceamycin in it if the genomic model calls for it, and the control treatment if not. If the patient is assigned to control, she gets control. It is the decision to assign that is being tested, more than the drug itself.


== Paracelsus and alternative medicine ==
::::In like manner, homeopaths could prescribe a totally individualized remedy, but they would be blinded to whether or not the patient gets the remedy -- control could be placebo, or a medical treatment. With a sufficiently large sample, if the homeopathic model is correct, the patients receiving the remedy should do better.


First, there is a History of Homeopathy page. Some participants here object to moving any history there, while others, including myself, feel the lead is too long and too argumentative and should shift. <small>Howard C. Berkowitz 14:42, 4 December</small>
::::It is not clear that homeopaths are willing to be tested in such a manner, which should obviate the argument about individualization not being permitted. --[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 17:05, 12 March 2010 (UTC)


:There is a big difference between a look at the history of homeopathy and the theory of homeopathy. This new page serves a quite different purpose. <small>Martin Cohen 17:42, 4 December</small>
:::::Brings me back to a question that I have never seen an answer to.  How can remedies be mass marketed and sold off the shelf at places like wal-mart and whole foods and be so effective (as claimed)? These remedies are either robust or need to be highly individualized.  If the latter, I don't see how how a mass market product will work.  If the former, then they have indeed being found wanting (no better than placebo). Their defense against accepting the failed results of clinical trials precludes claiming successes from the mass market products. Which is it? [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 19:15, 12 March 2010 (UTC)


::Given that there has been an intense discussion at Homeopathy, going back six archives' worth, involving the Editor-In-Chief, a current rewrite by an Editor, and extensive arguments, were I to see such a situation, I would hesitate before going ahead and creaing new pages, new models, and changing the text without presenting them on the talk page. <small>Howard C. Berkowitz 17:57, 4 December</small>
::::::A question, Chris, that I've asked myself. Let me respond indirectly.  One of the major mass-marketed products is [[Oscillococcinum]], about which I did write an article. What is the sound that is made by the creature from which the simillium is obtained? --[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 19:28, 12 March 2010 (UTC)


Second, I'm not clear whether you are proposing an [[alternative medicine]] page rather than [[complementary and alternative medicine]]. The latter is a generally preferred term, and there are very strong reasons not to separate the two. Synergy of disciplines, a potential benefit, is not going to come from separation. <small>Howard C. Berkowitz 14:42, 4 December</small>
:::::::Given that they are a £1.5bn industry we can expect to hear a lot of noise like that in the next few months. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 19:40, 12 March 2010 (UTC)


:I was 'suggesting' that the page title 'Alternative medecine' worked perfectly well, and that the inclusion of complementary medecine in the text itself was not thereby excluded. The longer title seems clumsy, makes linking more long-winded, and as I say, has left some links 'stranded'. Surely, as a general rule, we should respect page authors' choices of names for their pages except where there is a pressing need to do otherwise. Now I'm not saying you are wrong in this case, but I asked for the 'thinking' behind it. <small>Martin Cohen 17:42, 4 December</small>
:::::::: Howard, you got it right - for example, Ipecacuanha can't be given where Antim. Tart is indicated. Chris, classical homeopaths don't accept 'over the counter'/'off the shelf' products because anything between 2 to 20 remedies are mixed in one 'combination' (Hahnemann used to call such homeopaths the 'mongrel sect'), but since it's popular, the classical homeopaths can't do much about it. In India, homeopathy is a half a Billion $ 'industry' - and that is only counting the medicines sold 'over the counter' and not what is spent on homeopathic doctors - so we're not gonna let people talk rubbish about it. It really works (See the 'feg' pdf document I've posted in the previous section)!—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 09:22, 13 March 2010 (UTC)


::Stranded links can be fixed. At least Matt and I on the talk page, and others in email, have specifically discussed the reason for the page name change. [[Complementary and alternative medicine]] have a well-understood meaning. Surely, as a general rule, I have little respect for page name choices by people that come into the midst of an extensive discussion, create new pages and paradigms without discussion, and do without asking. Again, the goal here is collaboration, not WP bold edit and revert, especially in tense situations. <small>Howard C. Berkowitz 17:57, 4 December</small>
Ramanand, you didn't get right the essence of what I was saying: there are statistically powerful testing methods, which have been developed for biological therapies that indeed are individualized, which could answer the homeopathic objection to more traditional randomized clinical trials. I have not seen any evidence that homeopaths are willing to use such methods, but instead continue to insist on either statistically weak retrospective analyses or anecdotal/testimonial evidence. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 16:21, 13 March 2010 (UTC)


Up to this point, the homeopaths have emphasized Hippocrates and Hahnemann. Bringing in Paracelsus, especially in the lead, is a rather radical change that should be discussed first. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 14:42, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
:Howard, it is very simple: the homeopaths are perfectly happy to use clinical evidence when it shows that homeopathy works. But when it shows that it doesn't work, then the clinical trial methodology must be at fault! Heads I win, tails you lose. If clinical trials are unable to detect the effects of homeopathy, why is the British Homeopathic Association quote-mining Cucherat? What seems more likely: that homeopathy works but not to the point where the clinical trial can detect it, or homeopaths cynically misuse evidence to support their pre-ordained conclusions? It has been so amusing to watch: our politicians have seen that the <s>King</s> alternative therapist is actually nude. All the homeopaths have been able to do is spin, quote-mine and clutch at straws. [[User:Tom Morris|Tom Morris]] 18:38, 13 March 2010 (UTC)


:No founder is indicated in the lead to the article, an ommission that needed to be corrected.  Hippocrates has nothing to do with the debate, other than having 'observed' that "By similar things a disease is produced and through the application of the like is cured” and Paracelus rather predates the Internet favorite Hahnemann. Many of Paracelus's actual remedies were based on the belief and approach that "like cures like" and in this he was practising what is today regarded as homeopathy. The article, correctly if ambiguously (because it might have led some to think that he also developed the principles) states that Hahnemann "described the principles". It seems a contradiction to me to say that he is the founder of the approach, and offer Classical references to its practise. At most, he could be the 'father of modern homeopathy', as some have put it. <small>Martin Cohen 17:42, 4 December</small>
::I suppose there isn't really anything to do about it until there's a new Editorial Council and a reevaluation of workgroups. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 19:04, 13 March 2010 (UTC)


::You are making some flat statements that are not consistent with months of discussion. You haven't even presented your thinking on the Talk Page. Again, this is not WP, and, in an article with extensive rewrites and edit wars, bold changes and reverts do not fit the culture. <small>Howard C. Berkowitz 17:57, 4 December</small>
:::The draft is open to rewrite and, while I can't speak for everyone, I'll be glad to look at anything that gets put in it. I agree with Russell. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 03:17, 14 March 2010 (UTC)


:The aim of my addition is to broaden the discussion and include more contributors, including new perpectives. Alternative medecine, like homeopathy, should be described from an historical, a literary, a cultural, a sociological and most of all 'an alternative' point of view as well as the 'scientific' one. We don't need to, and should not seek to, impose blocks on the natural spread of information on CZ seeking to do this, as long as the new pages are suitably 'neutral' and follow normal standards of academic discourse.  [[User:Martin Cohen|Martin Cohen]] 17:42, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
::::Howard, there is a lot of research going on in Homeopathy. Dr.Peter Fisher heads a research group in London and Dr.Rastogi heads a research group in India. I will email them about your suggestion. Tom, please look at the 'feg' .pdf document I posted - it is good, solid evidence that Homeopathy works!—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 11:44, 14 March 2010 (UTC)


::I suggest you ask Gareth Lang or Larry Sanger if "broadening the discussion" seems constructive for the dispute resolution that's been going on or months. Whether or not the material is or is not neutral, I find that you have unilaterally redefined the grounds for coverage or discourse, made no effort to seek consensus, and imposed your views on how the process should proceed. When I join an electronic forum, I tend to observe first until I understand the social dynamics. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 17:57, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
Friends...in due respect, anyone who takes this "report" seriously has an axe to grind or is simply under-informed.


::::My name is invoked, and so I appear on the spot, Voldemort-like. Two things here--first, I would instead ask Martin to clarify his proposal, because I at least didn't find it entirely clear what he was asking for (what, for example would it mean to describe homeopathy as a "literary" "point of view"--which is literally what Martin said?), and also to explain a little more ''why'' he wants the change to be madeSecond, it is a little wrong-headed to suggest that such issues are always to be decided by some "higher authority" rather than dialogue and that avoiding controversy is a higher priority than taking on board new suggestions--surely we should not simply cut off debate simply on grounds that someone is new to the discussion. --[[User:Larry Sanger|Larry Sanger]] 19:40, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
Any rational person should and must be very suspicious of this "report." The MPs (Members of Parliament) who were a part of the Science and Technology Committee which voted for this anti-homeopathy report comprised of five members, with three members barely eking out their victory. Of the three votes, two members did not attend any of the investigational meetings, one of whom was such a new member of the committee that he wasn't even a member of the committee during the hearings, and the remaining "yes" vote was from Evan Harris, a medical doctor and devout antagonist to homeopathy. This report was not exactly a vote of and for the peopleThis information alone should entirely discount this "report" as a kangeroo court report that deserves that round circular file.


:::::Voldemort, old boy, thanks for the promptness. Larry, if I may use the informal, I have spent a good forty years working on electronic discussion groups. One of the basic rules of the [[Internet Engineering Task Force]], which has managed to get quite a bit done, is that lurking to get the sense of a discussion is usually very wise. Otherwise, as we have seen at The Other Place, an active discussion can be disrupted because a newcomer arrives and wants explanation, or has proposals that might have been discussed three archives ago.  Yes, you describe an ideal, but it isn't always practical if there is a goal of getting an article to some level of completeness. Even if this reaches Approval, there is always the opportunity for Draft Version 2. No, I don't regard that as wrong-headed but realistic. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 19:51, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
The very limited number of people who represented homeopathy were primarily three people. The others were entirely antagonistic to homeopathy or simply uninformed about it (such as the rep from Boots).


::::::Yes, well, in my 15 years in and creating online communities, I have also frequently observed a self-appointed "old guard" arise and shoo away newcomers, which is probably a more serious problem on wikis. Anyway, my point, Howard, stands: let the man talk. He isn't raising any issue that hasn't already been raised, as far as I know.  The first step, I think, is to ask him to clarify himself.  You might find that, after you get more clarification, you have nothing to object to. --[[User:Larry Sanger|Larry Sanger]] 20:09, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
Despite the use and acceptance of homeopathy throughout the U.K., there is a very active group of skeptics, with significant Big Pharma funding, who work vigorously to attack this system of natural medicine. Even though there is a wide variety of serious and significant pressing issues in British medicine and science today, an active group of skeptics of homeopathy successfully resurrected in October, 2009, a House of Commons committee, called the Science and Technology Committee, with the intent to issue a report on homeopathy. A leading skeptics organization, Sense about Science, that has been pushing for the re-creation of this Committee is led by a former public relations professional who worked for a PR company that represents many Big Pharma companies. Of additional interest is the fact that other Directors of the Sense about Science organization are a mixture of former or present libertarians, Marxists, and Trotskyists who also, strangely enough, seem to advocate for the GMO industry (ironically, libertarians normally advocate for a "live and let live" philosophy, but in this instance, it seems that they prefer to take choice in medical treatment away from British consumers).  


:::::::Let us agree to disagree in part. Where I do see a repeating issue, however, is where WP assumptions are taken here. Bold-revert is not especially the custom, and we seem increasingly to be trying to make our pages link better; suddenly creating new pages about alternate paradigms are not conducive to navigation.  
Sense about Science is a registered UK charity despite being a political pressure group. As such they have to divulge their sources of income which they do on their website. Not surprisingly, much of this comes from named pharmaceutical manufacturers.  


:::::::Nothing I have seen at CZ suggests that bold rewriting or creating of new pages, without talk page discussion of the issue, is a good direction. In fact, I had asked for clarification on some of these new pages; perhaps part of the problem is that what the man is saying is in no single place.[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 20:23, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
One of the investigators for the House of Commons Science Committee is a Liberal Democrat MP, Evan Harris. He has collaborated with Sense About Science on various projects, and he was also one of the skeptic demonstrators against the national pharmacy chain, Boots, which sells homeopathic medicines. This advocacy role does not make him an unprejudiced observer as is required for this type of investigation.


::::::::If we agree to disagree, Howard, you are thereby overruled. My point was ultimately very simple.  You were wrong to imply that Martin may not speak his piece.  Yes, he may.  End of discussion on ''that'' point.
A report from this kangaroo court was issued recommending that the National Health Service stop funding for homeopathy and homeopathic doctors, despite the support for homeopathy and for consumer choice from Mike O'Brien, the country's present Health Minister. This report is only of an advisory nature, and because the Health Minister has already expressed his support for consumers' right to choose their own health care, it is uncertain what, if anything, will result of this report. What was most surprising about this report was that it verified that when people repeat a lie frequently enough, such as "there is no research on homeopathy," many people actually believe it, despite its transparent falsity.[[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 05:33, 7 May 2010 (UTC)


::::::::Also, the idea that we are now forbidding the editing of articles or creating new articles without prior discussion, which is exactly what you said, Howard, is just absolutely wrong.  When we introduce that rule, CZ will have come to an end.  This is far too much ado about nothing (or little anyway).  As far as I can tell, Martin introduced some text that people ''disagreed with.''  The proper response is to discuss ''the offending text.''  Over and out.  No response is necessary, Howard. --[[User:Larry Sanger|Larry Sanger]] 02:14, 5 December 2008 (UTC)
== Sources ==


:::Whatever the merits of the above arguments, it looks to me as if Martin has royally screwed up the formatting here, along with duplicating some of the textI wish you'd learn to do things properly here, Martin -- it doesn't take much effort to reply (and indent, among other things) correctly. [[User:Hayford Peirce|Hayford Peirce]] 18:09, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
I'm surprised that this article does not reference or discuss Paul Starr's Pulitzer Prize and the Bancroft Prize winning book on the social transformation of American medicine.  Any article that wishes to understand the difference between allopathy and homeopathy needs to understand that this debate has less to do with science or medicine and everything to do with politics as the British report makes clear.  [[User:Russell D. Jones|Russell D. Jones]] 15:41, 2 March 2010 (UTC)


::::Actually the problem was [http://en.citizendium.org/wiki?title=Talk:Homeopathy&diff=100418605&oldid=100418600 this edit] from Howard. I think it was an edit clash with my previous one that resulted in duplicating much of the text. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 19:18, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
:At one time, it was indeed appropriate to compare allopathy and homeopathy. While some dictionary definitions still use allopathy as a synonym for conventional medicine, I find the modern usage to be more often by CAM practitioners, as that-which-we-do-not-do. (For the record, I happen to find some ''complementary'' medicine useful, or at least worthy of trial in non-critical situations.)


::::::Ah, in that case, I must humbly apologize, Martin. Sorry -- it really looked as if you had done it.... [[User:Hayford Peirce|Hayford Peirce]] 19:24, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
:As far as a "modern" comparison, however, I cannot do better than William Osler:
:<blockquote>A new school of practitioners has arisen which cares nothing for homeopathy and still less for so-called allopathy. It seeks to study, rationally and scientifically, the action of drugs, old and new."(Flexner report, page 162)</blockquote>


:::::In partial defense of Martin, I may have induced some formating errors. When I first saw his remarks and replied, I had an edit conflict but was running late to an appointment. My very quick cut and paste to re-merge the comments may have caused some formatting or duplication problems.
:Unquestionably, there was once a competition between something one could legitimately call allopathy, as a "doctrine of opposites", and homeopathy as a "doctrine of similars". Homeopaths often selectively quote Osler as saying that the homeopathic remedies were safer than most allopathic remedies of his era (i.e., late 19th-early 20th century). You'll note that there was insistence on keeping the 1905 quote from von Behring.


:::::That being said, looking at unusual formatting at, say the [[alternative Medicine (theories)]] page, I would have to agree that Martin might want to look at some of the customs and conventions. For example, [[Alternative Medicine (theories)]] has a nonstandard bold heading. It only links to [[homeopathy]], lacking, in particular, a link to the existing [[complementary and alternative medicine]]. While I'm not compulsive of filling out entire clusters, [[complementary and alternative medicine]] at least has a fairly extensive, if redlink-filled, Related Articles page.
:It ain't the 20th century any more, and conventional physicians don't prescribe based on opposites, nohow. Yes, there are political residues, but there's now a lot more in the way of evidence-based medicine...and protecting turf. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 19:37, 12 March 2010 (UTC)


:::::It would have been one thing to have questioned the links between [[homeopathy]] and [[complementary and alternative medicine]], and discussed, in the talk page of the latter, why changes are needed. With the existing links, however, [[Alternative Medicine (theories)]] only seems to be there as an adjunct to [[homeopathy]]. In other words, there's no plausibly expected page where the issues are discussed; they are not specific to [[homeopathy]] so don't belong on those very full talk pages. Martin says he wants to broaden a discussion, but, in fact, there are ongoing, stressful, and active discussion with complex social dynamics. I'd be cautious before unilaterally saying they need to be broadened. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 19:20, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
::My favorite quote from Paul Starr's book is: “Because homeopathy was simultaneously philosophical and experimental, it seemed to many people to be more rather than less scientific than orthodox medicine.[[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 05:37, 7 May 2010 (UTC)


I chose to delete Martin's addition on Paracelsus because it is simply incorrect.  Hahnemann was a highly academic writer/author, and yet, he never ever referenced any of Paracelsus writings.  Paracelsus may have written about the "doctrine of signatures," but many other healers over time wrote about the principle of similars, and yet, no one suggests that they are the "father" of homeopathy.  Hahnemann coined the word, but more important, Hahnemann introduced "provings" (experiments in toxicology) to this system, thereby creating an experimental method to verify what a substance causes...and what it cures.  Paracelsus' "signatures" concept is completely theoretical, suggesting that what a substance looks like is what it is effective in treating.  This concept is simply vague.  Hahnemann's significant background in chemistry and apothecary practice led him to various experiments that uncover "potentization" as the most effective way to increase a medicine's efficacy while decreasing its toxicity. 
== The memory of sugar ==


I appreciate Martin's boldness, though I encourage him to bringing significant changes or changes to the lead to the Discussion page first.  The challenge here is to be bold but humble...and discuss, discuss, discuss.  A fine balance.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 03:51, 5 December 2008 (UTC)
is being discussed [http://ff.im/gOS59 here] and provides a nice illustration of the topic. --[[User:Daniel Mietchen|Daniel Mietchen]] 21:56, 3 March 2010 (UTC)
====Constable input====
Martin has not violated any Citizendium policy that I can see. We have nothing that states that newcomers (to the conversation) have to behave any differently than those that have been here longer.  Do respect other authors and editors when making changes by clarifying your thinking on the talk pages.  While large deletions without explanation are [[CZ:Professionalism|unprofessional]], additions are encouraged as far as I interpret.  More importantly, let's treat each other as we would like to be treated. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 00:34, 5 December 2008 (UTC)


: I think that Martin's contribution was quite useful. I will reference to the Work of Peter Morell (historian of medicine, with training in homeopathy and conventional biology), "Hahnemann and Homoeopathy".
:I thought the "memory of sugar" tended to go either to the abdomen or buttocks, depending on genetics? :-)


<blockquote>Book review:  
:Seriously, the discussion at that link is what I'd suggest is an expectation. It is possible to be neutral, I think, and mention, in the lede, that homeopathy is not generally accepted. We still do not have a way of dealing with the situation where homeopathy supporters will support a lede that doesn't consider it reasonably credible. Of course, in no other workgroup do we have an equivalent to the health sciences/healing art splits. Should Religion be joined by Atheism?  Alternatively, is it possible to have a reasonable Atheism article in Religion? [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 22:46, 3 March 2010 (UTC)
Novel ideas / findings in the book</blockquote>


<blockquote>Hahnemann was reluctant to associate his new system of medicine with the name of Theophrastus or Paracelsus for fear of being misunderstood or being accused of plagiarism. (p. 15)</blockquote>
::The problem just isn't there with religion and atheism. If you, say, are interested in philosophy of religion, you can get a degree in it regardless of whether you are an atheist or a theist (or something else entirely). I say this from experience - I have a BA in Philosophy, Religion and Ethics from a Catholic college but am an atheist. There are some - I guess the polite way of saying it is 'non-mainstream' - ways of getting a doctorate in religion. You could become a "Doctor of Scientology" (D.Scn) - I read today that Ron DeWolf - Hubbard's son - had been given one, and stated in court that he wasn't sure whether they gave him the Doctorate before or after he'd been given the Bachelors! Or you could get a phony Ph.D from a diploma mill - as quite a lot of the creationists have. The problem with Healing Arts is that you can quite feasibly become a Healing Arts editor with a degree from a non-mainstream parallel academic institution. When mainstream academia isn't bending over backwards to certify degrees in quackery (as two universities in Britain shamefully have), the quacks create their own academic institutions.


<blockquote>The truth is of course, that Hahnemann was a second Paracelsus, but he felt he had to hide this fact. (p.72)</blockquote>
::"Dr" Gillian McKeith "PhD" has a degree from a place called Clayton College of Natural Health in Birmingham, Alabama. Said college is not accredited by any accrediting body recognized by the Department of Education, and a number of states in the U.S. list it as unaccredited on their websites for student loans (etc.). This does not stop McKeith claiming to have a PhD on her website, nor did it stop Channel 4 television or her publisher from touting this to promote her books and TV programme. She also likes to mention how she is a member of the American Association of Nutritional Consultants. You too can be a member of the American Association of Nutritional Consultants if you send them $60! McKeith has pushed notorious nonsense like the idea that green vegetables are good for you because the green shows they have chlorophyll (true), and the chlorophyll will oxidate your blood (how? Human beings are not plants. They tend to get their oxygen through respiration rather than photosynthesis. And even if they were getting their oxygen through photosynthesis, even your local tanning salon lamps aren't quite powerful enough to penetrate your small intestines).
:--[[User:Pierre-Alain Gouanvic|Pierre-Alain Gouanvic]] 18:37, 7 December 2008 (UTC)


:: On the road, but 'en passant', thanks to everyone for their 'attention' in this matter: I assume we share the same aims, so the thanks is to EVERYONE even those who on the face of it seem to want to assign 'bad faith' to their fellow contributors at all turns... And Dana, to remove Paracelsus who certainly has an important role in the history of homeopathy ENTIRELY is a little like the application of a censor's pencil... he certainly belongs somewhere in the new 'history of' section. 'Some' people say he is the father of homeopathy, remains true, even if 'many experts' dispute it. But I'm not an expert, and I'm certainly not trying to impose a contrary view of the 'facts' on you or anyone else here.
::Another graduate of the Clayton College of Natural Health is cancer quack Hulda Clark who sells a whole variety of magic 'zapping' toys that make funny noises and shine lights and do little more to cure cancer than extract money from punters - I mean, cancer sufferers.


::But that leads me to my main point - this article is written from a technica-scientific-rationalist perspective - it does not attempt to speak either to the general reader or to include other perspectives. And yes, Valdemort-Larry was right to draw attention to it! I did want literary perspectives, cultural perspectives, and 'alternative' science too given space somwhere to make their distinctive contributions. The tentatively drafted 'alternative theories' page was an attempt to reconcile the apparent unwillingness of the authors and editors of this page to blend such with their text. But in service to readers of the encylopedia, there have to be links from the text of the homeopathy page to indicate the other material. Gareth says there is a page on 'water memory' already, for instance - who will navigate there is another question! [[User:Martin Cohen|Martin Cohen]] 20:11, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
::Take any philosopher of religion or even most theologians - they'll certainly be able to say something useful on an article about atheism in the Religion WG. Same for the non-believers within the same fields. The problem with Healing Arts is it lets people with completely bonkers views about reality approve articles on their favourite pseudoscience. If the claims of the homeopaths were true (and, blimey, even our politicians can tell what a big pile of nothing the evidence of two hundred years of homeopathy has amounted to), then most of the articles in the Biology and Chemistry workgroup need rewriting.


:::While I find myself a little unnerved to be agreeing with Dana, I tend to feel some stronger sourcing than one book is needed to suggest that Paracelsus is the founder of homeopathy, at least as Hahnemann defined homeopathy.  Hahnemann's writings make it very clear that he was focused on symptoms, so there really needs to be some documentation that he was actively considering Paracelsus' ideas on such things as shape or color of remedies. Assuming Morell had no ability to consult the ghost of Hahnemann, what basis does Morell for flatly stating the "truth" about what Hahnemann thought? Is there anything written by Hahnemann, or someoone that worked with him, that credits Paracelsus?
::I'll repeat myself again: we need to fix the Healing Arts bug. It is nothing more than a bug. It is a bug that is bringing down the great work done by other WGs. It says to anyone who has spent years of their life working on getting a PhD in physics or literature or psychology or whatever that you can get a fake degree from a non-accredited university and also be considered an expert on the same level. How can I, in good conscience, tell the experts in my field to contribute given this significant vulnerability in the Editorship system? –[[User:Tom Morris|Tom Morris]] 01:21, 4 March 2010 (UTC)


:::As far as "who will navigate" to another page, Martin, Citizendium is a hyperdocument. Again and again, the argument has been made, by people who think very little of the web navigational skills of readers, that they will not link to other pages. I believe it is fairly well established CZ policy, established in many subject areas,  that we assume that the reader will, in fact, navigate, and the general editorial standards reflect that. We do not assume pages have to be self-contained for the "general reader". There are practical and technical reasons as well: you should notice the warning, at the top of the edit-mode page, that certain browsers have trouble with very large pages. Very large pages also increase the probability of edit conflicts.  There are discussions about general CZ navigation where your ideas could be argued, but they are bucking a consensus about general article design. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 21:16, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
:::Religion seemed the obvious parallel, but we could, I suppose, have an Absolute Pacifism workgroup with Military -- not that quite a few professional soldiers don't hate war. Why can Engineering debunk a hoax theory but Health Sciences cannot? [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 02:15, 4 March 2010 (UTC)


== elan vital ==
::::Howard, you're one of the eight Charterists.  Are you a loud and strong voice therein trying to *remove* Healing Arts as a Workgroup, so that some of this nonsense could then be addressed in the future in a rational way? [[User:Hayford Peirce|Hayford Peirce]] 02:49, 4 March 2010 (UTC)


Is homeopathy's "vital force" in any way similar to Bergson's ''élan vital'' -- "vital force" or, apparently, more correctly, "vital impetus"? [[User:Hayford Peirce|Hayford Peirce]] 18:02, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
:::::Compromise in the Charter Committee, I believe, means that the Workgroup and some other details will be passed, without detailed guidance, to the Editorial Council. Personally, I am urging the draft to go to discussion and markup, so we can proceed to the next steps after ratification. While this is an especially galling problem, there are less egregious workgroup structure problems that also need addressing and can't happen at the Charter level. --[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 03:21, 4 March 2010 (UTC)


== Neutrality Notes? ==
::::Even with Pacifism and the Military, there is an implicit understanding that most of the facts are the same. The Pacifist will agree with the General that the U.S. dropped the bomb on Hiroshima or that Nelson died in 1805. They have different opinions, but they do not care out their own ''facts'' in quite the same way as the Healing Arts gang. –[[User:Tom Morris|Tom Morris]] 07:32, 4 March 2010 (UTC)


Would anyone like to take a crack at making [[Talk:Ayn_Rand#Neutrality_Notes|Neutrality Notes]] for this article?
:::::No, the analogy may hold. There are those that will insist that any enemy can be defeated through passive resistance and good thoughts, just as some of the healing arts believe that it is utterly wrong to immunize against an infectious organism or use an antibiotic against one. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 07:43, 4 March 2010 (UTC)


I'd like to see how someone else would do this...and whether anyone is motivated...and whether we'll be able to agree on the results...and whether they will help at all.  Also, I'd need another example for the use of the Editorial Council. --[[User:Larry Sanger|Larry Sanger]] 19:31, 4 December 2008 (UTC)
::::::Tom mentions non-mainstream ways of getting doctorates in religion. In fact the Archbishop of Canterbury still has the legal power to award them, which might explain why Church of England bishops always seem to be Dr. [[User:Peter Jackson|Peter Jackson]] 14:29, 12 March 2010 (UTC)


== Bioavailability, proving, safety ==
==How well does it work?==


I'm not sure who wrote the text comparing provings to safety tests; while it has my edit note appended; I didn't write that and wouldn't have written it.
We use double-blind studies to tell how well a particular medicine works. The person handout out the medicine does not know whether it's a "real medicine" just a sugar pill. In the case of pain relievers, the potency of an [[analgesic]] is rated in terms of how much more effective it is than a [[placebo]].


Nevertheless, I agree there is no equivalence to bioavailability when something cannot be tested. I don't really understand Dana's edit comment, which I wish had been put on the discussion page.
If I recall correctly, as much as 75% to 90% of the effective pain relief you get from the pills comes from the placebo effect: you take your aspirin or ibuprofen or (without knowing it) your sugar pill, and your headache starts going away within an hour no matter what. The real stuff is only slightly better.  


Dana's note:<blockquote>Safety and efficacy of homeopathy: Provings are NOT like safety tests. They are experiments in toxicology to see what each substance CAUSES, even in potentized doses, in healthy people.)</blockquote>
Given all that, how would we design a study to compare homeopathic treatment with conventional treatment? Is it possible to conduct a blind study, if the way the healer deals with the patient is a key ingredient of the therapeutic effect?


This confuses me. Toxicology, in general use, is the study of substances that interfere with normal processes. In medical terms, a toxicology experiment that does not assess safety simply doesn't make sense. Does "toxicology" have a specialized meaning in homeopathy?  
For that matter, how can we compare Freudian [[psychoanalysis]] to Berne's [[transactional analysis]] or modern [[rational-emotive therapy]] or to a frank chat with a trusted friend or mentor (like Father O'Malley down at the local Catholic church)?


Actually, this brings up a question: are there new homeopathic remedies for which provings are needed, or is the list of remedies closed? If there are new remedies, is it correct to assume there is no safety testing in the sense of pharmacology, and it may safely be assumed all homeopathic drugs are risk-free? That's not snark, but  what seems to be an assertion I'd like to understand. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 21:10, 5 December 2008 (UTC)
* I daresay one result of a careful attempt to measure outcomes could be that "bedside manner" is much more important than we've allowed ourselves to realize.  


== Allopathy and asthma ==
But I ask again, how do we study and quantify it? --[[User:Ed Poor|Ed Poor]] 02:04, 28 March 2010 (UTC)


First, I have deleted several references to "allopathy" when it appears to be used as a means of describing current medicine. I believe the ground rules established that this, even more than "skeptic", is considered a biased word and needlessly inflammatory. Further, the term is simply no longer used except in historical (e.g., 100 year old) discussions of philosophies of health, and, regretfully, in what seem to be attacks on conventional medicine by homeopaths. There are many other ways to describe non-homeopathic approaches to treatment which are more accurate than allopathy.
::If one were to review the entire body of experiments that Thomas Edison conducted on electricity, one would have to say that the vast majority of his experiments were failures...and one might fall into a trap by saying that he was a failure. Of course, we KNOW that this is not true. Just because some studies have shown that homeopathic medicines don't work, there is a greater body of research to show that it does. The trick is to know WHEN homeopathic medicines work...and when they don't.


Second, flat statements that allopathy can't cure diseases need sourcing, not just a statement of opinion. "Cure", itself, needs statistical definition. It is fair to say that on the basic of large-scale, evidence-based studies, conventional medicine, with relatively recent therapies, can control asthma. Control means that there are few or no symptoms that distress the patient. "Cure" would mean the disease disappears for all time, with no need for  further acute or maintenance treatment.
:: If anyone here wants to review a body of homeopathic research on a specific group of diseases (respiratory allergies) that have primarily been published in high impact conventional journals, such as the Lancet and the BMJ, you might consider reading this review of research I co-authored in a peer-review journal:  http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20359268  -- you can read the entire article online at:  www.altmedrev.com (It is in the Spring, 2010, issue, article #6). [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 05:43, 7 May 2010 (UTC)


In this area, where evidence-based data is available, it does not seem reasonable to claim that small trials (10s of patients over short periods) flatly prove the advantage of homeopathy over large trials (thousands to tens of thousands) of conventional methods. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 13:32, 6 December 2008 (UTC)
== Unsupported assertions ==


:With respect to "allopathy" does anyone claim to be able to cure asthma? Likewise, would anyone claim to cure cystic fibrosis? Having said this, I'm not sure of the context in which this comes up. 
The current text has "Even in Europe, homeopathy is practiced by many conventional physicians, including 30-40% of French doctors and 20% of German doctors." and in the next paragraph "Some medical doctors, particularly in Germany, France, and several other European countries prescribe homeopathic medicines for wide variety of both self-limiting conditions and serious diseases with a high rate of patient satisfaction." There are no supporting citations.
:#Does this mean homeopaths do not distinguish between infectious disease and genetic disease?
:#How does the comment "allopathy can't cure diseases" relate to homeopathy?  Is it to say that homeopathy is as good as conventional drugs or is there a claim that homeopathy can cure?
:#What is the best study available to show that acute asthma can be controlled by homeopathy.  These claims of treating acute asthma are remarkable and either prove the efficacy of homeopathic treatment beyond doubt or are an exaggeration.  
:Howard, are you commenting on a specific paragraph here, one only dealing with asthma, or is this a more general comment? [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 16:50, 6 December 2008 (UTC) edit:  just found the relevant edits [http://en.citizendium.org/wiki?title=Homeopathy&diff=next&oldid=100419225 ] [http://en.citizendium.org/wiki?title=Homeopathy&diff=100419267&oldid=100419266 ]


::Although I had no problem with deleting the word "allopathy" in the one instance of deletion that I just found, people here should know that the word "allopathy" is not just a historical word but is COMMONLY used today by many of the most prominent medical organizations. For an impressive list of sources, see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Allopathic_medicine#Additional_references 
This is obviously redundant; we need ''at most'' one of these statements. However, neither strikes me as believable without support, so I am inclined to delete both. Anyone care to comment before I edit? [[User:Sandy Harris|Sandy Harris]] 15:29, 26 June 2010 (UTC)


::Sadly, however, the editors at wikipedia have rewritten history and present status of this word, and their article on allopathy is typical of many health articles at this site (it is ridden with POV and strong bias).
:Your point about unsupported assertions has come up before, and the current text, in my opinion, is significantly misleading. "homeopathy is practiced by many conventional physicians" does not, as much as some may want it to do so, imply that conventional positions endorse all of homeopathy. By definition, if they are conventional physicians, they are ''not'' practicing homeopathy as alternative medicine, but are using some complementary techniques from homeopathy. When I was last in my internist's office, I banged my shoulder against a piece of equipment. He rubbed it a bit. Does that mean he practices massage therapy?


::That said, I agree with others here who express concern about the statement "allopathy can't cure diseases." [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 18:50, 7 December 2008 (UTC)
:"Patient satisfaction" is a purely subjective assessment and is in no way evidence of efficacy.  I could take the sentence starting "Some medical doctors..." and substitute "chemically pure water that has not been exposed to a simillium" and demonstrate high patient satisfaction.


:::First, Wikipedia is rarely considered an "impressive" source at CZ. Many of the references it cites, however, do not treat allopathy as an antonym of homeopathy, but of osteopathic medicine. Many of the references are historical clarifications from administrative bodies.  
:I agree with deleting both. Even if citations are offered, they must be of a quality that indicates that homeopathic methods are a significant part of the practice of these physicians and they are not using it with the intent of creating placebo effects. --[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 17:05, 26 June 2010 (UTC)


:::Second, I believe the ground rules have established that allopathy is not considered a current term for describing mainstream medicine. Specifically,
:: It is a fact that at universities in Germany and Austria there are chairs and lectures on homeopathy (in Vienna also at the veterinary university). There are doctors who practice both. --[[User:Peter Schmitt|Peter Schmitt]] 23:10, 26 June 2010 (UTC)
:::<blockquote>"Allopaths" won't do, either, although it certainly can be introduced, and it should be.</blockquote>
:::I agree it is commonly used by critics of mainstream medicine, but William Osler described, in a quote I have frequently provided, that he considered both homeopathy and allopathy to be obsolete. By all means define it, but in proper historical context, explicitly including the Osler quote to which I refer. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 19:03, 7 December 2008 (UTC)
Did anyone browse through that talk page at wikipedia? It is painful. Why is there such a need by proponents of CAM to use the term allopathic? The amount of time and effort popularise a term that is hardly used, or worse, incorrectly used by people that should know better, is mind boggling.


Interesting commentary here: Katherine E. Gundling [http://archinte.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/full/158/20/2185 When Did I Become an "Allopath"?] Arch Intern Med. 1998;158:2185-2186.
::: I have no problem if the two sentences ar combined. I think we've gone over this several times on the talk pages. As Peter points out, there are obviously well established 'conventional' medical professionals that use homeopathy for treatment of medical conditions. This is pretty much common knowledge at this point, so I don't see the need for citing a source for the mere fact that some medical physicians use homeopathy in their practices. However, when we add specific numbers such as 30-40%, it does seem to beg for a reference.  It shouldn't be hard to find such a reference if it is out there.  Otherwise, removing the numbers and just stating the fact shouldn't be a problem.


Or have we already moved into an era that this term has been reinvented and now has a different meaning to Oslers time? Certainly terms such as epigenetic and gene have evolved in that time. If the usage has changed we need to be very clear that allopathy from 200 years ago is not synonymous with this current usage by some. Just out of interest, what is the exact definition as proposed by Hannemahn. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 19:25, 7 December 2008 (UTC)
::: I don't think we will be able to find any scientific sources that conclude that they use it only on undereducated healthy people as a placebo. In fact, I think the opposite is more likely the case. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 01:22, 29 June 2010 (UTC)


: I too have serious concerns about wikipedia, but I was referring to ONE specific reference at wikipedia that provides a detailed body of evidence of the modern (!) use of the term "allopathic".  I was actually surprised myself how many leading medical organization self-define themselves using the term allopathic.  See for yourself by going to the link that I provided.  That said, K.E. Gundling's piece is just one voice...the reference above provides much more substantative evidence.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 01:46, 8 December 2008 (UTC)
Would someone who has access care to correct the glaring English mistake in the first paragraph of this approved article? [[User:Ro Thorpe|Ro Thorpe]] 00:16, 2 July 2010 (UTC)


::The more I think about this the more I think this is effectively an evolving term. This would explain why some physicians object strongly to the usage of the term while others embrace it; it all depends on their own working definition. As I mentioned above, this happens with science terms too and frequently leads to pedantic arguments ([http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S096098220701007X ]). Hopefully we can navigate this without going wikipediaOne good starting point is to acknowledge that the term is  possibly confusing and not assume that the usage of allopath is similar between eras or even similar between all people now. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 02:38, 8 December 2008 (UTC)
:I'm sorry, Ro, I must have a blind spot that is preventing me from seeing this glaring errorCould you be so kind as to point it out? [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 01:42, 2 July 2010 (UTC)


== Unilateral revision of edit because "it is not acceptable to homeopaths" ==
::Oh, so go ahead and shoot me!  I found it (after reading your request for Hayford to repair it :) [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 01:46, 2 July 2010 (UTC)


To avoid edit and revert wars, especially when there have been multiple intervening edit, I refer to Ramanand's changes of Revision as of 06:00, 6 December 2008 with the edit comment "→this is what there was earlier-the new edit isn't acceptable to the homeopaths"
:::Bang, bang - but you've removed it! Many thanks! [[User:Ro Thorpe|Ro Thorpe]] 12:16, 2 July 2010 (UTC)


If the language is that unacceptable to homeopaths, than mutually agreeable language has to be worked out on the talk page. Otherwise, we have a revert war. I object to the language to which the material was reverted.
I provide many solid references to the use of homeopathic medicines by physicians in Europe in an article I wrote at:  http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dana-ullman/homeopathic-medicine-euro_b_402490.html  (It is NOT my intent for anyone to reference this article in OUR article at this website. Instead, we can use many of the references provided. This article also has many references throughout the article showing that people who use homeopathic medicines tend to have more education than those who don't.


Is this a constable matter of avoiding a revert war? [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 13:36, 6 December 2008 (UTC)
I urge us to be very careful in significant changing this article because a lot of time and thought went into it previously.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 18:05, 14 July 2010 (UTC)


:I agree that a reversion of a section that had previously cleared two editors should not be reverted by an author.  I have reverted to the last version that was reviewed by an editor and brought both versions to the talk page where you can discuss issues. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 16:52, 6 December 2008 (UTC)
== Review by a sceptical layman (i.e. me) ==


*Conventional physicians take a [[medical history taking|medical history according to medical principles]], classical homeopaths will take a history only using homeopathic priciples, and homeopaths with both medical and homeopathic training will then take additional history according to homeopathic principles, Classical homeopaths do not use medical [[physical examination]], [[diagnostic imaging]] and tests from the [[pathology|clinical pathology]] laboratories as suggested by the [[differential diagnosis]], and questions raised by the history and physical examination. Homeopaths that are licensed to perform these additional studies do not practice classic homeopathy, but rather a an alternative or "mixed" form.
I'm reviewing the draft. Here is a rough summary of my changes and concerns:
   
*Classical homeopaths place more emphasis on the way a person experiences their disease than on diagnosing the disease - i.e. they give priority to the syndrome of symptoms rather than to the results of conventional medical tests. This differs strongly from the conventional medical approach to finding the [[etiology]] of the disease proper, not its syndrome of symptoms.


:This is completely wrong-the diagnosis is important, for example the list of remedies used for bronchitis can't be used for cholera. That is why I replaced it with the earlier version.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 08:15, 8 December 2008 (UTC)
* I rewrote the paragraph in the lede section about the "long safety record". The reason homeopathy has a long safety record is the very same reason that not travelling has a long safety record: if something is inert and chemically indistinguishable from the delivery mechanism, it will be safe. Safety and efficacy is a balancing act. The reason homeopathy is safe is precisely because it isn't efficacious.


::It would seem, then, that part of the problem that non-homeopaths have with accepting these assertions is that it is not clear to them how homeopaths diagnose, and, once they have diagnosed, if there is any more to selecting remedies than looking up a set of symptoms in a repertory. This, again, comes back to what I've been calling the "cognitive process", which, in medicine, is the thought process that includes both diagnosis and selection of treatment. In contrast, the "procedural" process in medicine is performing a treatment, or perhaps an invasive diagnostic procedure, such as surgery.
* I'm not wild about long, windy footnotes about Romanization. I've thus split off the Romanization note about the word "[[qi]]" on to a separate page.


::At the core of the commuications problems here, I suggest, is that homeopaths have internalized certain approaches to interacting with patients, and it is so internal that there is difficulty in accepting that anyone who has not gone through homeopathic training does not think the same way. In like manner, however, people writing reasonable articles about conventional medicine understand that the average reader has not had professional training, so they explain the thinking, either in the article, or in a series of linked articles that go back to basics.
* The section that is disputed about the number of practitioners in France and Germany is ''in the wrong place''. The way in which homeopathy is prescribed or accessed doesn't seem to be to be a principle of homeopathy - homeopathy is homepathy whether it is prescribed by a homeopath or bought over the counter. I've thus moved it into the section which used to be titled "Professional homeopaths: who are they?" which I have retitled "Homeopathy in practice". This section seems to be the place to discuss provision, prescription, education, regulation and the like.


::The homeopathic approaches might get more attention if the homeopathic authors concentrating on explaining what they do, including, if I quote Gareth correctly, the things that homeopathy is claimed to help. Continuing arguments about history, early studies about potential modes of action, etc., take the article away from that absolute core information.  Simple assertions of "it doesn't work that way" are not enough to be convincing to someone trained in a different paradigm, for which the training is based on a fairly formal structure.  
* The paragraph starting "Homeopathic remedies can be prescribed by professional homeopaths" seems to be a tricky one. Depending on the country and the regulatory regime, homeopathy can be prescribed by a wide variety of people. Sadly (in my opinion), in Britain, quacks of all sorts can have their merry way with the public. Pretty much anyone can set themselves up as an alternative practitioner, so long as they don't make their claims too specific. But in other countries, this varies. It seems the important distinction that needs to be made is that homeopathy - unlike, for want of a better description, ''real'' medicine - can be prescribed by anyone.


::'''Constable/Editor''': since I believe this is one edit back, I don't want to revert. I do believe, however, that this discussion needs to be worked out on the talk page, not with inline edits in the article. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 16:45, 8 December 2008 (UTC)
* The rest of the section on "A typical homeopathic visit" seems to have some glaring problems. The homeopath is supposed to have EMT training in order to be "adequately trained"? (Heh. Surely, if heart attacks are the problem, what you need to do is to dilute high-fructose corn syrup into non-existence and it'll clear right up? I thought they believed in the law of similars. What's a defibrilator doing in the homeopath's office?) But anyway, this adequate training is according to ''who''? According to government regulations? According to the homeopathic groups? According to us? According to some third-party regulator like the [http://www.cnhc.org.uk/pages/index.cfm CNHC]?


:::'''Constable response''': Thank you for not reverting.  Improvements are always allowed so long as large amounts of material are not deleted without discussion or editors have asked that the text not be altered.  At this point, I believe the paragraphs in question have pretty much been struck by an editor.  It's up to the editors to decide what stays in. As Gareth has acted on this one, any improvements would obviously have to make it through him as well as Dana. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 18:25, 8 December 2008 (UTC)
* The article describes "classical homeopathy" at length, but I haven't seen any discussion of what the alternatives are to classical.


**Qualified medical and other Health professionals who practice homeopathy perform medical history taking, which is supplemented with homeopathic history taking. They also perform a basic physical examination, with additional examination of body parts or systems that may be associated with a symptom; diagnostic imaging and tests from the clinical pathology laboratories as suggested by the differential diagnosis, questions raised by the history, and physical examination. Investigations like blood and urine analysis and diagnostic imaging, can be helpful but are generally not essential for selecting a homeopathic remedy. 
* There is a lot of repetition of parts of the article. The 'Principles' section is repeated in the section on 'The claims for homeopathy'.
   
**To determine which remedy to prescribe, classical homeopaths place more emphasis on the way a person experiences whatever disease they have more than the name of the disease s/he has. They thus give higher priority to the unique syndrome of symptoms of the patient than the objective results of conventional medical tests.


:These 2 paragraphs are more accurate.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 08:15, 8 December 2008 (UTC)
* No criticism seems to be made of the "treating the whole person" idea. I'm not even sure that this is a desirable thing. If I break my arm, I want my arm fixed, not someone to waffle about my "disturbance in the overall homeostasis of the overall being". In fact, when I broke my arm as a child, I'm very glad that I had access to a surgeon to fix it. This kind of rhetoric seems to be just an evasion tactic - if the studies don't show that homeopathy actually fixes anything (and, well, it wasn't going to put the bones in my elbow back together), then they can justify this kind of thing by pointing out that the person feels vaguely better in some holistic sense.


::In all due respect, I don't see the difference. Please elaborate on when the "diagnosis is important", as much of the homeopathic writing seems to emphasize that the medical model of a diagnosis, which is a direct consequence of a pathological etiology, is irrelevant; it is symptoms that are important. It may be that homoeopaths use the word [[diagnosis]] differently than do physician, diagnosis is principally derived from a determination of [[etiology]], in combination with models of [[physiology]] and [[pathology]]. Etiology, in turn, considers history, physical, and laboratory tests  Right now, I'm completely confused on what homeopaths mean by diagnosis, as it seems they make a diagnosis without determining an etiology, depending instead on syndromes of symptoms. If this is not the case, please clarify.
* The paragraph about corticosteroids seems to be totally out of place. Oh, it sort of makes sense - it is a follow on from the last paragraph about homeopathy and asthma.


::To a conventionally trained practitioner, the results of the tests, combined with the history and physical, form the basis for diagnosis. Treatment/remedy selection is a next step, as is the prognosis.[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 18:29, 8 December 2008 (UTC) (left out date/time in earlier comment and don't know how to get it back. Sorry> It is in response to Ramanand Jhingade's comment of 08:15, 8 December)
I've got a more radical suggestion. This article obviously needs a fairly ground-up rewrite. Here's what I reckon we should do. The current article seems to have been put together in a rather piecemeal way. Instead, I think the best way is to see if we can come together and work out a list of the fundamental questions that a good article on homeopathy should answer - then build a simple structure around those questions, and fill them in. We may be able to repurpose some of the text from the existing article.


:::The 'method' of diagnosis is the same, it is only the 'method' of remedy selection that differs.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 06:27, 9 December 2008 (UTC)
I'd suggest the following list of questions:


== Pharmacopœia  (or whatever the plural may be) ==
# What is homeopathy?
# Is there any known mechanism for homeopathy?
# Is homeopathy clinically effective?
# What are the main issues of contention regarding homeopathy?
# Why have there been campaigns against homeopathy like the 10:23 campaign?
# What is the history of homeopathy? Who is Samuel Hahnemann?
# How is homeopathic care provisioned and regulated in different countries?


There may be a usage difference between homeopathy and conventional medicine. The general, non-homeopathic ''United States Pharmacopœia'', as well as the related but subtly different ''National Formulary'', is not that uncommon to find on the reference shelves of physicians especially interested in pharmacology, along with a standard textbook such as ''Goodman & Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics'', along with more specialized works.
Before formulating a structure for any potential rewrite, I'm interested in seeing if anyone has any other questions that they'd want to add. –[[User:Tom Morris|Tom Morris]] 12:30, 4 July 2010 (UTC)


There is an '''organization''' called the United States Pharmacopœia that produces several books, the USP and NF being the core ("basic" in the sense they are fundamental references), but also a practitioner guide called USPDI. I'll have to look up the "DI", which I think stands for Drug Indications, and is a specifically practitioner oriented book, or, as I use it, a database.  It's better written than the ''Physician's Drug Reference'', which is a compendium of the exact text of FDA-approved package inserts, basically written by lawyers.
:Tom, I only have a few minutes right now, but let me share a thought or two. My greatest unanswered question is "what is the cognitive process of a homeopath in a patient interaction?" In other words, homeopaths say that every remedy is individualized. Whenever I posed this question to Dana, it was brushed aside, saying that one had to be a trained homeopath to understand.


One of the reasons that conventional physicians may keep the USP is that it can be the best place to find "inert" ingredients that really are not. For example, many tablets are colored with tartrazine, also known as "Yellow No. 5". This dye can trigger asthma in susceptible patients. The USP may indicate if an approved tablet can contain tartrazine, which may be very important to know.
:Odd, but I have written quite a few articles on differential diagnosis in medicine, and some of my most interesting professional work is in expert systems to "individualize" (e.g., what dosage forms are most convenient for the patient and are most likely to be taken on schedule? What other diseases are present -- are there synergistic as well as problem interactions? Are there patient preferences?  Are certain side effects more or less likely?  Somehow, I manage to muddle through this sort of thing, yet I keep being told there are Inner Secrets to Homeopathy that prevent a straightforward explanation. Now, I'm not a classic layman in conventional medicine, but I can't think of a field where I don't have a basic understanding and the ability to quickly get a much deeper understanding -- and also know what I don't know. In the last six months or so, I've had to do the research to do peer interactions, on the specific diseases of people (two- and four-legged) for whom I'm an advocate and case manager -- involving [[human iron metabolism]], [[feline squamous cell carcinoma]], and [[peripheral nerve myelin protein 22]] and [[inflammatory polyneuropathy]].  But I can't begin to understand how a homeopath thinks?


My point is not to be so abrupt at assuming that a reference has only one purpose, or, at least, to indicate it has only one purpose in homeopathy. My assumption that a Pharmacopœia is of clinical interest is based on experience, not guesswork. Unfortunately, I find a certain tendency, in this article, to assume that the homeopathic usage of a term is the only possible interpretation, which leads to ambiguity. As, I believe, Chris said, it cannot be assumed that the reader of the article is a trained homeopath, so if words are used in a specialized way, they need to be disambiguated. It is not helpful to put down people that have experience with a term in mainstream medicine and have no reason to know homeopaths use the word differently. The article needs to educate on such matters, not huffily suggest going to read a homeopathy textbook. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 20:52, 6 December 2008 (UTC)
:In fairness, I'm not sure how much time I'm willing to expend on homeopathy, at least unless I get comparable collaboration on less controversial, and possibly useful to more people, health science articles (to say nothing of other fields). [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 13:26, 4 July 2010 (UTC)


{{civil}}
== Luc Montagnier ==


{{civil}}
French virologist Luc Montagnier has said at a prestigious international conference when he presented a new method for detecting viral infections that it bore close parallels to the basic tenets of homeopathy. This has been published in the 'Sunday Times' (London), as well as 'The Australian' - here's a link to the article: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/health-science/nobel-laureate-gives-homeopathy-a-boost/story-e6frg8y6-1225887772305
:I hope one of you (at least Dana) make time (I don't have the time) to insert this matter into this article.—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 16:26, 5 July 2010 (UTC)
Here's another link: http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Archive/skins/pastissues2/navigator.asp?login=default&AW=1279125246109
—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 16:37, 14 July 2010 (UTC)


::Second, I know how the [[Food and Drug Administration]] in the U.S., as well as equivalent regulatory bodies in other countries, use pharmacopeias. I repeat: a pharmacopeia is a basic document, at least to a manufacturer, "basic" in the sense that it is a foundation of good practice. The [[United States Pharmacopeia]], for example, is a basic reference for drug manufacturing in the United States, although it has clinical applications besides manufacturing. The ''Handbook of Chemistry and Physics'' is a basic document, but "basic" does not equate to "elementary".
::I certainly have no intention of amending the article with newspaper articles, especially those that indicate nothing but a "close parallel." Has Dr. Montagnier's proposal been discussed in mainstream journals?  


::As an "author, publisher, and seller" of homeopathic books, perhaps one might wonder if you should be making flat statements about things where you may have a financial interest? I am indeed a book author, but don't sell them directly; when I do write for profit, I clearly identify any possible relationships in other writings. I recommend this practice.
::The first article, in ''The Australian'', mentions a "memory of water" type argument, and cites rejection by other scientists. I'd note that his Nobel was for virology, not physical chemistry. The second is behind a paywall. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 16:58, 14 July 2010 (UTC)


::So, yes, I do know that those familiar with [[Good Manufacturing Practice]] (a legally defined term of art) of drugs, non-homeopathic and homeopathic, generally accept certain things to be true. You denied that the FDA exempted homeopathic drugs from certain aspects of Good Manufacturing Practice. I responded not only with the citation from the U.S. Code of Federal Regulations, but with the actual text of the exception. After your initial complaint, you have made no comment on the requested documentation that I provided. Do you still maintain that the FDA does not exempt homeopathic drugs from parts of the Good Manufacturing Practices that apply to every mainstream product it regulates? [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 18:52, 7 December 2008 (UTC)
:::Hi friends!  Actually, I got sent this link to a recent issue of the "New Scientists" by none other than Nobelist Brian Josephson:  <http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20727682.300-60-seconds.html>


:::Howard, I never denied that the Homeopathic Pharmacopeia isn't a standard reference for homeopathic drug manufacturers, and in fact, this is exactly what I have asserted.  I cannot help but sense that you've never seen or read the homeopathic pharmacopeia because, if you had, you would know that there is NO clinical information about any medicine in it.  This text is ONLY of interest to drug manufacturers, not to clinicians or consumers, and THAT is why I didn't want to confuse readers here by saying that the Homeopathic Pharmacopeia was the "third standard reference" book in homeopathy. It is not such. These facts have NOTHING to do with any financial interest on my part...they are simply statements of factI am confused how or why you would suggest that such facts somehow are tainted in any way.
:::"Clear as a Nobel"
[[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 01:59, 8 December 2008 (UTC)
:::Luc Montagnier, the French virologist who won a Nobel prize in 2008 for linking HIV with AIDS, last week made controversial claims that highly dilute solutions of harmful viruses and bacteria emit low-frequency radio waves, allegedly from watery nanostructures formed around the pathogens. Similar claims have been made for homeopathic remedies." [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 17:40, 14 July 2010 (UTC)


{{inflammatory}}
::::That link goes to the daily news summary, not anything on homeopathy.  As quoted, though, they are "controversial claims". No details.  [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 17:57, 14 July 2010 (UTC)


== Individualization and permutation ==
:::::It is necessary to have that link in this article to show that homeopathic remedies are not 'placebos', as some people allege.—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 15:40, 16 July 2010 (UTC)


Gareth, I certainly agree there are limits to polypharmacy in mainstream medicine. In some of my work with expert systems in prescribing, one of our first tasks is often to figure out just what the patient is taking, often from multiple prescribers that do not talk to one another. One of my research areas is analyzing multidrug regimens to see if they can be simplified, to increase compliance, avoid side effects, and, when possible, optimize combinations that address comorbidities.
::::::It is another piece in the puzzle.  It is primary research, but it is by a Nobel Prize winner, so it is news about homeopathy. We shouldn't treat it as scientific fact, but it is a fact that a prominent scientist has made the statement that involves a quality of water.  It is in no way scientific consensus, an in fact may lead to this guys ruin for whatever reason.  We have included news about the British Medical Association's recent position statement concerning homeopathy and [http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/health-science/nobel-laureate-gives-homeopathy-a-boost/story-e6frg8y6-1225887772305 this article] specifically mentions that statement as well.  This is the draft, so I won't categorically remove something that is written comprehensively, neutrally, and objectively about the subject. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 12:59, 17 July 2010 (UTC)


Nevertheless, the point has been hammered that homeopaths "individualize" to a greater extent than do mainstream physicians, and this is a refutation that medicine is a rigid structure that does not consider individual patient needs. That's all I'm trying to accomplish. If the homeopaths stop making the distinction that physicians do not individualize for specific patients, I'm happy to drop the whole issue, but as long as that insistence is made, I see it as non-neutral and inaccurate.
(undent) Matt, you give it a perfectly good context--as news. It doesn't show, or not show, anything about homeopathic remedies being placebos, or effective, or ineffective, or any particular clinical correlation. As far as I understand, he's made an observation in physical chemistry and RF fields interacting with water, nothing else. I sincerely hope he's not hurt, as he was incredibly dignified while there were attempts to discredit his initial discovery and characterization of HIV -- his Nobel was very deserved.  [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 19:42, 17 July 2010 (UTC)


Treatment of a patient with clinical AIDS, for example, is highly individualized, starting with the selection among many [[highly active antiretroviral therapy]] (HAART) regimens, then adding prophylaxis as indicated by the degree of immunosuppression and specific risk factors, then treating associated clinical disorders such as [[AIDS wasting syndrome]].
:My point in providing the link to the NEW SCIENTIST is to verify that this research is "notable," and as such, a short note is worthy here.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 05:35, 21 July 2010 (UTC)


Can we come to some agreement that both disciplines individualize according to their own model, and not continue to have a superiority clash that one side is the only one that understands individualized treatment? I'm talking about widely used treatment, incidentally, and not yet touching genetic medicine. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 22:24, 7 December 2008 (UTC)


:This "more personalalized/individualized" experience claim reads too much like an ad. Since there are homeopathy practitioners contributing here, the article could easily have some pictures. ([[User:Chunbum Park|Chunbum Park]] 22:43, 7 December 2008 (UTC))
::Matt, you are wonderfully reasonable.  Howard is not accurate when he says that Montagnier has "made an observation". Montagnier conducted RESEARCH, and he wrote about it in a peer-review journal. He spoke about it to a group of fellow Nobel Prize winners.  And ALL of this was so notable that the "New Scientist" commented about it...and linked it directly to homeopathy. I have no problem if we choose to have the word "controversial" used in describing this new work.  The fact of the matter is that this new work discusses "electromagnetic signaling" which may help explain how homeopathic medicines may work. [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 18:29, 9 September 2010 (UTC)


::Hi Howard, yes this is an issue that needs to be handled - at present the "Conflict" sections are like minutes of unresolved editorial disagreement rather than helping the reader and we need to fix these - but that requires a bit more time and thought than I'm able to give immediately. I'm afraid I'm going for what seem to be the most obvious fixes first - what I've left I've left not because I think its OK but because it needs more care. However, yes I agree that the article should not seem to imply that conventional medicine does not seek individualized treatment - that would be inconsistent with at least a large trend in modern medicine to identify individual genetic risk factors.[[User:Gareth Leng|Gareth Leng]] 22:46, 7 December 2008 (UTC)
:::Then why isn't the peer-reviewed journal cited, rather than ''Wired'' and ''The Australian''? Further, one may write (e.g., an editorial) ''in'' a peer-reviewed journal, but not have one's work peer-reviewed ''by'' that journal. The peer review process becomes more credible if another independent researcher reproduces of these results.  Please provide citations of these events if you want me to believe this is substantive.


:::There are some clear omissions from this article. Most obviously to me, there needs to be a section stating clearly exactly what claims are made for homeopathic remedies. This needs to be phrased in such a way that it is clear that the claims are being reported not asserted, but this section is very important. This will not be the place to discuss the validity of the claims - that's the job of the testing article - so this shouldnt be controversial if phrased properly. It seems to me essential to understand exactly what homeopaths say homeopathy can be used for.
:::Nobel Prize winners, rather by definition, tend to be specialists. One might speak on medicine to a group of Chemistry laureates, and have no special critical review.  


:::I'd also like to see a very specific example of a particular proving.[[User:Gareth Leng|Gareth Leng]] 22:55, 7 December 2008 (UTC)
:::It's interesting that we are still arguing how homeopathic medicines "may" work, when it's rather routine to understand the molecular pharmacology of conventional medicines. Sorry, this still comes across as hand-waving for something with a trivial base of evidence.


::::Thanks; you are going in a good direction. I like your " It seems to me essential to understand exactly what homeopaths say homeopathy can be used for." To me, this is what I have been asking and asking about what I've termed the "cognitive process" of a homeopath-patient encounter, and still have not gotten an answer.
::::Have I fired five or six rounds? [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 18:38, 9 September 2010 (UTC)


::::In some cases, the answer has been that the practitioner uses all their training, homeopathic or not, to decide what is appropriate. To me, that's a non-answer, although it's usually coupled with a comment that everything is individualized and I'm not accepting the homeopathic paradigm, but expecting an etiological one. Even if that is literally true, then the homeopathic paradigm needs to be explained in enough detail for a non-homeopath to have an idea what is done. Saying that the syndrome is looked up in a repertory until something matches and a remedy is prescribed, again, feels like a non-answer. If there are cases where a homeopathically qualified physician selects medical treatment, or complementary medical and homeopathic treatments, I really can't accept that no concrete examples can be given. Isn't that what would be taught in homeopathy school?
== Evidence that homeopathy works ==


::::Apropos of provings, I have not seen anything mentioned that indicates active work in proving new remedies. Perhaps the reference books (not trying to distinguish among repertory, materia medica, or pharmacopeia) are, indeed, considered to be closed systems needing no additions. If so, I'd like that to be stated explicitly. If homeopaths do research new remedies, I'd like to know what aspects of treatment they are trying to improve &mdash; that's not in the least meant to be sarcastic or snarky. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 00:21, 8 December 2008 (UTC)
I hope one of you (at least Dana) can insert sentences that read something like, "there is scientific evidence for homeopathy", using the PDF for "Scientific framework of homeopathy: evidence-based homeopathy" available at http://www.feg.unesp.br/~ojs/index.php/ijhdr/article/viewFile/286/354 wherever appropriate. I haven't seen anyone object to it here anyway.[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 15:15, 21 July 2010 (UTC)


== Vaccination ==
== the word "skeptic" ==


Ramanand Jhingade just added [http://en.citizendium.org/wiki?title=Homeopathy&curid=100005146&diff=100420905&oldid=100420657&rcid=579771 the bolded text] to complete the following point:
Wasn't it decided a long time ago that aside from the two existing examples in the article that pro-homeopathy advocates (and anyone else) could NOT use the word "skeptic" in future edits?  Just want to make sure. [[User:Hayford Peirce|Hayford Peirce]] 21:50, 5 August 2010 (UTC)
:"Homeopathy is based on "the principle of similars", which asserts that substances known to ''cause'' particular symptoms can also, in low and specially prepared doses help to ''cure'' diseases that cause similar symptoms. This principle is not accepted by mainstream medicine or by conventional scientists today, '''although the principle is used in vaccination'''."


Do all vaccinations cause symptoms?  I realise that some do, if using attenuated viruses but i don't think most vaccinations cause symptoms. I think this addition is only valid if the recreation of symptoms is a key to the success of vaccination but i don't think this is the case at all. Any doctors want to comment here? [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 07:10, 9 December 2008 (UTC)
:I remember that as a specific ruling by Larry. In my experience, it's almost always used by advocates of a position; the neutrality policy wouldn't be hurt if it were banned. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 22:41, 5 August 2010 (UTC)


:Many people report symptoms after vaccination. e.g. Koplik's spots after a measles vaccination.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 08:07, 9 December 2008 (UTC)
::But what about people who ''are'' skeptics? Are we not allowed to say that Michael Shermer - who runs the Skeptic's Society and publishes ''Skeptic'' magazine - is a skeptic? –[[User:Tom Morris|Tom Morris]] 23:02, 5 August 2010 (UTC)


:::Ramanand, that doesn't quite respond to Chris' excellent point.  OK--sometimes, people report symptoms after vaccination.  But isn't it more often, as when my little boy is vaccinated for various things, that there are no symptoms at all?  I myself would ask, "What does it mean to say the principle is used in vaccination?"  Obviously, the doctors who perform vaccinations do not understand themselves to be following a principle of similars, since (I assume) they would regard that as old, long-outmoded medical thinking.  We should not imply that ''they'' think they are following the principle.  ''In this context,'' it looks like we are saying that mainstream medicine concedes an important point; surely they don't. I leave this to others, but I would suggest that this go in a footnote, saying, "(Some?) homeopaths suggest (believe?) that vaccinations operate on a principle of similars.  Here, homeopaths find an inconsistency or mismatch betweeen mainstream medical opinion and actual practice. For their part, mainstream medical doctors point out that the efficacy of vaccination has long been well explained without a principle of similars.  [Right?]" --[[User:Larry Sanger|Larry Sanger]] 15:19, 9 December 2008 (UTC)
:::As a direct quote or a self-identification, sure. As condescension to disbelievers, no. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 23:04, 5 August 2010 (UTC)


:::I went ahead and added a few edits, attributing the opinion to unnamed homeopaths.  But again, that's all I'll do...I leave it to others, I'm merely trying to illustrate how I in my relative ignorance would deal with the issue. --[[User:Larry Sanger|Larry Sanger]] 15:55, 9 December 2008 (UTC)
::::Ah, but is it? I consider 'skeptic' to be much less of an insult than 'homeopath'! –[[User:Tom Morris|Tom Morris]] 23:06, 5 August 2010 (UTC)


::"Many people report" is, at best, saying "some people have symptoms that may or may not be related to the specific antigen for which immunity is being triggered". Anecdotal reports with no statistics do not address Chris' questions. Further, many of the symptoms that are caused by conventional vaccines have nothing to do with the specific antigen for which the vaccine are given, but to other chemicals introduced by the vaccine manufacturing process, such as formaldehyde used to kill viruses. Some of the more serious reactions are from the culture medium, such as egg yolk.
:::::I think it is -- it comes up repeatedly in fringe articles, be they moon landing hoax, UFO, etc. -- anything not a true believer. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 23:13, 5 August 2010 (UTC)


::Are we not going onto an irrelevant side track? A vaccination is objectively judged effective if it produces measurable changes in antibodies or other immune factors. If it doesn't, whether there are or are not symptoms, a doctor will judge that it failed. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 12:19, 9 December 2008 (UTC)
::::::If *I* use the word, Tom, it's a compliment. If Dana uses it, it's pejorative.  That's why Larry (or someone) banned it from this article, if I recall correctly. (I have 20 years' of Skeptical Inquirer on my bookshelf.) [[User:Hayford Peirce|Hayford Peirce]] 23:21, 5 August 2010 (UTC)


== What the...? ==


:::Chris asks a good question that could clarify some things if we could answer it properly; "Do all vaccinations cause symptoms?".  According to our article, the law of similars would suggest that a condition is treated with something that causes the same symptoms, without having to know the condition specifically.  So, it seems, for instance, if someone presents with hydrophobia and foaming of the mouth, a homeopath would treat the ''sick person'' with a remedy that caused these same symptoms in a normal person whether or not you knew it was rabies - in an effort to boost the body's immune system for whatever is causing the symptoms.  Whereas, vaccination is treating a ''normal person'' with a causative agent (the attenuated virus itself) to prevent an epidemic.  However, one treats sick people and the other treats well people.  The idea of boosting the "body's natural defenses against disease" is certainly homeopathic and could be construed to include the concepts in vaccination. I think the claim is that the budding science of immunology was thinking like a homeopath when they discovered the benefits of vaccination by injecting a normal person with small doses of a causative agent, but that is really as far as it can go.  Can we explain it?  Or should we just leave it alone? [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 21:33, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
<blockquote>Homeopaths respond to these concerns by noting that using homeopathic medicines can delay or reduce the use of conventional medicines that are ineffective and dangerous.</blockquote>


:::But the context here is not limited to when immunology was a "budding science"; it suggests to me, and I believe to Chris, that it is arguing that ''current'' vaccination is based on symptoms. There is continuing work with modern vaccine development to eliminate symptoms caused by the vaccine; that's one reason why the bleeding-edge vaccines don't use killed or attenuated microorganisms, but protein or nucleic acid fragments from them. Since lymphocytes, triggering the start of a specific immune response, have receptors for antigens at the molecular, not cellular, level, there's no reason to use cells (or viruses) at all. If a particular disease causes symptoms from a toxin, but the lymphocytes can be trained to recognize some surface protein of that invader, a protein that has nothing to do with the toxin, the invaders will be attacked without ever introducing the symptom-producing substance during vaccination.  For this reason, I absolutely object to describing current immunotherapy in terms of similars; symptom avoidance is a conscious goal.
If this were The Other Wiki, that'd be an instant "citation needed"! I know homeopaths like to bang on about the evil 'allopaths', but do they honestly respond to the [[opportunity cost]] argument with a reversed opportunity cost argument? That's so... indescribably crazy. I certainly would like some verification on that. –[[User:Tom Morris|Tom Morris]] 00:42, 6 August 2010 (UTC)
:Remember our motto: '''be bold''' -- remove it, and let whoever put it there back it up with some facts if they want to restore it. [[User:Hayford Peirce|Hayford Peirce]] 01:42, 6 August 2010 (UTC)


:::It would be speculative, at best, to say Jenner was thinking of symptoms. The last time I read Jenner's papers, the language was more suggestive of a focus on epidemiology than on specific symptoms: he observed that if someone had had a cowpox infection, they would not contract smallpox. He didn't speak in terms of the symptomatic similarities, but in terms of entire syndromes. (see link to review)  
::Oh, now we're bold, haha. It's a response to the use of homeopathy for use with things like childhood ear infections, a commonly self limiting condition that is often treated with antibiotics which have unwanted and sometimes dangerous side effects. It probably could be explained a little better when it's all cleaned up. After all, that is the homeopath response. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 21:50, 7 August 2010 (UTC)


:::Part of the problem here is that "vaccine" is used in a generic way, describing two completely different kinds of immunotherapy. [http://content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/content/full/24/3/611] It should be noted that while Jenner produced true active immunity, Pasteur's initial rabies "vaccine" was not a vaccine, but an antitoxin that conveyed passive immunity if given before the virus replicated to an infective level and started producing "hydrophobia". So far, one person in history has survived, intact, after clinical rabies developed; all other survivors of rabies exposure received antitoxin.  Rabies vaccines given to animals and animal workers do produce active immunity, although they have sufficiently nasty side effects in humans that veterinarians and the like are tested for rabies antibody levels before giving them a booster. In other words, if it is at all possible to avoid giving a booster that will produce symptoms, that is the current standard of practice. We have separate antitoxins and vaccines for a number of diseases, such as diptheria and tetanus, we have antitoxins only for others such as botulism, and we have vaccines only for the majority of preventable diseases. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 22:03, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
:::On the other hand, I can point to many medical studies advising against antibiotics in uncomplicated otitis media. Going back to Osler at the turn of the 20th century, he correctly pointed out that "allopathic" drugs were often harmful -- but he then said both homeopathy and (classically defined) allopathy were "cults" that needed to be replaced. One doesn't need to turn to homeopathy to find best practices that avoid both overprescribing and underprescribing. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 21:59, 7 August 2010 (UTC)


::::I hadn't seen any reference to antitoxins, but that seems more in line with what homeopaths consider likes curing likes because the patient is sick and is experiencing symptoms. That doesn't change the fact that vaccines are used on people who are not experiencing any symptoms, i.e. are well.  I haven't seen anything in our article that suggests that homeopaths treat well people with anything to prevent a disease. Am I missing something? [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 22:15, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
::::Yup, absolutely agree. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 01:10, 8 August 2010 (UTC)


:::::Look at the section '''Similia similibus curentur: the law of similars'''
== principle of infintesimals ==
It says "Today, two notions, vaccination, and hormesis, are used as analogies for homeopathy's law of similars and the use of small doses". For much of the reasons you suggest, the analogy between vaccination and homeopathy is very, very strained.


:::::The reference from Behring, which I now, even more, want to see removed as out-of-date and confusing. Behring cites Pasteur, and, while I hesitate to make assumptions about "general readers", I would wager that most such people, when they think of "Pasteur treatment", think of [[rabies]]. Pasteur's treatment for rabies is an antitoxin.  
I'm thinking that [http://en.citizendium.org/wiki?title=Homeopathy%2FDraft&diff=100701656&oldid=100701655this principle] needs defining.  I'm thinking that the 'principle of infintesimals' is the concept that is controversial.  Perhaps one of our homeopaths could explain? [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 12:32, 12 August 2010 (UTC)
:Throughout this article, the infinitesimal dose and law of similars have been used interchangeably, but they aren't the same. http://www.similima.com/org20.html has given a brief description of the "infinitesimal dose". The law of similars is just, "using the most similar remedy" - to put it plainly. I don't have the time to check and insert those changes, but I hope you Matt, or may be Dana can do so. The infinitesimal dose can also be defended with the "memory of water" and Monsieur Montagnier's research (see Dana's post above).-[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 13:49, 13 August 2010 (UTC)
::Certainly using them interchangeably is not accurate. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 15:05, 13 August 2010 (UTC)
:::I think the term "interchangeably" was wrong to use - what I meant was that the term "law of similars" is used in the article and draft article, when it's supposed to be "the infinitesimal dose", in some places.—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 15:50, 13 August 2010 (UTC)
::::So it seems to me that infinitesimal dose needs to be defined.  The law of similars can obviously involve large doses of products. Obviously Homeopaths use more than infinitesimal doses in their treatments; otherwise we wouldn't have side effects from a nasal product that has zinc in it. We are not getting this point across. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 17:47, 13 August 2010 (UTC)


:::::He did, in fact, develop a true vaccine for [[anthrax]] in [[sheep]].  To respond to "suggests that homeopaths treat well people with anything to prevent a disease", I semi-agree, and believe that the entire idea of relating vaccination to similars is both historically wrong and also misleading. If, and I agree, the homeopaths are bringing up vaccination as an example of similars, and the classic vaccination of Jenner was preventive, I really don't see it as a terribly useful metaphor.
::::<font color=red>I don't think it's worth the time, since that will also be criticized here (maybe you can use the web-site I mentioned above to do that). The nasal product, "Zicam" wasn't a homeopathic product at all, because it had milligram doses of zinc, which is against homeopathic principles. Homeopathic remedies start with mother tinctures and can go up to higher potencies (more dilute) from there.</font>—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 09:50, 23 August 2010 (UTC)


:::::So -- if homeopaths don't believe in giving preventive things to well people, why is there a lengthy section about vaccination, which, in its original literal definition, involved giving cowpox to well people to keep them from contracting smallpox?  Personally, I recommend getting rid of Behring, vaccination, and mithridization. They are potentially confusing to anyone who doesn't understand that the immunology being discussed is a century or more out of tune with current thinking, yet the article seems to push for endorsing homeopathy as analogous to vaccination. That's contradictory. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 22:35, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
:::::Zicam was marketed as homeopathic, and licensed under special regulations applying to homeopathic products. Sorry, for legal purposes in the US, it ''was'' a homeopathic product. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 15:49, 24 August 2010 (UTC)


::::::Now you see what I mean. For purposes of closure, I'll repeat what I said above:
:::::<font color=green>I know it was, but it was against homeopathic principles.—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 15:39, 25 August 2010 (UTC)</font>


::::::The idea of boosting the "body's natural defenses against disease" is certainly homeopathic and could be construed to include the concepts in vaccination. I think the claim is that the budding science of immunology was thinking like a homeopath when they discovered the benefits of vaccination by injecting a normal person with small doses of a causative agent, but that is really as far as it can go.  Can we explain it?  Or should we just leave it alone?
(undent) Please do not use color for emphasis.
::::::[[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 23:04, 10 December 2008 (UTC)


:::::::First, I simply do not agree that budding immunologists, specifically Jenner, thought like homeopaths. His papers do not indicate that he was boosting natural defenses, but was introducing an external substance, cowpox, that prevented smallpox. He specifically talked about populations who had had cowpox, rather than some natural property that was boosted by cowpox.
In the context of the  United States, your simple statment that it "was against homeopathic principles" is legally irrelevant, as the FDA makes the decision if something is to be regulated as a homeopathic preparation (or food supplement), exempt from a good deal of the regulation of other drugs, or if it is a conventional regulated substance. The FDA determined Zircam was homeopathic, and, while  I suppose you might argue, in an article about homeopathy and the FDA, such an argument is irrelevant here. If you reject the argument that a governmental organization cannot make such decisions for a country, then I can argue that homeopathy can't be accepted as a national means of practice in India.


:::::::Second, I really would like to see it not just left alone, but removed. The idea that homeopathic principles guided Jenner is not reflected in his actual papers. While John Snow was a few decades in the future, Jenner's theories were much more like Snow's, seeing an external cause of cholera (the contaminated well at Broad Street) and stopping it by an external measure (disabling the Broad Street Pump). Jenner saw an external infection, smallpox, that could be stopped by cowpox. There's nothing there about similars, body defenses, or anything that could be extended to use Jenner as thinking homeopathically.
With all things that it approves, the FDA depends on the manufacturer's application. More is accepted is fact in a homeopathic New Drug Application that isn't required to undergo controlled trials. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 16:57, 5 September 2010 (UTC)


:::::::I could make a little better argument for Pasteur thinking in similars only that he consciously used an attenuated rabies product, but the reality is that the Pasteur antitoxin treatment, as opposed to later and complementary rabies preventive immunization, doesn't strengthen the body's defenses either. If there isn't enough antitoxin to neutralize the rabies pathogen in the patient, the patient is going to die. In the Pasteur treatment, it's the externally introduced antibodies that fight the rabies virus; it's only in rabies vaccination where the body's defenses are taught to fight rabies.
== Answer to an "unanswered question": Popularity is no metric of efficacy ==


:::::::Gareth, I really think that whole "Similia similibus curentur: the law of similars" section is '''not supportable''' on the actual work of Jenner and Pasteur, overemphasizes the authority of a Nobelist's immunologic thinking over a century out of date, and mithridization quickly goes into conventional allergic desesitization, which is not based on homeopathic doses and results in measurable changes in immunity. Move the title somewhere to keep the Hahnemann quote, and delete everything else in that section. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 23:35, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
Sorry, but the addition "The simple reason for homeopathy's growing popularity is because it works." is completely unacceptable without overwhelming evidence that it does work.  Were this to be accepted without sourcing, the logic could be applied to popularity of politicians, especially not in office, supporting the premises their programs work.


Friends, some people here are mis-understanding Ramanand here. The point is not:  do vaccines "cause" symptoms?  The point is:  do OVERDOSES of a vaccine or a specific substance in a vaccine cause symptoms?  The quote from Von Behring connects the concept underlying vaccination with the concept underlying homeopathy.  This is an important point. [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 07:02, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
I propose to delete this. Popularity is relevant to marketing but not efficacy. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 15:48, 24 August 2010 (UTC)


:I understand.  The principle of similars is not used for vaccination, it would be completely inaccurate to say this in the article. i recommend that this be cut from the article.
:Those questions were begging for an answer. If you delete my answer, you must delete the questions preceding my statement as well!—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 15:45, 25 August 2010 (UTC)
:Just because some vaccines (at high or low concentrations) give symptoms similar to the pathogen it is aimed at does not mean the concept of similars is used as a principle of vaccination. If that assertion were true then every vaccine would recreate the symptoms of the targeted pathogen.  This is not the case.
:Historically there might be an argument for people thinking that the principles of homeopathy and vaccination are similar. But the sentence above is presenting it as a fact not as a historical curiosity. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 18:31, 11 December 2008 (UTC)


== Couple of edits ==
::Your statement, unsourced, was not an answer. It was purely your opinion, phrased as informal commentary. Also, it is a rather sweeping opinion that goes to the heart of the article, with no evidence behind it. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 16:45, 25 August 2010 (UTC)


*Homeopathy is not considered an Indian system of medicine in India.
:::While Howard is right in saying that "popularity" is not a metric of efficacy, popularity is (by definition) its own metric, and statistics about homeopathy's popularity now and in the past has a place in an encyclopedia. Further, I give reference to a half-dozen
*there are references (already a part of the article) for the fact that homeopathy can treat acute bronchitis effectively
surveys that further verify that people who tend to receive homeopathic care tend to be more educated than those who don't. 
:&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 07:25, 9 December 2008 (UTC)


::If homeopathy is not an Indian system of medicine in India, what is it? Is everything not ayurvedic considered not-Indian?
:::The following link to an article that I authored provides references to this information (please know that I am not suggesting that we link to this article but only to use the references in this article in our encyclopedia listing:  http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dana-ullman/homeopathic-medicine-euro_b_402490.html  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 19:14, 9 September 2010 (UTC)


::The comment about references seems argumentative. I have not seen anything more than assertions and small trials that homeopathy can treat bronchitis effectively, nor even enough information to believe that the same definition of [[bronchitis]] is being used by all writers. It would add information, rather than argue, to point to the references &mdash; this note tells nothing specific. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 12:24, 9 December 2008 (UTC)
::::''Post hoc, ergo prompter hoc?'' I can give even more studies that verify more people who drink milk become heroin addicts. Popularity is a principally a metric of efficacy -- of marketing. If it is significant here, Lady Gaga should be even more expert than Dana, and probably has a better figure. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 19:20, 9 September 2010 (UTC)


== Series of reverts of material from Gareth ==
== Allopathy ==


{{nocomplaints}}
"Today, "allopathy" is used by practitioners of alternative and complementary medicine, like homeopaths, osteopaths, naturopaths, chiropractors and so on to refer to conventional, western medicine."


Generally, to keep the temperature here low, our policy is that if you wish to complain about ''the behavior'' of another contributor here, the way to do it is to report it to the Constabulary. More specifically, if you want to point to a series of edits that allegedly constitute a behavioral problem, the way to establish that is to provide several "diff" links that a constable can examine. Note that ''unexplained'' reversions would be the potential problems here. If the complaint is not about "bad behavior" but simply about bad editorial judgment, that is up to the editors and since Gareth himself is now, thankfully, watching this article, presumably he can evaluate the matter for himself. --[[User:Larry Sanger|Larry Sanger]] 15:08, 9 December 2008 (UTC)
Since practitioners of conventional, western medicine rarely use the term, however, there's no good argument to insist on calling them allopaths. Yes, there are a few historical references, especially when talking of osteopathic vs. allopathic medical schools, but the term used by conventional western physicians tends to be...conventional western physicians.


== Wording ==
Ramanand, if I refused to call you anything other than Jean-Paul, would that change your name? [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 16:57, 24 August 2010 (UTC)


Ramanand just wrote "''[http://en.citizendium.org/wiki?title=Homeopathy&curid=100005146&diff=100420905&oldid=100420657&rcid=579771 this certification is a must]''" when adding the bolded text to complete the following point:
:Practitioners of alternative and complementary medicine, like homeopaths, osteopaths, naturopaths, chiropractors and so on refer to conventional, western medicine as "allopathy" even today. If you don't like it, you can add something like, "conventional, western physicians do not refer to themselves as allopaths".—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 15:50, 25 August 2010 (UTC)


:"''Homeopathy is practiced worldwide by many licensed practitioners, including some conventional physicians, '''with the necessary homeopathic certification'''.''"
::Each profession defines what it calls itself. That is not the role of other professions. Would you accept the specific words "practitioners of conventional western medicine call homeopaths frauds?" No?  Then why do you have the right to define a name, regarded by many as either historically inaccurate -- they don't use the principle of opposites -- or a sneering attack?. I wouldn't have the slightest objection if homeopaths called themselves Similarists, Hahnemannists, etc. -- but that is how they characterize themselves, not how they characterize others. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 16:44, 25 August 2010 (UTC)
===Ruling needed===
Mr. Jhingade reinserted "although osteopaths, homeopaths, naturopaths and other alternative medicine practitioners continue to call it allopathy." I will remove this unless an Editor says otherwise, as I believe it has been ruled that one discipline is not permitted to define a name for another. Shall I say "although biologically-oriented scientists consider homeopaths to be quacks? (noise made by the simillium of [[Oscillococcinum]], of course)"  At best, this might go in the [[allopathy]] article.  


This has been an ongoing edit war and I think the problem is we are comprehending this sentence differently.  From my perspective that addition is completely redundant.  Without the bolded text it reads that there are "many licensed practitioners" and some of them are conventional physiciansWhy would we need to then reiterate they are licensed or certified? The affirmation of what has gone before makes the sentence hard to parse as one assumes this must be a different point. And if it is a different point, then I have no idea what it is?  Is there a distinction between being certified and  licensed? [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 16:22, 9 December 2008 (UTC)
Osler deprecated both allopathy and homeopathy by the time of the Flexner report, although, somewhat earlier, he had attacked some of the drugs used by self-descibed allopathsI'd note the latter was 19th century.


:As an English major (back in the day, of course, but not *that* long ago), and a one-time professional writer who was, I supposed, more concerned with my style and the choice of words than anything else (why I wasn't as successful as [[Stephen King]], perhaps, who lives about three houses up the street from where I grew up), I have to say that Chris has parsed this situation perfectly. I can't see any reason at all for having the additional '''with the necessary homeopathic certification'''. It seems clearly redundant, and the fact that it '''is''' there, leads to the speculation that '''something else''' is trying to be conveyed. So there are two solutions:
Be very careful, incidentally, in using "osteopath" versus "osteopathic physician". The latter, in the US, does use "allopath" but in a very narrow context dealing with the history of schools. Undergraduate and graduate medical education from traditionally "osteopathic" or "allopathic" education is largely identical, although some additional manipulative techniques may be taught in ''some'' historically osteopathic programs -- or by qualified faculty in historically "allopathic" programs. Assuming equal certification,  with many boards merging, the scope of practice of DO's and MD's are identical.  U.S. osteopathic physicians do not use the term allopathy in regular practice. Indeed, I know a few that don't use manipulation or any special osteopathic methods. As an aside, in the state of Virginia, to perform acupuncture, one must be licensed as a physician; the two I used were, respectively an MD with a OMD degree from Vietnam and a OB/GYN certification from FACOG; the other was an DO internist board-certified in internal medicine.


::*Delete the phrase, because it's redundant. Or:
In the UK -- I can't speak authoritatively  for the rest of Europe -- osteopathy is indeed a CAM discipline and its practitioners' scope of practice is not the same as a physician.  


::*Completely rewrite the phrase so that it really does express a completely different thought. [[User:Hayford Peirce|Hayford Peirce]] 18:46, 9 December 2008 (UTC)
I would add that the opinions of naturopaths are irrelevant to this article.


:::Conventional physicians can't practise homeopathy without that additional certification, so is it OK to put that before the 'licensed practitioners'?&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 07:28, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
Could we please stop refighting this revert battle?  My impression is that rulings have been made.[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 17:30, 5 September 2010 (UTC)


::::But isn't that what it says? To me licensed practitioners is referring to a qualification in homeopathy? It sounds like you think it means something different? [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 08:00, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
:Practitioners of alt. med. still call it allopathy (Look at the American Association of Osteopathic Physicians web-site, the National Center for Homeopathy web-site and so on). I'm sure Dana will support me on this one. I'm looking forward to a ruling too and I believe such a ruling will support the homeopaths' viewpoint, because this article is titled Homeopathy and not, "Criticism of Homeopathy".—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 08:44, 6 September 2010 (UTC)


:::::It seemed to convey that conventional physicians can practice homeopathy without the additional certification, which I have corrected now.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 09:07, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
::If you are arguing from the perspective of the American Association of Osteopathic Physicians, you are either ignorant of the historical reason they do that, or deliberately making a false argument that American osteopathic physicians, as distinct from osteopaths in Europe, are in any way "alternative". DOs pass the same undergraduate and graduate certifications as MDs.  I suppose I'll have to remind one of my DO friends, a world authority on field and disaster medicine, that he's "alt" and the surgeons shouldn't listen to him. If nothing else, there ''is'' a distinction between alternate and complementary.


::::::Ramanand, at least in the United States, if a conventional physician, without one bit of training in homeopathy, chose to prescribe a homeopathic drug, there is absolutely nothing that would stop him or her from doing so. With some specific exceptions, any licensed physician can prescrine any prescription drug. The most common example has nothing to do with homeopathy, but with the rule that the Food and Drug Administration licenses prescription drugs only for specific "indications", for which acceptable clinical trial data has been presented. It is within the professional judgment of a physician to do "off-label" prescribing, which means that if the physician judges a drug to be useful for a condition not in the FDA indication, he is perfectly free to do so. For example, carbemazepine had an initial indication only for certain types of epilepsy, but was fairly quickly found to be effective in neurogenic pain, especially tic douloreux, and for bipolar mood disorder. It now is, formally, a first-line drug in both areas.  
::As far as the National Center for Homeopathy website, what part of "one discipline doesn't specify what another calls itself" do you fail to grasp?  I'm sure I can find medical sites that call homeopaths frauds and quacks; would you accept that designation? I'd have to go back into the archives, but I seem to recall that Larry ruled on this a long, long time ago. Dana does not have any editorial authority over what non-alternative practitioners call themselves.  


::::::So if an American physician chose to prescribe a homeopathic preparation, who would stop him? While he might not go through the same diagnostic process as a homeopath, the fact that he prescribes a homeopathic remedy, and is responsible for the safety of his patient, says that he is effectively practicing homeopathy as well as conventional medicine. Gareth, would this be the case in the UK?
::If you think these comments are "attack on homeopathy", I refer you to the commentary of Dirty Harry Callaghan regarding the .44 Magnum. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 01:46, 7 September 2010 (UTC)


:::::Going back to the special cases, however, there are drugs, called controlled substances by the [[Drug Enforcement Administration]] (DEA) (see schedules in article) that can only be prescribed by a practitioner with an additional DEA license. There are both federal and local requirements for a controlled substance requirement. In general, a fully licensed U.S. MD/DO/DDS can get the license with no difficulty, and states vary wither advanced practice nurses can have a full, partial, or no DEA license. I am rather certain that the DEA would not give a license to someone with only homeopathic training and licensure.
== Matt's reversions ==


:::::So, the reverse of what you are saying is true in the US, and I believe quite a few other countries. A conventional physician, who chose to do so, could use homeopathic treatment. A person licensed only in homeopathy could not prescribe controlled substances, and, in all likelihood, could not prescribe non-homeopathic remedies that require a prescription. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 15:29, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
Matt, I see you have already reverted what I had added. I don't want to indulge in any "edit warring", so please restore what I had added. I have mentioned the reasons in the sections preceding this.[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 16:20, 25 August 2010 (UTC)


[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 15:14, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
:Since you merely identify this a "Matt's reversions", it's difficult to what you specifically have in mind. Did Matt move the questionable material here for discussion?  If he did, then it's appropriate to discuss it here, within policy limits, before it goes back.


Ramandand is simply wrong here.  There are many places in the world where NO certification in homeopathy is necessary for physician or even consumers to prescribe homeopathic medicines. In the UK, for instance, there is "common law" that allows full freedom to practice homeopathy or any health care.  i believe that the sentence should say:  '''Worldwide, homeopathy is mostly practiced by licensed health professionals, including many conventionally trained medical doctors, and some countries and some states within countries allow unlicensed practitioners to engage in homeopathic care. ''' [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 06:52, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
:If he deleted without making it clear what he was deleting, or why he was making a Healing Arts Editor decision to delete it, he needs to put it here. Otherwise, you cannot simply demand that it be put back without consensus or an Editor ruling. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 16:51, 5 September 2010 (UTC)


::Frightening as it may be, you and I might be moving toward an agreement. For much of the history of this article, there has been no particular reference to homeopaths having medical training. Especially when this has been said in the context of treating something that could well be life-threatening without immediate medical treatments, this worries a number of readers. 
:I'm in a hurry, but will make a quick reply. I hope Matt brings things here for discussion in future.—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 08:38, 6 September 2010 (UTC)


::Can we agree on something along the lines that unlicensed practitioners may not be qualified to manage severe disease and injury? I am far less worried that the dual-trained professional will miss something that I've seen "classical" alternative practitioners, not, incidentially, homeopaths, by inaction lead to the death or permanent disability of real people. While the individual involved was not a homeopath, I lost a very close relative because the alternative practitioner spent two weeks missing increasingly obvious indications of an internal bleed. I am equally angry at licensed MDs that don't know when to call for help, and I can give many examples -- yet I don't think they are the majority. If the majority of homepaths have a reasonable amount of conventional training, such that they will recognize emergent situations, I will feel much, much better.
== "Attack piece" ==


::I would appreciate sourced numbers on the dual-trained homeopaths and identification of areas where people trained only in classic homeopathy, or any other alternative system, are permitted to practice. I know there are areas in the United States where such unlicensed practice is allowed, but also where there were manslaughter charges or wrongful death lawsuits if consultation was not recommended. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 07:12, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
The statement "Some other researchers claim that there is scientific evidence that homeopathy helps in many problems and diseases[3]" was added with the edit note that "the lede can't be an attack piece."


==Reference==
The lede also cannot be a place where non-substantive opinion can be used to "neutralize" the main thrust of expert opinion. Again and again, it's been pointed out that CZ's current neutrality policy does not mean that equal emphasis must be given to each position.
The cited reference states"It is more than a century and a half now that Homoeopathy is being practiced in India. It has blended so well into the roots and traditions of the country that it has been recognised as one of the National Systems of Medicine"
The reference nowhere referes to "Alternative Systems of Medicine". Please either find a better reference or leave the wording, but respect the references.[[User:Gareth Leng|Gareth Leng]] 22:41, 9 December 2008 (UTC)


:Constable comment: I consider this a directive from an editor on this page, which means that no author should change that text. It may still be discussed on this talk page or on the forums. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 22:48, 9 December 2008 (UTC)
I recommend deletion of the above statement as far too general, and, for that matter, worded in a manner that really doesn't counter but says "well, yes but..."  There's an old medical story about a radiologist who crawls, bloody and battered, into his emergency room.  Asked what happened, he said it was "consistent with being mugged."  Things in the lede need a bit more substance than "consistent with.[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 17:19, 5 September 2010 (UTC)


::I returned it to the text that Gareth had asked to remain until you clear it with him.  Otherwise, it's an [http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/CZ:Constabulary_Blocking_Procedures#Offenses_which_will_result_in_a_warning_first.2C_then_a_ban an editorial issue]. Please don't consider this time a warning, but do be careful. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 19:36, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
:I don't see any probs with that ref and I'm sure Dana, the only other Homeopath here will support me on that.[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 08:34, 6 September 2010 (UTC)


:::Homeopathy is not considered Indian in India. I hope Gareth or you can do something about that sentence.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 09:16, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
== Similars and "allopathic drugs" ==


== More wording: "'may or may not" ==
First, I contend there is no such thing, in modern terms, as an allopathic drug.  Got any references, such as Goodman and Gilman, that use the term?  No, homeopathic texts don't get to define practices in general medicine. Taking a recent addition that I believe must be either radically changed or updated, I quote:


[http://en.citizendium.org/wiki?title=Homeopathy&diff=100420913&oldid=100420911 Ramanand says] that "'either this matter should be removed or it should have the "may or may not", because these conditions may not go''". For contexte see the following text, the disputed words are bolded:
:"Recent research has shown that some conventional drugs, which are normally used to do something, can do the opposite also - a rebound effect, similar to homeopathy's law of similars.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Kales A, Scharf MB, Kales JD |title=Rebound insomnia: a new clinical syndrome |journal=Science (journal) |volume=201 |issue=4360 |pages=1039–41 |year=1978 |month=September |pmid=684426 |doi= |url=}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author=Kirkwood CK |title=Management of insomnia |journal=J Am Pharm Assoc (Wash) |volume=39 |issue=5 |pages=688–96; quiz 713–4 |year=1999 |pmid=10533351 |doi= |url=}}</ref>
<ref>{{cite journal |author=Tsutsui S |title=A double-blind comparative study of zolpidem versus zopiclone in the treatment of chronic primary insomnia |journal=J. Int. Med. Res. |volume=29 |issue=3 |pages=163–77 |year=2001 |pmid=11471853 |doi= |url=http://openurl.ingenta.com/content/nlm?genre=article&issn=0300-0605&volume=29&issue=3&spage=163&aulast=Tsutsui |last2=Zolipidem Study |first2=Group}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author=Hohagen F, Rink K, Käppler C, ''et al.'' |title=Prevalence and treatment of insomnia in general practice. A longitudinal study |journal=Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci |volume=242 |issue=6 |pages=329–36 |year=1993 |pmid=8323982 |doi= 10.1007/BF02190245|url=}}</ref>.
<ref>{{cite book | last = Reber  | first = Arthur S. | authorlink = | coauthors = Reber, Emily S. | title = Dictionary of Psychology | publisher = Penguin Reference | date = 2001 | location = | pages = | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 0-140-51451-1}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author=Kales A, Soldatos CR, Bixler EO, Kales JD |title=Early morning insomnia with rapidly eliminated benzodiazepines |journal=Science (journal) |volume=220 |issue=4592 |pages=95–7 |year=1983 |month=April |pmid=6131538 |doi= |url=}}</ref>
<ref>{{cite journal |author=Lee A, Lader M |title=Tolerance and rebound during and after short-term administration of quazepam, triazolam and placebo to healthy human volunteers |journal=Int Clin Psychopharmacol |volume=3 |issue=1 |pages=31–47 |year=1988 |month=January |pmid=2895786 |doi= 10.1097/00004850-198801000-00002|url=}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author=Kales A |title=Quazepam: hypnotic efficacy and side effects |journal=Pharmacotherapy |volume=10 |issue=1 |pages=1–10; discussion 10–2 |year=1990 |pmid=1969151 |doi= |url=}}</ref>.
<ref>{{cite journal |author=Hilbert JM, Battista D |title=Quazepam and flurazepam: differential pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic characteristics |journal=J Clin Psychiatry |volume=52 Suppl |issue= |pages=21–6 |year=1991 |month=September |pmid=1680120 |doi= |url=}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal| journal =Pharmacopsychiatry | year =1989 | month =May | volume =22| issue =3| pages =115–9| title =Can a rapidly-eliminated hypnotic cause daytime anxiety? | author =Adam K | coauthors =Oswald I| pmid =2748714| doi =10.1055/s-2007-1014592}}</ref>"


:In the USA, if a homeopathic remedy is claimed to treat a serious disease such as cancer, it can be sold only by prescription. Only products sold for “self-limiting conditions”--colds, coughs, fever, headaches, and other minor health problems that eventually '''may or may not''' go away on their own--can be sold without a prescription (over-the-counter).
First, it's impossible to respond to this deluge of citations without any details. Second, for these to be "allopathic" drugs, based on the "principle of opposites", the papers must include that language. Do they?


[http://en.citizendium.org/wiki?title=Homeopathy&diff=prev&oldid=100419335 I have removed] the bolded text with the following question "''Surely by definition minor colds, coughs, fever etc. go away on there own?''". Gareth has [http://en.citizendium.org/wiki?title=Homeopathy&diff=100421206&oldid=100421046 removed this text] too. I want to hear Ramanand's specific reason for including this text since it seems to contradict the whole premise the the sentence ("self-limiting conditions" and "minor"). Which diseases in this category may not go away? I'm not sure I understand the usage of "may not go away" in the context of the two sentences above. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 23:15, 9 December 2008 (UTC)
Second, it's a leap to equate a rebound phenomenon to allopathy; the dose-over-time, molecular control mechanisms, etc., are much more than "opposites". One of the classic examples of rebound, nasally applied vasoconstrictors, doesn't take place when the dose and duration are properly controlled. In general, if the vasoconstrictor is needed for long enough to cause rebound, use of antiinflammatories, such as corticosteroids, cromolyns, or antihistamines should be under active consideration to replace the direct vasoconstrictor.


::Those conditions may or may not go away on their own. In fact, if a cold is left untreated, it can lead to a cough/fever and if a cough is left untreated it can lead to pneumonia. Fevers and pneumonia can be life threatening. If y'all don't want that addition, the whole matter between the hyphens should be removed.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 07:42, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
It was with considerable restraint that I didn't immediately move this to the talk page. Ironically, there are very pleasant, collaborative discussions going on in a number of military and history articles.  Maybe getting to kill people makes for more restrained discussion. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 19:04, 5 September 2010 (UTC)


:::You are describing a situation for people with a compromised immune system.  That is not a "self limiting condition". Normal people have a full recovery from "minor" colds and fevers with no treatment whatsoever. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 07:55, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
:The rebound effect is well documented and accepted in medical circles, so please don't delete that sentence or the refs I inserted (I've improved on the way it used to read, so pls take a look).[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 08:31, 6 September 2010 (UTC)


::::Even normal people don't have a full recovery from all colds and fevers with 'no treatment whatsoever'.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 09:12, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
::Well documented? "Rebound effect' doesn't appear in the index of the standard textbook, ''Goodman and Gilman's The Pharmacologic Basis of Therapeutics (9th Edition)''. Now, as I have mentioned, the term "rebound" is indeed used in very specific contexts, such as the response of nasal mucosa to topical vasoconstrictors.


:::::We'll have to disagree about that. And the big point you are missing is that by definition a  "self limiting condition" is one that people recover from. Having  "self limiting condition" and "may not go away" associated as above is contradictory. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 09:21, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
::"can lead to the opposite effect, when stopped - a rebound effect, which means they are following homeopathy's law of similars." is not especially an improvement. Of course there are drugs that have adverse effects when stopped inappropriately. Corticosteroids, selective neurotransmitter uptake inhibitors and opioids all come to mind. "Similars" have nothing to do with it, in the sense that a corticosteroid, in a Proving, would be inflammatory. Instead, the adrenal cortex has reduced its production of endogenous steroids because it has sensed a certain blood level.


::::::Agreed, Chris. I'd add that most over-the-counter products for self-limiting conditions give a list of reasons (e.g., fever lasting over a week or above a certain temperature, blood in the sputum, etc.) to stop taking the product and consult a physician. This is true even for non-homeopathic, non-medical remedies; there is a point when my grandmother would stop feeding me chicken soup and call the pediatrician. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 15:42, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
::It's vaguely amusing to hear you comment about people ignorant of homeopathy, when there seem to be so many opportunities to be unaware of molecular pharmacology. But, there are different tastes -- where's the eye of newt and blood of bat when you need them? [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 01:18, 7 September 2010 (UTC)


I think that it is obvious that the words "may or may not" do not have a place here and that they are confusingFor the record, there are several, not just one, reason that a homeopathic drug is an OTC one:  if the condition for which it treats is self-limited, that the condition does not required medical diagnosis or medical monitoring, and that the dose in which the medicine is prescribed is basically safe (these are the FDA's rules). [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 06:39, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
==Dead link==
http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/511604 Reference 102 about the value of talking to patients. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 19:08, 5 September 2010 (UTC)


:I will consider this consideration to not use "may or may not" in conjunction with this sentence an editorial decision per Dana. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 20:53, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
:Then I suggest we remove the sentence attributed to Vandenbroucke.[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 13:56, 6 September 2010 (UTC)


== Help parsing a sentence from typical homeopathic visit section? ==
==Thankless CZ==
Editing CZ is a thankless job. I'm sure the people who are ignorant about a subject (like Homeopathy) can move on to Facebook, Orkut, Linked in, Twitter or some other networking site/s and make a lot of friends and get to know them really well - we hardly know anything about each other here. Howard, you're probably a nice guy I can get to know better and probably dine with. Sandy, Im sure I can make an interesting 'date'. Why don't y'all look for me on Facebook?—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 13:56, 6 September 2010 (UTC)
:I have nothing against friendship, and I do think I've found a number of good friends here. Nevertheless, the essence of what I see as appropriate writing at CZ depends on courtesy, but above all, logic -- western if you will -- and evidence. I have a LinkedIn account, but not Facebook, Twitter, etc. -- and don't want them. On the other hand, I am very active on an assortment of professional mailing lists. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 18:50, 6 September 2010 (UTC)


"A diagnosis will also be used to rule out treatment with unnecessary remedies. "
:: First off, I greatly doubt either of us would enjoy a date. 'Sandy' is a short form of 'Alexander', and I'm neither unattached nor gay.
:: Second, some of your other apparent assumptions are just as bogus. People generally aren't here for social networking, but to contribute toward building an encyclopedia. Nor does not being an expert on homeopathy preclude contributing.
:: I'm resisting the urge to write a more pointed reply because it would violate [[CZ:Professionalism#What_behaviors_are_unprofessional.3F]]. [[User:Sandy Harris|Sandy Harris]] 23:47, 6 September 2010 (UTC)


I'm not sure this sentence, where it is, actually adds anything. If it's meant to mean that the homeopathic diagnosis rules out unnecessary medical treatment, make that clear. Since it uses the term of art "remedy", however, it would seem to apply to homeopathic treatment.
==Confusing deletions==
It's somewhat difficult to tell why things are deleted when the only reasons given are in edit notes, which aren't always easily accessible if, for example, minor edits follow them in the log.


If that's the case, then if it fits anywhere, it presumably belongs two paragraphs or more down, when the ''simillium'' is being selected. It's still confusing even there, since my understanding is that classical homeopaths usually select only one remedy &mdash; so what would be ruled out? Doesn't selecting a single ''simillium'' inherently do that?
This was deleted, possibly due a claim that it was unsourced -- yet it is sourced. It's a reasonable statement and belongs in the article. <blockquote>This does not mean that that people treated with homeopathy do feel better as a result - the clinical literature clearly shows this, but Vandenbroucke suggested that this could be because its practitioners treatments spend more time with people than doctors do. "Even if people give you the wrong explanation about what you seek treatment for, the fact that they spend a long time speaking with you might help," Vandenbroucke suggests.<ref>[http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/511604 medscape]</ref></blockquote>


I suspect it's a leftover sentence, but I didn't want to delete it in the event it's saying something that I don't understand. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 23:53, 9 December 2008 (UTC)
"Homeopaths contend that flawed trials cannot be used to show that homeopathic treatment is ineffective <u>(please read the previous paragraph for information about the positive trials)</u>."  This new sentence, especially the underlined words, is argumentative rather than informative. --[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 18:50, 6 September 2010 (UTC)</i>


:No it was added recently by Ramanand, referring us to the [http://en.citizendium.org/wiki?title=Homeopathy&diff=prev&oldid=100420335 Talk Page] here. I believe he is trying to emphasis that homeopaths do diagnose, possibly to address some of the points made in the [[Talk:Homeopathy#Unilateral_revision_of_edit_because_.22it_is_not_acceptable_to_homeopaths.22|section above]]. As written it is a bit of a throw-away statementWhat is the major point we are trying to make here? [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 00:11, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
:I didn't do the above editing, though I support it.  Just because Vandenbroucke says that statement does not mean it is true, especially when there is at present no data to support it.  This idea borders on the preposterous that the "extra" time that homeopaths spend with their patients leads to the therapeutic benefits that homeopathic patients experience.  If THAT were the case, then, psychologists would be our finest healers (and sadly, they are not). Although the first interview with a homeopath is typically an hour, the follow-up visits are usually 10-30 minutes, just a little longer than a conventional MD.   


=== Why is a diagnosis important for a homeopath? ===
:As for "flawed" trials, see my longer message in the next section where I talk about the importance of "internal validity" in trials AND "external validity."  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 01:09, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


For cholera, the remedies used are generally Verat.alb, Camph., Cup.met. etc., while for acute bronchitis it would be Ipecac., Blatta Ori., Nat. Sulph. etc.
==Dana Ullman's thoughts on this article to date==


This sentence:-
Sorry to be away from the article for so long...
<blockquote>"A diagnosis will also be used to rule out treatment with unnecessary remedies. "</blockquote>


therefore should be there.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 07:51, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
I am very concerned about this present “draft” of the homeopathy article. I feel that it has lost its “encyclopedic” tone, and instead, it is a mixture of encyclopedic information along with strong “point of view” skepticism.  Although I do not have a problem with proper skepticism, it is the tone of it AND where it is placed in the article that is critical. 


:Sorry, this still doesn't make sense. By diagnosing cholera, why would one even consider treatments for bronchitis? By diagnosing bronchitis, why would one even consider treatments for cholera?  If the symptoms of both are present, it might be perfectly reasonable to rule out both. The sentence still doesn't make any sense.
For instance, in the very top portion of this article are paragraphs #3 and #4 which are not encyclopedic in tone or content.


:This is, however, an excellent example of why conventional physicians are very afraid of the safety of homeopathic treatment rather than conventional. From the World Health Organization down, the absolutely mandatory treatment for cholera is fluid replacement, preferably [[oral replacement fluid]] (ORF) but intravenous fluids if necessary. It is the massive fluid loss that kills patients with cholera. While antibiotic can reduce the duration and severity, it is perfectly acceptable, in major epidemics with limited resources, to put patients over a bucket to collect their liquid feces, and have laymen making them drink all the ORF they can. If rehydration is not the core of treatment, the patient will quite likely die. The homeopathic remedies you cite do not include the desperately needed sodium and potassium and water replacement, as well as the supplementary carbohydrate that is the key to getting them absorbed through the gastrointestinal tract. Civility prevents me from saying what I'd do if I saw someone trying to treat cholera with anything not including ORF or IV fluid replacement, other than to say a bullet would be kindler and gentler. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 15:39, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
I will try to avoid doing “editing” the article myself. Instead, I will propose here in the TALK section my ideas for what should be said, and I hope that those people who want to maintain a high-quality objective and encyclopedic article will make appropriate changes to the Draft. Needless to say, I will not sign my name, as a Healing Arts Editor, to anything that does not maintain a certain objective tone. And by “objective tone,” I obviously do not mean that this article should just a promo for homeopathy.


::Howard, the vast majority of homeopaths in this world are trained in medical diagnosisIn cases of cholera, ORT is (!) a necessity, and homeopathic medicines are adjunctive to that...as is good public health measures. And as you may remember, Jennifer Jacobs conducted that important trial in PEDIATRICS on childhood diarrea, and it showed that efficacy (and even greater efficacy when a defined pathogen was found in the stool of children)
:My sincere thanx for whoever re-formating my contribution so that we can communicate about them in bit-sizeable chunksGood work[[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 15:37, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


::That said, it is important to note that although there are certain medicines that are more commonly given in certain pathologies, certain unique symptoms can and do call for unusual other medicines that may not be typical of a specific pathology...but can be therapeutic.  Remember, good homeopathic care is not necessarily a "this for that." Instead, individualizing a medicine to the overall syndrome is thought to bring the best results.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 06:27, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
=== Dana on 3rd paragraph===
Ultimately, I recommend some changes in the 3rd paragraph…here’s what I suggest for replacement for this paragraph.   


:::Dana, I do not understand that the majority of homeopaths in the world are trained in medical diagnosis. While that may be true in the West, the issue of cholera only came up when Ramanand volunteered "For cholera, the remedies used are generally Verat.alb, Camph., Cup.met. etc., while for acute bronchitis it would be Ipecac., Blatta Ori., Nat. Sulph. etc." The remedies mentioned make no mention of ORT, and Ramanand's examples, so far, have not mentioned medical approaches as well. I completely agree that ORT is a necessity, but Ramanand, whom you have accepted here as a professional homeopath, did not mention it at all.  Even in the context of my remark that I found Ramanand's not mentionng ORT to be frightening to a medical perspective, just above your reply to me that I should not worry about homeopaths because they have no medical training, you did not address Ramanand's comment. Please do so.  
::While many medical practitioners prescribe some homeopathic remedies, a significant majority of the scientific and conventional medical community (including a number of national medical representative bodies like the British Medical Association), consider homeopathy to be unfounded and pseudoscientific.[1] Skeptics of homeopathy insist that there is no plausible mechanism to explain how the remedies might work, given that many of them are so dilute that they contain not a single molecule of the active ingredient. However, homeopaths and scientists from varied specialties, including Nobel Prize winning virologist Luc Montagnier, assert that there are viable theories about how homeopathic medicines may act, though as yet, no one explanation has been verified. Advocates assert that the homeopathic “principle of similars” is, in part, the basis for modern day immunizations, allergy treatments, and select other conventional treatments (ie, the use of Ritalin and other amphetamine-like drugs used to treat hyperactive children), while critics have compared it to sympathetic magic.


:::Please supply sources that the majority of homeopaths in the world have medical training, and at what level. Apparently, some areas of the world allow classical homeopaths, without medical training, to practice. Do you deny this? Whatever Jennifer Jacobs may have done, the subject being discussed is cholera, not childhood diarrhea, in the context of this discussion. 06:49, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
::: I wrote the current text. To me it seems accurate and encyclopedic, much better than either what it replaced or your suggestion.


Actually, the 100,000 (!) homeopaths in India attend a 4 or 5 year homeopathic medical college and are legally called "homeopathic doctors." There are over 100 such homeopathic colleges in India. The fact that Ramanand mentioned specific homeopathic medicines for cholera does not necessarily mean that these medicines are the ONLY treatments he provides. Ramanand also didn't mention nutrition or public health or other health advice, but that doesn't mean that these are not a part of a homeopath's knowledge or usage. Please avoid over-simplifying homeopathy or homeopaths. In efforts to avoid too much detail, let's not go on tangents. [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 07:43, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
::: My "While the founder of modern homeopathy was a medical doctor, some modern medical practitioners do prescribe some homeopathic remedies, and some governments do recognise homeopathy as legitimate treatment" instead of your "While many medical practitioners prescribe some homeopathic remedies" gives more arguments favorable to homeopathy, but states them more carefully, your "many" seems dubious to me.


:::Wait a minute. I was just talking about the different set of remedies in different diseases. I did not say I would not use ORT/ORF.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 08:30, 11 December
::: My "the consensus of medical and scientific opinion is that homeopathy is unfounded." seems to me a simple statement of fact.


::::'''Constable''':  I believe '''"Please avoid over-simplifying homeopathy or homeopaths. In efforts to avoid too much detail, let's not go on tangents."''' is a personal attack violating civility.
::: I removed the claim that it is "pseudoscientific", which seems to me true but unnecessary here. Criticism is fine; gratuitous insults are not.


::::Where did I oversimplify?  I didn't bring up cholera or bronchitis. Ramanand chose to use them as examples. Since I am not a homeopath, but I am quite familiar with the medical emergency management of cholera through work in developing emergency and field protocols, all I could see is the most critical component not. I think my questioning was quite valid. 
::: I do not think the British Medical Association or your "However, ..." or "Advocates assert ..." belong in the lede. The lede needs to be a simple summary of key points. The BMA, Montaignier and Ritalin might all be discussed later, but they do not belong here. [[User:Sandy Harris|Sandy Harris]] 03:34, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


::::Garethcan you help here?  Conventional medical people do not, it is true, give the benefit of the doubt to someone calling themselves, without qualification, a "homeopath", is also fully trained in conventional medicine. If the statement can be made and sourced that homeopaths always use appropriate medical therapy for critical conditions, there would be much less doubt. Can that statement be made? [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 16:22, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
Greetings, Sandy...we've not interacted yet...let's work together. First, the claim in the present draft that "There is no plausible mechanism..." is false and has no place here. There ARE plausible explanations, though simply none that have been confirmed. [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 15:20, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


:::::'''Constable response''': I don't see a violation with Howard's comments or Dana's request. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 21:00, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
:: It depends on the interpretation of the word "plausible". Certainly there are explanations, but I'd say none are plausible. [[User:Sandy Harris|Sandy Harris]] 02:31, 15 September 2010 (UTC)


== History of ==
: Sandy suggests above that my reference to "many physicians" prescribing homeopathic medicines "seems dubious."  Perhaps it would help if he re-read our article here where in the "Homeopathy in Practice" section gives some specific figures:  "In Europe homeopathy is practiced by many conventional physicians, including 30-40% of French doctors and 20% of German doctors. Some homeopathic treatment is partly covered by some European public health services, including in France and Denmark. In France, 35% of the costs of homeopathic medicine prescribed by a medical doctor are reimbursed from health insurance."...Clearly, the term "many" is not dubious.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 15:48, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


Having noted the above debate, it seems that Paracelsus DOES have enough of a role in the history of homeopathy to deserve a mention, if not in the intor, in the relevant section. So I've put him back there. I do think those removing him earlier should have considered doing this kind of 'constructive' change rather than the 'deletionist' kind. In fact, the link ot the 'history of' page is not very impressive - there is little new materail here, and indeed much of the current page's scientific interests are rehearsed. The c&a medicine page is not in fact a page indicating or even hinting at the wide variety of information and material there is on this to be (eventually) found, but rather a brief and IMO crude dismissal of the topic. We can surely do better than this![[User:Martin Cohen|Martin Cohen]] 21:09, 10 December 2008 (UTC)
:: See the discussion under "unsupported assertions" above. Those claims do belong somewhere in the article, if they can be supported, but the lede as it stands seems to me a good summary. [[User:Sandy Harris|Sandy Harris]] 23:21, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


: Martin, in due respect, you must provide references (and credible ones) to your ideas about Paraselsus being the "father of homeopathy."  When I previously deleted this info in the intro, I provided concerns about this which you still have not answered.  Please answer them here before going to the article. Paraselsus' concept of "signature" is a very primative understanding of the principle of similars. Hahnemann brought a specific experimental method to this principle, learned the value of potentization, and coined the wordThere is only one "father of homeopathy" and Paracelsus ain't him.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 06:15, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
: I have a question for Sandy and Howard and other skeptics.  At present, in this lede, there is the sentence:  "To a skeptic, the 'principle of similars' is merely an appeal to sympathetic magic."  Out of curiosity, do you believe that there is a certain wisdom of the body?  Do you believe that the human organism tries to adapt to infection and/or stress by creating symptoms in order to survive? If you answer YES or MAYBE to EITHER of these questions, then using drugs that mimic the body's defenses make sense, and as such, we HAVE to delete or change this ill-founded sentencePlease also remember that the "high potencies" is only a part of homeopathy and that most homeopathic medicines sold in health food stores and pharmacies today are in small, material doses.  It is inappropriate (and inaccurate) to assume that ALL homeopathic medicines are in doses beyond Avogadro's number.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 16:34, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


:: I did add back in some info about Paracelsus.  I have also deleted a bunch of inaccurate info about Galen and 4 humors.  Actually, most medical historicans assert that Galen and the humors had nothing to do with homeopathy or the principle of similars (it is mostly the use of opposites!). This section is much improved, though it needs more improvement. By the way, for people interested in history, the [[History of Homeopathy]] needs a lot of work, especially because very little info there is on history...it is mostly a review of homeopathic theories.  Eeeks.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 07:36, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
:: That sentence is fine. What we believe is not at issue. The paragraph is trying to summarise the position about homeopathy of skeptics and critics. I'd say that, if anything, it understates their revulsion. Granted, other parts of the article should give a much more favorable view, but the negative views should be there as well. [[User:Sandy Harris|Sandy Harris]] 23:21, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
::: (written while Dana was writing the preceding response:)
::: I have googled Paracelsus+Hahnemann. My conclusion is that the influence of Paracelsus on Hahnemann, a very erudite person, was major. There are far more resemblances between P and H than this (signatures). Should we say "father of homeopathy"? perhaps, with a cautionary note. Should we have references, and well researched article on Paracelsus that we could link to? Sure. But the last things that are needed are hasty deletions and fragmentations of this article. Yes, CZ is an hypertext. But we're still creating this homeopathy article! The scientific aspect of homeopathy was transferred to a controversial article, "memory of water", without proper examination of the non-controversial aspects of the materials science of water or homeopathic preparations, described in Martin Chaplin's website. Now, we are supposed to give up Paracelsus, until Martin Cohen can find references and back "his" case? This is not collaboration. There are no material scientists who have studied water in CZ. There are no specialists of Paracelsus. But there are some persons who want to learn.
::Returning to fragmentation. What's happening here is a process that took place in Diderot's Encyclopedia. The subarticles contain tools and info to question and actually rewrite the root article. Encyclopedists found that it was a good way to transmit info that would have been  rejected if they had been in top topics. Who decides, in CZ, when it is appropriate to put things about the material science of water as an ancillary topic, under a highly controversial heading ("memory of water"), thus effectively presenting homeopathy as a scientifically undefendable superstition or hoax? Who decides that Paracelsus, the magician, the alchemist, cannot be associated with Hahnemann?
::: Asking the question answers it.
::: Matt Innis pointed out this problem in the forum discussion about neutrality notes. I agreed, and Martin had comments along those lines. How is it possible to have a Neutrality note about an article if it is the absence of some things in the article that is considered (by some) as the bias? This is the problem of demarcation.
:: When I first began researching on the materials science relevant to our case, the motto was Matt's "let's take our time and do it right". So I work, with very little help (but some support). Suddenly, I get the message that the article should get approved sooner than later. My work gets transferred elsewhere, I give up... and weeks later I notice that the timeline has changed: people are taking  their time again.
::: What if I told you that Paracelsus' influence seems to require more "let's take our time and do it right" and less "give your references, build your case, and don't forget you're not an expert"?
::: I'm going to tell you why I chose to embark in this homeopathy article adventure. I wanted to test if CZ can handle scientific controversies. Yes, if and only if we take our time, discuss, build closer collaborative ties, and invite experts (by recruiting or through readings).
:::--[[User:Pierre-Alain Gouanvic|Pierre-Alain Gouanvic]] 07:57, 11 December 2008 (UTC)


::::The most important thing is to accept what an expert says.e.g.I had a tough time inserting the sentence that homeopaths treat acute bronchitis, until Gareth looked up the Net and found it to be true. I think Larry should look into this.—[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 08:42, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
:::Individual belief is outside the scope of the article, but no, I don't think there is a "wisdom of the body", and, using the medical definition of [[symptom (medical)|symptom]], the body doesn't create any symptoms -- the mind does. Symptoms are subjective, and signs are objective. A sign may be evidence of a defense mechanism, but it's far more likely to be evidence of a disease process.


Pierre-Alain and anyone else, I welcome whatever references you provide that verify that Paracelsus was the "father" or "founder" of homeopathy, but I insist that this should not be placed in the article until there are good references for it and there is consensus on the Discussion pagesI can tell you that I am fairly knowledgeable about Hahnemann's history and have written and published widely on the subject, and I cannot remember a single incident in which Hahnemann quoted or referenced Paracelsus.  Even if someone were to find some specific statement, it is unlikely that it would be adequate enough to supercede Hahnemann as being the father or founder of homeopathy.  I've said enough on this subject and don't plan to say more until substantial evidence is provided. [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 23:51, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
:::The great fallacy I see here is the assumption that proving-based drug mimic the actual defenses. The body's direct defenses against ''[[Clostridium tetani]]'' exotoxin in [[tetanus]] are immunologic. Those defenses are supported by administering synthetic tetanus immune globulin -- we learned to avoid the horse serum preparation as too risky -- to give initial passive immunity, and tetanus toxoid to build active immunity. These don't "mimic" the defenses; they '''are'''  the defensesThe body really doesn't have defenses against the neurologic effects of the toxin, but benzodiazepines, neuromuscular blocking agents, baclofen and dantrolene provide what, I suppose, could be called "symptomatic" relief. Without getting into all the receptors, we have a pretty decent idea '''how''' these drugs reduce the spasticity; we don't need to go the route of finding similars.  


== Rolled back "if it doesn't work" ==
:::I'm not opposed to using unusual explanations when there are no better ones. "Wisdom of the body" sounds like something for a Religion Editor. I do use complementary methods when I have some reason to believe in a favorable risk-benefit. As soon as I hear that something is risk free, alarm bells go off. There are always tradeoffs. I'm facing a terrible one now, as the American Veterinary Medical Association described euthanasia as a means of comfort care that has the side effect of death -- yet I have a beloved cat who has a greater will to live than any human I've ever encountered. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 23:56, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


I rolled back "if it doesn't work", which Ramanand added to a sentence about when to call for conventional medicine. The context suggests that homeopathic treatment should always be the first form of therapy, and conventional physicians called in only "if it doesn't work." Ramanand did not qualify the context to indicate if the homeopath has any medical training, to make a rational choice if the condition is one in  which there could be immediate danger without appropriate treatment.
The text you are questioning is "There is no plausible mechanism to explain how the remedies might work, given that many of them are so dilute that they contain not a single molecule of the active ingredient. To a skeptic, the "principle of similars" is merely an appeal to sympathetic magic." I think that is OK as it stands.


Versions of this point have, to an extent, been an edit war. Dana made the reasonable point yesterday that with cholera, the medical training of most homeopaths would say that oral replacement therapy (ORT) must come before everything else, other than IV fluid replacement if the patient cannot swallow. Not replacing fluids and electrolytes, in acute cholera (as defined by the WHO and CDC), is quite likely. ORT is hardly a toxic conventional drug: it contains water, sodium, potassium and carbohydrate. A quite useful improvised ORT, for developing countries, is to take the water in which rice boiled, put in a spoonful of salt, and mash part of a banana or pour orange juice into it (both are rich in potassium).
It could be replaced with something that both states the skeptical position better and mentions that not everyone is skeptical:


The idea of trying homeopathic treatment first for everything is at the center of the fears by conventional medical physicians and scientists.  If the practitioner is dual-trained and chooses, with informed patient consent, to try a homeopathic remedy for a non-life-threatening condition, that's between the patient and practitioner. Indeed, if, in that case, the homeopathic remedy worked, I'll call that patient choice.
: To a skeptic, there is neither any solid evidence that homeopathy is effective nor any plausible explanation of why it should be, and the "principle of similars" is merely an appeal to sympathetic magic. Homeopaths, however, believe that they have good answers to these criticisms.


Gareth and Chris, I believe, have tried various rewrites saying that the chief concern about safety is that inappropriate delay in providing medical treatment can cause dangerous delays. An unqualified "if it doesn't work" is simply not acceptable from the medical standpoint, unless, for example, Dana is correct that most homeopaths are medically as well as homeopathically trained. I still would like to see sourcing on that training, and I believe Dana agreed that there are unlicensed practitioners. It is the latter, practicing pure homeopathy, that are of the greatest medical safety concern. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 16:12, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
::Close.  Let me urge that [[sympathetic magic]] show as a wikilink, as it is not just a throwaway pejorative, but an anthropological term that shows up across many cultures. Consider dropping the "merely". When I wrote the article on sympathetic magic, it wasn't intended to disparage, but to explain a cultural pattern.


:Homeopaths do use homeopathy as the first line of treatment, so we should have that matter I inserted or remove the whole sentence.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 10:10, 12 December 2008 (UTC)
::Is it necessary to bring up both the Avogadro argument ''and'' similars in the lede, purely from a standpoint of complexity?  Yes, I understand that potentiation is an argument that can be countered with the Avogadro point, but similars seem more basic than potentiation in understanding the core argument of homeopathy.


::I'm hearing a fundamental difference between Dana and Ramanand. Dana suggests most homeopaths are medically trained, and, if a patient presents with a potential medical emergency, they will use nedical techniques within their scope of practice and refer otherwise, quite possibly complementing the medical with homeopathic remedies.  If, for example, such a practitioner, especially one already part of a multidiscipinary team, wanted to use homeopathic methods as part of the treatment of a condition such as fibromyalgia, I might be comfortable with that.
::I am ''not'' trying to be argumentative when I say that arguing that the principle of similars is an equivalent or superior explanation, to a drug that was designed using molecular structure-activity relationships, is inflammatory. It's one thing for the homeopaths to say why their own preparations work, but it's pushing too hard to say that the homeopaths have better explanations for the drugs developed under different paradigms. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 02:46, 15 September 2010 (UTC)


::Ramanand seems to be saying that India has both conventional medical and classical homeopathic training and certification, and that 10 percent of the population uses homeopaths as primary care providers. It is this 10 percent that especially concerns me, as Ramandand has offered no information that students in the homeopathic curricula get thorough medical training. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 11:24, 12 December 2008 (UTC)
=== 4th paragraph===
I believe that the present 4th paragraph has NO place in the top section.  Discussion of the “possible dangers” from the patient or the doctor’s decision to not use conventional treatments has NO place here. If others wish to insert this information under its proper section, I do not have a problem, though we must then acknowledge:  Homeopaths respond to the possible dangers from using homeopathic medicines in replacement of conventional medical care by asserting that there are much greater dangers by using conventional medicines as a first method of treatment.


== Deletionism and do people read things properly before deleting?  ==
: It probably needs mention of the fact that homeopaths retort that conventional medicines may also have large risks. I'm inclined to think it does belong in the lede, since these risks are a basic issue about homeopathy. However, I don't feel remarkably strongly about that and would be interested in hearing other opinions. [[User:Sandy Harris|Sandy Harris]] 03:44, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


Dana has deleted my Paracelus point although reinstated him later, for which I thank her - magnaminous!
::I would prefer to see it go unless the homeopaths present a statistical risk-benefit argument, based on modern medical practices, not 1900, that the hypothesis is true that the clinical outcome is better with homeopathic treatment than medical or no treatment. The risks of most medical treatments are quantifiable, as are the benefits, with the understanding that statistical aggregates do not apply to individuals.


She also announced problems with the history of Homeopathy page - exactly the problems I just pointed to above - did she read that? At least we agree t here is a problem. The page could be said to be advancing... but my mina concern is certainly not being addressed. I don't say everyone has to change their way of operating, but I do think there needs to be some restraint on deleting contributions, as Pierre hints too, as though a 'rule' has been established and ''certain persons are entitled to interpret and enforce it on the page.''<small>Certain persons are entitled to do just that. See below</small>[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 21:38, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
::There are any number of times I've chosen something with significant risk, because there was reasonable evidence the risk was greater than the benefit. Obviously, a cardioplegia solution that stopped my beating heart was risky, but the risk of not having the open-heart surgery was greater. There was reliable data for risk at each stage of the procedure.


Here is the text again:
::When other children would chant "your mother wears army boots," I'd point out that they were part of her uniform. The "medical treatment is more dangerous", without substantial data, rings equally relevant to me. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 04:34, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


"Paracelsus (1493-1541) is considered by some as the "founder" of homeopathy, and is also credited with popularizing the theory "of signatures". According to this, the medicinal use of plants is revealed in exterior signs such as colours or shapes. "
::: "I would prefer to see it go unless ..." is not clear to me. Are you saying that text on homeopathic rejoinders should not be inserted, or that we should follow Dana's suggestion and remove the current 4th paragraph from the lede? [[User:Sandy Harris|Sandy Harris]] 05:30, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


There is nothing remotely controversial about this, and I changed the text to ensure that. Dana can look it up for herself in any reputable homeopathic source.
::::Unless the homeopathic rejoinder has strong statistical support, it should not be in the article. It's one thing if there is a formal risk-benefit analysis proving a hypothesis, but if it's no more than "well, medical treatments are dangerous," it's irrelevant defense. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 06:25, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


(Here's a typical reference: "The doctrine of signatures was a purely philosophical notion until Boehme's predecessor, the alchemist Paracelsus, had applied it to medicine ..." from page 27 of The American Institute of Homeopathy Handbook by Edward, M.D., D.Ht. Shalts (Paperback  2005))
In due respect, the formal risk-benefit analysis needs to go BOTH ways. What evidence do you have for the "dangers" of receiving homeopathic treatment...and please do not give individual cases. I do have access to numerous cost-effectiveness studies showing significant cost savings to people who utilize homeopathic medicines. [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 15:34, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


I don't think the contribution is terribly original, or interesting. It is however relevant to the history of the subject and leads us towards other areas. I'd like to see it reinstated, and if not, I shall raise it as an issue on the forum for general discussion. Many historical, cultural and 'traditional' aspects of homeopathy are are neglected in this page which, to repeat, is adopting an inappropriately narrow and exclusive 'scientistic' approach. Most of the debate paraded here as 'central' is 'marginal' - Dana makes that point too, in a way, in her edit here:
:Bluntly, it does not need to go both ways. Homeopathy is desperately trying to claim a place at the table in the face of enormous evidence that molecular medicine is effective. It seems your position is that homeopathy and medicine are of equal status and that every claim against homeopathy must be counterattacked by one about medicine. If, indeed, homeopathy is so much an alternative to medicine, this is useless.


"Although homeopathy is practiced by medical doctors, other health professionals, and consumers in virtually every country in the world, homeopathy is not accepted by majority of mainstream medical doctors or conventional scientists today."
:Incidentally, it would be wise for you to identify your financial interests in the promotion of homeopathy, such as (from http://www.homeopathic.com/main/bio_dana.jsp):
:*Dana Ullman, M.P.H. (Masters in Public Health, U.C. Berkeley) is "homeopathic.com" and is widely recognized as the foremost spokesperson for homeopathic medicine in the U.S.
:*Dana founded Homeopathic Educational Services, America's largest publisher and distributor of homeopathic books, tapes, software, and medicine kits. For 10 years he served as formulator and spokesperson for a line of homeopathic medicine manufactured by Nature's Way, one of America's leading natural products companies.


Calling this 'improving the sentence" is disingenuous, though, Dana, and I don't think it improved the article. It struck a political note where one would expect a neutral tone. However, as I say, Dan in my view raises the issue of the gap between the 'scientific-medical' and the 'health care' or indeed general public perspectives. The homeopathy article should not be constructed from the first approaches perspective at the expense of excluding the others. At the moment, it is - and so is the 'history of homeopathy page', and the 'alternative and complementary medicine' page. We have to accept new perspectives in order to start to balance the pages. A start would be by restoring Paracelus to his proper place, which, whether it is as elevated as 'some' claim - is certainly important. [[User:Martin Cohen|Martin Cohen]] 21:25, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
:See Bob Badgett's developing article on [[conflict of interest]]. It is one thing for a practitioner to charge for professional services, but it is generally considered unethical for physicians to refer patients to testing facilities, publications, etc., from which they derive income.  


::Please do not roll back a revert without discussion on this page, and usually Editor approval. Revert wars are regarded quite severely here.
:You are the one making the claims that medicine is so dangerous. I didn't make claims about ""dangers" of receiving homeopathic treatment", which is a change of subject. I will say, however, that it is dangerous to seek homeopathic treatment in lieu of medical treatments of established efficacy.  Now, that seems a backing-off from the dangers of conventional medicine, but there seems a dearth of such studies from sources not vested in homeopathy. Again, these studies need to be overwhelming to dispute the CZ policy of providing the mainstream view.  


::Incidentally, Paracelsus must have some powerful techniques, as you appear to have performed gender reassignment on Dana. Seriously, I'm not sure what you mean by a "first approaches" perspective, but the general philosophy of CZ is not to insist on bringing in every idea that might bear on a subject. Actually, under CZ, "certain persons are entitled to interpret and enforce it on the page". They are called Editors for the workgroup. Dana is a Healing Arts Workgroup editor, and, whether I agree with him on the deletion or not, I do know, as an Editor in other workgroups, that his ruling will stand and be reinforced unless more Editors disagree, or his ruling is disapproved by the Editor-in-Chief or Editorial Council (of which I am a new member, but I'm not guessing).
:"NPOV", incidentally, is WP-speak and discouraged here.  


::Who is "we" such that "we have to accept new perspectives?", and who will compel "us"?  [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 21:38, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
:Incidentally, apropos of being encyclopedic, how about contributions other than your single subject? Some of us are interested in building an encyclopedia, not fighting a never-ending battle with single-issue advocates or, as Sandy responded to Ramanand, social networking. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 16:48, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


:::Martin, I asked for a reference for your "fact," and the reference that you provided did NOT verify itIn the future, please do not reinsert deleted comments, creating an edit war, until there is some consensus from the Discussion page.  Your assertion that Paracelsus was the father or founder of homeopathy is not simply "controversial," it doesn't seem to be true.  I showed good faith by incorporating what you were trying to say about Paracelsus, and I will continue to try to collaborate with you and others to create the best possible article[[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 23:19, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
:: Wow, Howard, you're now getting disperate...and I'm sorry to see thisFirst, for your information, I was personally asked by Larry Sanger (the founder of Citizendium) to edit here, and he asked me to become a Healing Arts Editor.  I have never hid any fact about my background.  In fact, most people appreciate my knowledge and expertise, except those few people who are threatened by facts, research, references to data, and the substantiation of information.   


::::As an aside, i thought that Dana is male? [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 02:55, 12 December 2008 (UTC)
:: You and Sandy were asking me for "evidence" that conventional medicine has certain risks.  While I could have laughed at this seemingly innocent (or naive) request, I simply responded by asking you to provide evidence that there was danger to homeopathic treatment.  Instead of providing this evidence, you have chosen a different strategy to get your bias into this article.  Let's avoid such tactics...and let's try to work together to write something fair, accurate, verifiable, and encyclopedic.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 22:26, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


:::::That had been my impression as well, but do remember that Martin is an advocate of alternate positions. :-)  [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 03:12, 12 December 2008 (UTC)
:::No, I don't believe it is possible to collaborate with you to write something that is fair, accurate, and is not far more supportive of the benefits of homeopathy than is supportable by the views recognized by the bulk of medical opinion and data. I believe the best I can do is point out evasions, selective and often inaccurate statements about pharmacology, misquotations (e.g., saying Sandy or I asked for "evidence" medicine has risks), and what I believe to be a significant conflict of interest. I do so in discussion here, to be sure other members of the community see it, rather than jump into revert wars.


::::::Geez, all you gotta do is go to [[User:Dana Ullman]], where Mr. (Dr.?) refers to himself a gazillion times as "he" or "him" or some such.... [[User:Hayford Peirce|Hayford Peirce]] 03:18, 12 December 2008 (UTC)
:::I have never suggested that medical treatment does not has risks; medical treatment ''always'' has risks. What I find to be hand-waving is the implication that homeopathy has no risks, including the delay of effective treatment.  


:::::::I rest my case. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 03:21, 12 December 2008 (UTC)
:::You will note that I have asked for an Editor ruling on what I consider continued misues of von Behring as an authority that homeopathy works. I find it sad that regardless of what was done to design a treatment, the data-free argument that similars ''might'' be an explanation continues to be brought up.


== Friendly amendment further improving precision? ==
:::Larry Sanger is not a health professional, and, I suspect, asked you to be a Healing Arts Editor because you are visible in that field.  I would be much less antagonistic to your contributions were you to focus on what homeopaths believe and do, rather than the frequent -- and frequent inaccurate -- attacks on medicine, such as your condescending remark that there are no antifungal and antiviral agents of demonstrated efficacy, and, indeed, demonstrated risk. Indeed, the risk of unmodified amphotericin B has led to significant molecular work to reduce toxicity. You give the impression, however, that Hahnemann got it all right in the early 19th century, and medicine continues to get it wrong.


Dana,  
:::Professional collaboration does not require that participants like one another. It does not help when they are patronizing, and, if they can't take focused criticism without changing the subject, perhaps the kitchen of knowledge is a bit too hot. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 22:53, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


I like your last
Howard, my concern about your editing is that you are just fabricating fights.  You wrote above that I said
<blockquote>Some of the principles of homeopathy has been utilized in some form for thousands of years, but its basic principles were first methodically set out by a German physician, [[Samuel Hahnemann]] (1755–1843), who observed that a medicine sometimes evoked symptoms similar to those of the illness for which it was prescribed.</blockquote>
"there are no antifungal and antiviral agents of demonstrated efficacy."  Where (!) did I say OR simply imply that?  Nowhere!  I even repeated my point that we all have to be careful in making broad statement such as the "collective weight of evidence".  THIS is what I mean by "straw men."  You create arguments with yourself by making up what I say.


Would it be even more precise to say,
:Where did you imply that? In an unsigned entry following mine of    Howard C. Berkowitz 04:25, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
:''I am surprised and even a bit shocked to hear your assertion that antibiotics are effective for viral and fungal infections,''
:Obviously, I disagree, because I then listed numerous examples of antimicrobials effective against such infections.
:If you want to accuse me of starting fights with myself, I'll simply conclude that one of me will always win. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 04:38, 15 September 2010 (UTC)


"Some of the principles of used in homeopathy has been utilized in some form for thousands of years. The term '''homeopathy''' and its formal definition came from  German physician, [[Samuel Hahnemann]] (1755–1843). His key observation was that a medicine sometimes evoked symptoms similar to those of the illness for which it was prescribed, and his key theory was that very small doses of such a medicine would heal a matching set of symptoms."


I'm not happy with ...and his key theory..., but I think breaking up the first sentence both makes it clear what Hahnemann actually did, as opposed to what influenced him. Since this is not rocket science, I'll borrow the analogy that Kostantin Tsiolkovsky can't be said to have originated rocket-propelled space flight, since it was Robert Goddard that actually developed a rocket engine designed, as his book was titled, ''A Method of Reaching Extreme Altitudes''Short-range gunpowder rockets that stayed at low altitudes had been around for centuries, and Tsiolkovsky and others talked about an evolved rocket that could go to high altitude, but it was Goddard that defined the actual techniqueParacelsus might have described a goal, but did not, as far as I know, speak of the key concept of similars.[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 23:09, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
To clarify (again), my point is not that there are no risks to homeopathic treatmentHowever, IF we wish to highlight that there are certain risks to homeopathic treatment, we also have to acknowledge that it is widely recognized that there are much greater risks from conventional medical treatment.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 03:43, 15 September 2010 (UTC)


: Thanx Howard. However, Hahnemann did not simply define "homeopathy;" he created the methodology underlying this system of healing. Further, we would be more precise if we said that his "experiments" (not simply "observations"). Therefore, my suggestion would be:
: Certainly we should say somewhere in the article that there are also risks with other treatments, and that one of the arguments for homeopathy is that many of its remedies are low-risk. However, "it is widely recognized that there are much greater risks from conventional medical treatment" strikes me as something an encyclopedia cannot subscribe to without a lot more evidence.


: "Some of the principles of used in homeopathy has been utilized in some form for thousands of years. The term '''homeopathy''', its formal definition, and the methodology of this medical system derived from  German physician, [[Samuel Hahnemann]] (1755–1843). Hahnemann's experiments on human subjects discovered that a medicine will elicit a curative effect on people who exhibit the similar symptoms to which the substance causes in overdose.  Later, Hahnemann developed a specific pharmacological method, called potentization, that significantly reduces the size of the dose of the medicine while seemingly increasing its therapeutic effects.[[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 23:42, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
: In any case, I do not think a detailed discussion of risk issues belongs in the lede. I am inclined to thin the lede should raise the question, and in my opinion the current text does that adequately. [[User:Sandy Harris|Sandy Harris]] 04:12, 15 September 2010 (UTC)


::No problem. It was, I thought, essential, aside from anything else, to say explicitly that he was the first to use the term, and then explain his other work. Whether or not one believes in the paradigm, it is only fair to say, as you did, that he both defined "homeopathy" and "potentization". Paracelsus made some observations and connections, but it was Hahnemann that defined an actual system. Is there any serious argument that we are not working from Hahnemann's definitions in this article? We may have arguments about efficacy and other matters, but, up to a couple of days ago, there didn't seem to be much disagreement about the starting point.
::I agree that a detailed discussion is out of place in the lede. If I may, I'll offer a fairly well-established risk of using homeopathic therapy as a first resort: [[myocardial infarction]] (heart attack). Assuming there are no contraindications to thrombolytic therapy, the window for optimal benefit from thrombolysis is 3-6 hours after onset, with declining benefit out to 12 hours. Thrombolysis can reverse the damage to the heart muscle if done within the window. I can cite any number of conditions where death can occur in hours or days  without definitive therapy--tetanus is one. Of course, the best treatment for tetanus is prevention -- and TDAP and other immunizations are not designed by the principle of similars.


::While some may want to bring other ideas in CAM into this article, it's fair to say that several people have been struggling for precision for months, and, until there is consensus there, insistence that alternate perspectives need to be considered now, in this article, takes us back to a starting point. It may well be that some of the alternative perspective ideas could go into the [[complementary and alternative medicine]], but this article is about a specific system. Even in the CAM article, the CZ way to do things is building on what is already there, or, if one really wants to tear apart what is done, either reaching a  consensus that is needed, or waiting until it's fairly obvious no one is concerned with changes. I have torn apart articles, but I gave plenty of warning I was doing so. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 23:55, 11 December 2008 (UTC)
::It's one thing to say that homeopathic remedies might be lower-risk in non-emergent situations, but that isn't what is being said. Of course, one could also say "it is widely recognized that there are much greater benefits, in serious conditions, from appropriate conventional therapy."  No, appropriate conventional therapy does not, as been charged, extend to antibiotics for uncomplicated otitis media. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 04:38, 15 September 2010 (UTC)


:::We need to mention Paracelsus in a way that doesn't diminish the importance of Hahnemann.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 10:46, 12 December 2008 (UTC)
:::In due respect, no one (!) has said or suggested that homeopathic medicines should be a treatment of first resort for heart attacks.  THIS is what I mean by my concern for your tendency to create fights/arguments.  Let's both avoid creating straw men.  That said, I agree with Sandy that the lede should not have a detailed discussion of risks issues, though I would think that we might all agree that it is widely recognized that homeopathic medicines themselves are "basically safe."  Also, can I ask us all to try to avoid inserting our own comments within the comments of other writers because it makes it challenging for people to determine who is saying what.  Thanx. [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 16:51, 19 September 2010 (UTC)


== MCI ==
::::If it's alternative medicine, then it is the first resort. If it's complementary medicine, then there should be guidelines for the scope of practice of homeopathy. In the past, however, Ramanand has said homeopathy should be a first reatment for all manner of conditions.  There was an extensive argument about acute asthmatic attacks, which, as I remember,


I'm providing a ref to the Medical Council of India web-site to show that the Dept. of AYUSH is a separate entity.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 11:37, 12 December 2008 (UTC)
::::I am not creating a straw man. Please document when homeopathy should not be the treatment of first resort. Otherwise, I'll assume alternative medicine with no limitations.  


== Potency/Dilution ==
::::Let me clarify my position. I would tend to say that homeopathic medications, themselves, are basically safe. I am very concerned that homeopa<u>thy</u>, as a system of treatment, can be as deadly dangerous as a non-surgeon trying an advanced surgical procedure. You have yet to give information that documents what limitations homeopaths accept.


I've started putting together a table at [[Homeopathy/Catalogs]].  However, I'm not sure which are the standard potencies that are used. I added LM as 1LM 2LM and 3LM just as experimentation but maybe 1LM (or just LM?) is the only one that is in standard usage?  I saw a few references to 10L, 20L and 50L, are these commonly used?  Are there others?  Some notes on the reasons for the different dilutions and their relationships would be interesting to our readers, I think. [[User:Chris Day|Chris Day]] 15:38, 12 December 2008 (UTC)
::::Please stop with the straw man accusations. I do not believe that any consensus is possible between alternative (i.e., not complementary) medicine and coventional medicine. Actually, I'd be far more likely to consult a shamanic healer than a homeopath, as there's a fair bit of documentation that shamans have a good understanding of psychosomatic medicine. I don't know what consensus could exist between someone that rejects the idea of treating the pathogens of infectious disease, and someone that has an understanding of modern microbiology. We, sir, are not on the same side and will not be. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 17:24, 19 September 2010 (UTC)


Those potencies are designated, 'L/1', 'L/2', 'L/3', 'L/4', 'L/5', 'L/6', etc., with 'L/3', 'L/6', 'L/9', 'L/12' being the most used.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 07:00, 13 December 2008 (UTC)
=== Rest of article ===
Further evidence of the strong POV and non-encyclopedic tone of this Draft is:


: In due respect, I have never seen reference to "L" potencies. I assume that you mean "LM" potencies"LM" refers to 50,000, and it refers to dilutions of 1:50,000 (instead of 1:10 or 1:100). [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 17:48, 13 December 2008 (UTC)
--under OVERVIEWThe first two sentences are “attack sentence. It is clearly inappropriate to provide critique of a subject before adequately describing it FIRST.  Those sentences must be removed or placed elsewhere.


==Reference Integrity==
: I'd say at least the entire first paragraph and probably the whole "Overview" section should be deleted. None of it is real overview of the field. [[User:Sandy Harris|Sandy Harris]] 03:50, 14 September 2010 (UTC)  
A reference from an Indian Government site states that homeopathy is recognised as one of the Indian 'National Systems of Medicine'. Another contributor is recverting this to 'Alternative Systems of Medicine'. The issue is simple - what does the reference say? it says National not Alternative. So please, either find a reference which says something different, or else leave this alone, but do not make a lie of the reference by changing the wording to be inconsistent with what the reference says. '''This rule is absolute - never change the wording of a directly referenced statement in a way that makes it inconsistent with what the reference says.'''[[User:Gareth Leng|Gareth Leng]] 16:23, 12 December 2008 (UTC)


::Please check your email. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 16:52, 12 December 2008 (UTC)
:: I agree with Sandy. There is no need for this "Overview" section, though I do believe that we need to place some of this information about the status and popularity of homeopathy in a section "Homeopathy in Practice."  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 15:45, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


:::If some aspect of this continues, it would be nice to know, briefly, what India means by "national system" (traditionally Indian, such as ayurvedic?), and where conventional medicine fits. An article, comparable to [[National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine]], for [[Indian National Systems of Medicine]] could be a nice addition to CZ. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 19:19, 12 December 2008 (UTC)
-- under OVERVIEW: Some sentences here are just confusing, especially this one and especially its last phrase: They are interested too in why some studies appear to have positive outcomes—do these reflect real efficacy, or can they be accounted for by flaws in study design or in statistical analysis, or "publication bias"—the tendency for small studies with chance positive outcomes to be published while studies with negative or inconclusive outcomes are not.


::::The ref mentioned is the official web-site, so I don't think I can find a 'better' ref. There is a mention of, 'these complementary alternative systems of therapeutics' at the end of that page, so I hope you can look into it. You (Gareth) and possibly Dana should correct that.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 07:20, 13 December 2008 (UTC)
-- under HISTORICAL ORIGINS, it is confusing and surprising how or why Paracelsus was described as an “astrologer.”  This field was not a primary area of his contributions.  Just as the bio for Isaac Newton does not describe him as an astrologer, even though he actually wrote more on THIS subject than on mechanistic physics, we editors here know that Newton’s primary contributions to the modern-day have nothing to do with astrology. Needless to say, people here who want homeopathy to sound “quackish” tend to provide this biased information.


:::::Here's what I am reading from [http://indianmedicine.nic.in/html/homoeopathy/homoe.htm], with <u>emphasis</u>. "In 1948, the Committee by Planning Commission in 1951 and the Homoeopathic Pharmacopoeia Committee in 1962 testify to this. At the instance of the recommendation of these Committees, the Government of India have accepted Homoeopathy as one of the <u>national System of Medicine</u> and started releasing funds for its development"  A different sentence says "Homoeopathy in India enjoys Government support along with the other systems of medicine because Government is of the view that presence of all these <u>complementary alternative systems of therapeutics</u> offers a much wider spectrum of curative medicine than is available in any other country.
-- under HISTORICAL ORIGINS: Inaccurate information has been provided about the present status of the word “allopathy.”  There is a long AND significant modern-day usage of this term by conventional medical organizations, medical schools, and state and national governments.  Evidence for this is at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Allopathic_medicine (see “Hopping's huge list of links). Clearly, the term “allopathy” is still in extremely common usage, and it is simply inaccurate to say that it isn’t.  In this light, Osler’s quote has no meaning here, though it may have a place in the article on “allopathy.


:::::I can see this as confusing. The home page of this section says that"The Department of Ayurveda, Yoga & Naturopathy, Unani, Siddha and Homoeopathy (AYUSH) was established as Department of Indian Systems of Medicines and Homoeopathy (ISM & H)". 
-- under THE LAW OF SIMILARS: As much as I like the subject of “hormesis,” I do not associate its application with the law of similars nor do I know any reference to that. As such, the word “hormesis” has no place in THIS section. We could replace this word, hormesis, with the word “pheromones” because these substances are known to have a powerful effect in extremely small doses AND it is widely known that pheromones from one species are only sensed by those of a “similar” species.
:::::*The first direct quote says "homeopathy is one of the <u>national systems of medicine</u>." It doesn't say the national systems are alternative, or even what the systems may be.
:::::*The second sentence includes "Government is of the view that presence of all these <u>complementary alternative systems of therapeutics</u>" It doesn't use the word "national" with "alternative", although they are on the same page
:::::*Nowhere on either page is any mention of conventional medicine.
:::::So, I agree that the reference never calls homeopathy an "alternative", but rather a "national", system of medicine. The reference does say that homeopathy is among a recognized set of CAM, but doesn't use the word "national" Putting the two sentences together, one can infer homeopathy is a national systems and the national systems, which do not mention conventional medicine at all, are complementary and alternative. In other words, it never explicitly calls homeopathy one of the alternative systems of medicine, but I can see how one could infer it from the text.  "National" does seem the only phrasing that can be supported with a direct quote, although it can be inferred, but not quoted, that homeopathy is one of the government-recognized systems of medicine.


:::::Could everyone restate what this comment and reference are trying to establish?  I think it's fair to say that a branch of the Indian government recognizes homeopathy as an established method of care, and it is of the national standards. The specific department, like the U.S. NCCAM, is only concerned with alternative medicine.  The reference never explicitly calls homeopathy an alternative system of medicine, but it suggests that it is. It's just not a site that supports the "alternative system of medicine" as a direct quote.[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 10:41, 13 December 2008 (UTC)
-- under CLINICAL TRIALS TESTING THE EFFICACY…
There are many sentences and paragraphs here that I could recommend changes, but I will emphasize those that are most important or most incorrect:


== badly worded sentence in lede paragraph that can lead to confusion ==
I recommend removal of the following short paragraph & its accompanying quote. 


The third sentence: "Although homeopathy is practiced by medical doctors, other health professionals, and consumers in virtually every country in the world, homeopathy is not accepted by the majority of mainstream medical doctors or conventional scientists today." is badly worded and potentially confusing.
::While many of these have indicated positive effects, generally, trials that are larger high-quality trials have tended to show little or no statistically significant effects, as was concluded by the authors of the second Lancet study cited above when they re-analyzed these trials.  
:: “There is increasing evidence that more rigorous trials tend to yield less optimistic results than trials with less precautions against bias.”[98]


It first says that "homeopathy is practiced by medical doctors", then goes on to say that it "is not accepted by the majority of mainstream medical doctors". This makes the reader say, "Whuuuh?"
My explanation:  First, the quote does not verify the sentence it is supposed to substantiate.  Second, the article it quotes also asserts that it is a general finding in ALL clinical research that the higher quality trials tend to show less positive results.  Third, the fact of the matter is that there are many high quality trials published in “high impact” journals that have shown statistically significant effects, including the four trials by Reilly, et al, the four trials on the treatment of influenza using Oscillococcinum, and the three trials on childhood diarrhea by Jacobs, et al.


The easiest solution is to rewrite the first part to say "homeopathy is practiced by some medical doctors" by adding the word "some". If, of course, this is what the sentence actually intends to say. Since I don't think that pure homeopaths are called "medical doctors", I *suppose* this is the intended meaning. If not, then the entire sentence should be clarified by rewriting. [[User:Hayford Peirce|Hayford Peirce]] 19:11, 12 December 2008 (UTC)
We need to be careful in our review of research to avoid skewing the facts with “fudge” words. For instance, one could say that the “collective evidence” of the thousands of studies conducted by Thomas Edison was that electricity was not possible (because only ONE experiment in 1,000+ worked)


:I agree, HayfordThat entire paragraph seems repetativeWe are going to lose most readers by the second paragraphIt needs consolidating. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 03:23, 13 December 2008 (UTC)
The challenge that we have in describing the efficacy (or lack of it) using homeopathic medicines is that we have to evaluate internal validity (how “high quality” were the trials?) AND external validity (is the specific medicine tested commonly used by homeopaths to treat people with that specific condition?)Skeptics of homeopathy tend to evaluate the internal validity issues and totally ignore the external validity issues…and BOTH are essentialTo ignore external validity is akin to saying that antibiotics do not work for infections because the “collective weight” of studies on viral, fungal, and bacterial infection shows that these drugs do not work for this common group of diseasesGet it?


::Good edit[[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 17:43, 13 December 2008 (UTC)
:No. I don't get it, because I can demonstrate, ''in vivo'' and ''in vitro'', that antibiotics do work for viral, fungal and bacterial infectionsThis is hand-waving and hardly encyclopedic.


==Matters arising==
:I have repeatedly challenged you to respond to why homeopaths seem uninterested in the sort of trials used for customized pharmacogenomic medicine, which do have internal and external validity, and never have gotten an answer. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 04:25, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


First of all, this page is too long, can 'the page's owner' archive some of it, please?
:: I am surprised and even a bit shocked to hear your assertion that antibiotics are effective for viral and fungal infections, but I have no interest in arguing with you about these subjects here, though these strange assertions may influence your credibility with others.  I take much more seriously your unfounded assertion that homeopaths are not interested in research that has internal and external validity.  What is your evidence here?


Secondly, Dana, my apologies for misstating your gender, a false assumption about the name 'Dana'.
:::Shocked? Now, if you are holding to the generally obsolete assertion that antibiotics are purely natural products, that's one thing. Let's see...viral? Neuraminidase inhibitors for influenza (as well as the older amantadine and rimantidine), ribavirin for Lassa fever and possibly other hemorrhagic fevers, protease inhibitors (as part of HAART) in lowering HIV levels...well, interferons might or might not be considered antibiotics, but have distinct roles in treating viral diseases. Fungal? Amphotericin B (amphotericin B lipid complex, amphotericin B cholesteryl sulfate, and liposomal amphotericin B); the conazole series; griseofulvin; flucytosine -- and that's not considering topical-only agents. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 17:07, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


Third, please stop misstating my actions - I have not reverted any edits. I have argued a case for the inclusion of Paracelsus in the history of homeopathy, and provided links and evidence for this. Your constant assertions of 'reverts' are factually incorrect, please acknowledge this here.
::::Howard, you're missing my point here. My point is that one must be careful using the term "weight of evidence" because such terms group together various disparate treatments for various disparate conditions.  Although I used the term "antibiotics," perhaps I should have used a name of a specific antibiotic, thereby showing that it may be effective for one type of infection but not for "all types" of infection.  Likewise, testing homeopathic Arnica for one ailment may prove efficacious, but testing it for two other ailments might show that it is ineffective. One should not say that the "weight of evidence" is that Arnica is not effective.  Instead, it is more accurate to say that Arnica is effective one condition but ineffective for two others.  Get it now?  I hope so...


It is a matter of easily verifed fact that 'some people' consider Paracelsus to be the 'Father of Homeopathy'. Here is another such 'person':
::::My intention is not to "fight."  My intention is for us to work together to provide verifable accuracy.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 22:37, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


http://www.angelfire.com/in4/alchemy2084/paracelsus.html
:::::Now I am confused. When you challenged fungi and viruses, it seemed you were challenging the existence of antimicrobial agents (a better term than antibiotic) for those organisms. I gave counterexamples.  


Robert Coon, the author in this case, is what we might call an 'unreliable source' - except in one thing - he knows his own opinion. He is a 'lectureer' in homeopathy, and he thinks that Paracelsus is the Father of ... am I making a point clear?
::::No person with reasonable competence in [[infectious disease]] suggests there exists Panaceamycin, good for everything, any more than, presumably, Arnica is good for everything. Antimicrobial agents have reasonably well defined spectra, but, since they are directed against mutable living organisms, any competent hospital has a table ("antibiotogram") of the preferred agents for community-acquired and hospital-acquired infections ''in that locality''.  


I am open to the idea that the page would be 'overstating' his claim, if we used the formulation I first of all offered, but my statement is NOT factually incorrect. The ommission of Paracelsus reflects no credit on the way this page has been constructed and debate handled.
::::Now, does the "weight of evidence" support appropriate antibiotic use? Yes! "Appropriate" does not include using antibiotics for self-limiting conditions unlikely to be affected by any antibiotic. Appropriate means considering the overall clinical picture -- sounds like the argument you make about syndromes -- such as not using penicillin G for exquisitely penicillin-sensitive streptococci, if the culture shows coinfection with [[Staphylococcus aureus]] or other penicillinase-secreting organism. One has to consider potential development of resistance, as well as the practical means of administration--if there is no one qualified to inject a parenteral antibiotic in home care, the antibiotic is irrelevant no matter how effective it may be against the organism. If there's a choice in a patient with a hearing loss, you avoid the especially ototoxic aminoglycosides.  


Howard has already been 'corrected' in his attempts to assign 'ownership' of pages, I'm surprised to see him still doing it. However, that is for others to clarify.
::::Incidentally, I was just scratching the cognitive process in determining how to treat an infection. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 03:03, 15 September 2010 (UTC)


Gareth makes an interesting point about the abuse of editing powers above - of course the quote cannot be modified. Why was the response put in an email? What is going on here? Much of the world considers homeopathic medicine to be 'real' medicine, I understand (without being there at the time, so 'some' may dispute it) that Gandhi said this:
:: Just as doing double-blind and placebo controlled research testing surgical procedures have their methodological and ethical challenges, research on homeopathy has to be sensitive to the method itself.  You cannot just test a homeopathic medicine and its effects on a bacteria in a petrie dish, nor can I test acupuncture by putting a needle in a petric dish full of bacteria.  You've been told this many times in the past, and yet, you repeatedly feign ignorance about homeopathy and homeopathic research.  Please...you're a smart guy. Let's discuss research that does exist.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 15:59, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


"Homeopathy cures a larger percentage of cases than any other method of treatment and is beyond doubt safer, more economical and a most complete complete medical science."
:::I repeat: there are usable methods that have been described for pharmacogenetic medicine. Let the clinician diagnose the individual treatment and send orders for it to the pharmacy. The pharmacy breaks the blinding code and dispenses either the ordered individual treatment or the control arm, the latter which may or may not be placebo. The safety committee monitors, and, assuming the study goes to completion, statistically evaluates the hypothesis that the experimental treatment arm is superior to control.


I've tried to make a modest contribution to this page and certainly the response is not impressive. My benchmarks are these:
:::Incidentally, the piece of laboratory glassware is a Petri dish. If, however, you are referring to bacterial sensitivity testing, production tends to be done with radiochemistry, radioimmune reactions, or immunofluorescence. Consider me dumb since I don't know I'm feigning ignorance about homeopathy. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 17:07, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


The page should reflect these:
:::"I've been told"...but by someone I find plausible? You have yet to answer my question about the cognitive process of a homeopathic session, claiming that only a homeopath can understand it, yet no medical discipline makes such a claim of inner mysteries. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 17:07, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
Homeopathy is a subject much larger than the  Western European 200 year old invention version ...
Paracelsus belongs 'somewhere'  in the 'true' history of homeopathy.


Here is a link to some well-founded comment on that. I suggest Dana incorporate some - or perhaps a Constable would confirm that I and others will be allowed to without having our entire contribution swiftly and indiscriminately deleted (as happened to me here originally) and followed up with inaccurate and ad hominem comments on the talk pages.
::::Howard, I am perfectly able to describe the cognitive process of a homeopath, but I don't think THAT has a place here.  I've told you this before (many times!), and yet, you repeated request it.  I'm writing this again because it seems that you don't want to remember.  Sadly, you consistently seem to want to pick a fight, and you make these strange claims about homeopathy and homeopaths without evidence.  To me, it just seems that you have a chip on the shoulder.  I have no problems with you making verifiable statements or asking questions, but I do have a problem with you creating boogey-men when none exist.


I still believe we can work together on this topic! The page is NOT at a 'final stage', it is woefully lop-sided and and much needs to be done. Recently, despite all that is said above, the page has made progress - hasn't it? [[User:Martin Cohen|Martin Cohen]] 22:06, 12 December 2008 (UTC)'
:::: I will say this:  homeopaths usually prescribe their medicines for the overall "syndrome" of the patient, not just their "disease." [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 22:46, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


:Hi Martin, you "own' this page!  Just cut and paste the sections that you want to archive into [http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Talk:Homeopathy/Archive_8 this page].  You can do this any time you like.  Just remember to keep active sections on this page[[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 03:32, 13 December 2008 (UTC)
:::::I keep repeating it because you keep refusing to answer it, which I remember very well. Apparently, homeopathy is unique among healing arts and health sciences in not addressing cognition in practitioners.  


==More on Paracelsus ==
:::::I suppose that if I can't do better than century-old immunology and pronouncements that regardless of the molecular pharmacology that went into developing a drug, our old buddy similars ''might'' be the real explanation.


"A text on pharmacology in nursing credits Paracelsus with exerting “a profound influence upon the medical beliefs of his time and of succeeding centuries” (Bergersen and Goth, 1979). In Remington’s Pharmaceutical Sciences, Higby (1990) lauds Paracelsus for “sparking the growth of the modern pharmaceutical sciences.” Countless textbooks, handbooks, encyclopedias and dictionaries (general and special), and monographs give him similar credit. Other sources refer to him as the “Father of Toxicology.” Furthermore, his name appears as a significant figure among voluminous numbers of works on homeopathy, natural medicine, alternative medicine, and botanical studies. A Web-based Paracelsus mailing list is part of a “health web system,” and the Paracelsus Healthcare Corporation runs the Bledsoe County General Hospital of Pineville, Tennessee."
:::::Sadly, you consistently want to pick a fight with anyone who doesn't regard homeopathy as the greatest thing for health. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 23:14, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


from http://www.mindfully.org/Pesticide/Paracelsus-Dose-ToxicologyOct01.htm
--Under GOVERNMENT AND INSTITUTIONAL…
-- If we choose to include reference to the Great Britain’s House of Commons’ Science and Technology’s report on homeopathy, we have to make it clear that this report was voted on by an extremely small minority of its members.  Of the 14 members, 10 did not consider this issue worthy of voting.  Ultimately, a “majority” of only THREE members voted for this anti-homeopathy report. Of these 3 votes, two members were so new to the Committee that they did not attend a single hearing on the subject of homeopathy. The third vote for the “report” came from Evan Harris, a vitriolic antagonist to homeopathy who was not re-elected this year, losing to a 20-something year old political neophyte.  Finally, because this report was “advisory” only in nature, the health minister overruled it and didn’t accept its conclusions.  If anyone wants to make reference to THIS report, we have to add these important facts.  I personally suggest that we do not cover this complicated and inconclusive decisions.


[[User:Martin Cohen|Martin Cohen]] 22:08, 12 December 2008 (UTC)
It should also be noted that whoever wrote the above was obviously also aware of these facts and choose not to present them.  This type of biased reporting should not have a voice here.  Let’s strive for more encyclopedic objectivity. 
[[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 01:21, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


:There is no question that Paracelsus is a major historical figure in medicine. Paracelsus belongs in any history of medicine article that covers his era.
:Repeated defenses of homeopathy, with nothing more than supposition and coincidences, don't belong here either. In my opinion, Mr. Ullman, you will not regard anything short of an article that gives homeopathy as much credibility as conventional medicine as acceptable -- and that, sir, is a promo. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 04:25, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


:This is not a general article on the history of medicine. It is on the specific subject of homeopathy. Every available reference says that Samuel Hahnemann created the word, definition, and basic methodology. While it may be in the parthenogenetic sense, that makes him the father of homeopathy. Unless you can find a source that Hahnemann specifically said his methodology is built on that of Paracelsus, there is no more justification for saying he is the father of homeopathy than was Hippocrates, Galen, Aristotle, or Bucephalus.  
===Logical fallacies===
Take the proposed statement "Advocates assert that the homeopathic “principle of similars” is, in part, the basis for modern day immunizations, allergy treatments, and select other conventional treatments (ie, the use of Ritalin and other amphetamine-like drugs used to treat hyperactive children), while critics have compared it to
sympathetic magic. "


:Further, a Healing Arts editor has made, I believe, an editorial ruling on fact, under CZ rules, that Paracelsus was not the father of homeopathy. Again under CZ rules, that ruling stands, unless it is overruled by at least two Workgroup-specific Editors, the Editorial Council, or the Editor-in-Chief. These rules are in existence precisely to stop the sort of endless content arguments that characterize Wikipedia. I agree with Dana on very little, but, as an Editor in other workgroups and as secretary of the Editorial Council, he seems to have made a straightforward ruling with which I agree. Gareth Lang is the other active Editor in this article; you may ask him as well, but I doubt you are goig to get a different answer.  
If anyone used the principle of similars to plan these treatments, there might be a case. I sincerely doubt, however, that this was ever done; the advocates making after-the-fact, observational rather than molecular, correlations that are extremely dubious.  Take a modern immunization, especially an acellular one -- it is designed on a molecular basis to produce desired immunoglobulins and other specific substances; similars were not involved in the design. It's rather hard to say that "similars" is a ''better'' explanation than what the molecular pharmacologists intended, and can demonstrate.


:If necessary, that ruling can be enforced, by the Constabulary. May I suggest that you drop the Paracelsus argument before enforcement measures are taken? I'd note that this is a very difficult article for reaching consensus, and the Paracelsus argument is a tangent from several months of work. If anything, people are trying to reduce the article size, putting, again by CZ policy, some materials into subarticles. Please try to understand the rules and customs of this community and not try to substitute your own. If there are policy issues with which you disagree, you may variously address them to the Editor-in-Chief, the Editorial Council, or discuss them on the Forums.
Are there homeopathic provings that demonstrate that large doses of cromolyns cause basophil and mast cell degranulation? If not, the molecular explanation that they desensitize the granules, and in turn block the release of histamine and other inflammatory messengers, is a much better shave with Occam's Razor.  


:This is a talk page for Homeopathy. An authorized Editor has ruled that Paracelsus is not within its scope. Further argument about Paracelsus is not appropriate here. Is there anything ambiguous about that? [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 22:41, 12 December 2008 (UTC)
I hope we do not have as lengthy a debate on the Tooth Fairy, especially from advocates that are America's leading spokesman for tooth fairies and thus have a financial conflict of interest. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 01:57, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


::We need to mention Paracelsus in a way that doesn't diminish the importance of Hahnemann.[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 07:50, 13 December 2008 (UTC)
:Just to throw yet another bit of reality, the use of amphetamine-like drugs, as well as non-amphetamine drugs such as Strattera, for attention deficit disorder &mdash; not limited to children &mdash; and not discussing other psychotropic drugs is, to put it mildly, showing selection bias. There's as much evidence of neurotransmitter effects than of "similars". Further, if one were to generalize to other psychotropic drugs, one couldn't use the principles of similars to produce hypomania in a normal control.  It has repeatedly been demonstrated that lithium carbonate, for example, is not euphoriant. In high doses, it's a depressant -- remarkably so, since the subject will be dead. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 04:25, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


:: I'd like a look at this by Constables, then. Not on the claim Howard has just unhelpfully rehearsed despite my long explanation to the contrary just above, but on the 'actual' issue:
:: We cite in this article a quote from Emil Adolph von Behring (the "father of immunology") who asserts, "In spite of all scientific speculations and experiments regarding smallpox vaccination, Jenner’s discovery remained an erratic blocking medicine, till the biochemically thinking Pasteur, devoid of all medical classroom knowledge, traced the origin of this therapeutic block to a principle which cannot better be characterized than by Hahnemann’s word: homeopathic."  Whether physicians today (or yesterday) refuse to believe that the "principle of similars" is utilized in medicine, it still can be asserted that they are consciously or subconsciously utilizing it. This is NOT to say that ALL drugs are prescribed by this principle (Howard creates a straw man argument with his reference to lithium carbonate).  Further, just because there are other explanations for how or why Ritalin works does not take away the fact that the "similars" principle may also be at play.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 16:14, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


I think the Homeopathy page should include Paracelsus, who 'some' people consider to have had a major influence on the subject. I have given a couple of explicit examples and references to indicate this, I think it would be fair to say that Ramanand and Pierre have supported the notion (from their more expert perspectives) that Paracelsus is part of the history of homeopathy, and that Dana himself has allowed a mention on the page. Yet Howard is stating  - again - as a 'rule':
:::Ah yes. von Behring. 1901 Nobel Prize for 19th century work. Got some authoritative immunology less than a century old?  Maybe someone that knew about immunoglobulins?


"This is a talk page for Homeopathy. An authorized Editor has ruled that Paracelsus is not within its scope. Further argument about Paracelsus is not appropriate here."
:::"It can be asserted" and "just because there are other explanations" doesn't support similars, any more than the Illuminati ''might'' be responsible for all evil in international relations. "Might" isn't encyclopedic.


If this statement is left unaddressed, I fear it undermines the basic principles of  CZ.  
:::Actually, I prefer the wicker man to the straw man.  


THREE notes:
:::I'm disgusted, but I will not give up because the integrity of CZ means something to me. To stop responding to handwaving would be to give in to the stamina of homeopathic advocates.


1. The original edit offering 'Paracelsus IS the Father of Homeopathy' has been amended, willingly, by me, as indicated above - it is a view held by some, and can be argued for, but the'decision' of Dana and others here has been accepted and no one is arguing that that phrase should be used. It's repetition by Dana and Howard is misleading and seems to be intended as a 'strawman' tactic.
:::You were the one that brought up various drugs. I added lithium carbonate as one example. How is it a straw man?  In therapeutic doses, it has no effect on non-hypomanic patients. Easy to call things straw men when you don't like them, and drop back to "it can be asserted." The capability of assertion does not make for encyclopedic quality. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 17:16, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


2. The current text on the page (as edited by the major contributors to this page) now INCLUDES  a reference to the role of Paracelsus, which in 'content' terms, seems satisfactory to me. However, Howard's statement attempts to set a precedent that would exclude such adjustments.
===Regarding 'point of view'===


3. I also note the unhelpful indeed aggressive comments added to my own talk page complaining about a page I have started and wish to have linked to this one. The 'theories of ' page is at a very early stage, but is  intended, as I have again labororiously indicated, to allow space for some of the more general 'philosophical'  issues that 'alternative medicine' raises, and are in my view (here speaking as a philosophy editor) inadequately addressed 'thus far' here. Howard seems, in fact, to be looking for confrontation, not consensus. I raised this with him before and I hoped to avoid this conclusion.
No "point-of-view" disparagement required for conclusions/inferences drawn from science. Any such disparagement itself reflects "point-of-view". The lede as it reads now reflects medical science's judgment of homeopathy. Personally, as a scientist, I consider an open mind a virtue, but I try not to have it so open my skeptical inquirer falls out. [[User:Anthony.Sebastian|Anthony.Sebastian]] 03:16, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


'''Constable Response:'''  The question of Paracelsus is a content decision for which there are remedies through the editorial and author conflict resolution processes.  I suggest that everyone review them.  They are there to allow articles to progress through dissagreements such as these.  Constables remain at arms length from these decisions for good reason.  There is nothing that asks or allows a constable to stop a citizen from making comments on article or user talk pages so long as they are professional.  However, it can become an issue if metadiscussions spread from one article page to another as they become inflammatory and this gets dangerously close to unprofessional behavior.  We cannot solve professional disputes on Citizendium, we only report them.  Again, use your workgroups. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 16:09, 13 December 2008 (UTC)
:As I've suggested, we have to face the issue that the two advocates appear not to want the general judgment to appear, unless it is immediately accompanied by a Seinfeld-like "but that's OK, and homeopathy works." [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 04:25, 14 September 2010 (UTC)


== "if it doesn't work" is back again ==
== Biology-Health Sciences Editor ruling needed ==


I see that this sentence has once again been edited to read: "Some physicians, however, still maintain that even benign homeopathic treatment is relatively unsafe, because it might delay effective, conventional medical treatment, if it doesn't work."
Immunology clearly falls into these fields, ''not'' Healing Arts. I contend that it is ludicrous for this article to be using von Behring as a source of authority. It's fair enough to mention a 1901 Nobel Prize winner in a historic context, but a ruling is needed if his statements on homeopathy and immunotherapy can be used as substantiation for plausible modes of immune response.  Immunology has progressed a bit in over a century.


I thought it had been agreed, or possibly even ordered, that "if it doesn't work." would no longer be attached. (In any case, if it *is* permitted to stand, it should be rewritten as "does not" rather than "doesn't". [[User:Hayford Peirce|Hayford Peirce]] 19:05, 13 December 2008 (UTC)
It's futile to argue this with Mr. Ullman, and I believe we have enough relevant Editors to settle this point. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 18:35, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
:Agreed (sorry for butting in). ([[User:Chunbum Park|Chunbum Park]] 09:56, 15 September 2010 (UTC))
::Don't feel sorry, Chunbum, your particpation and opinion is a valued part of the decision process.
::This appears to be a bigger issue than homeopathy.  It appears that you are asking to limit an editor on an article.  We don't have a mechanism for that.  We've really left that to the devices of other editors to challenge unusual statements by other editors.  I would expect that even Dana would appreciate a immunologist's input, but regardless, they'd both still need resources to cite. I'm not sure that a Health Sciences Editor can overrule a Healing Arts editor on an article, but he can certainly challenge anything that counters his beliefs. I would think the EC or EiC would have to rule on something like that.  Of course, that would be the Managing Editor should the new charter take effect. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 12:59, 15 September 2010 (UTC)
:::That's much what I was thinking. To take a parallel example relevant to Howard, the article on the [[Iraq War]] might, and in my view should, discuss the question of its legality. But I don't suppose the article is affiliated to the Law Workgroup. So what happens with a hypothetical conflict between, say, Howard and a law editor on that question? I think the new EC has to think about the whole system here, not just leave it to the ME to invent precedents. [[User:Peter Jackson|Peter Jackson]] 15:03, 15 September 2010 (UTC)
::::Perfect example, Peter.  The new charter should allow the new ME to make a decision on the fly based on ample input from everyone (especially editors) and then the EC can take its time to review the ME decision and either overrule it or support it.  Hopefully, that will develop a sort of "case law" that eventually develop into policy based on a democratically expert debated concepts rather than customary consensus. Meanwhile, authors will be able to move on to different content while the decision is reached elsewhere.  [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]]
 
(undent) All of you make good points, but the specific may be a little easier. If I were to state the problem in EC terms, it is that different disciplines acquire knowledge at different rates. Were this, for example, a Literature article, Oscar Wilde or G. B. Shaw's comments would be relevant. If this were aviation engineering, however, I think it is relatively obvious that Orville and Wilbur Wright's commentary would not be very relevant to an Airbus (most recent model) or Boeing 787 Dreamliner. While I've often wondered how a classic military genius such as Belisarius would do with airmobile forces, he'd have a bit of catching up.
 
Von Behring, and indeed Hahnemann, were giants in their time. Today, however, von Behring wouldn't know how to find  his way to the protein sequencer or the molecular visualization workstation.
 
The policy, therefore, might say that to cite an authority as more than a historic point, that authority has to be reasonably familiar with current concepts. It may be even faster now, but, a few years ago, based on MEDLINE growth, the amount of information in health sciences doubled every seven years. Some fields, such as molecular pharmacology, went from nonexistent to major disciplines.  There's not going to be a citation that "Von Behring is obsolete", but that's a reasonable inference.
 
Peter, I would be absolutely delighted to have an article on the legality of the Iraq War. The article is not now affiliated with law, or several other relevant workgroups, due to the three workgroup limit. In doing the main draft of these articles, I had quite enough to do with the "what" and "how" without getting into the just war theory or international law. I would be happy, over an appropriate beverage, to discuss what I personally consider to be vague language in the UN Charter. 
 
Unquestionably, Matt, workgroups need to be revised. I have been doing some experimentation with subgroups, but they are not a sole answer. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 17:19, 15 September 2010 (UTC)
 
: I think the word "ruling" in the section title is an error. Certainly ''comment'', or even ''contributions'', from those editors would be useful and (I assume) welcomed by all concerned, but I do not think they have the authority to ''rule'' here.
 
: The paragraph quoting von Behrig starts "Scientists and medical doctors today do not think that the principle of similars is generally true or useful, and they explain the efficacy of vaccination without referring to it. Physicians of the 19th century however did consider that the principle could be valuable." That strikes me as fair. Given that context-creating text, I see no objection to the von B quote.
 
: As I see it, there are serious issues with this article, and Howard is right about most of them. However, on this particular point, I see him as tilting at a windmill. [[User:Sandy Harris|Sandy Harris]] 02:52, 16 September 2010 (UTC)
 
:::One never knows...the windmills ''might'' be giants. Seriously, I really don't have a problem with historical quotes in historical contexts. Such contexts, though, would include both Osler's preference for 19th century homeopathy over 19th century allopathy, and his later statement that both allopathy (as used at the time) and homeopathy were both "cults" that needed to be replaced by scientific medicine.
 
:::Recent comments on this talk page, however:
:::<blockquote>Whether physicians today (or yesterday) refuse to believe that the "principle of similars" is utilized in medicine, it still can be asserted that they are consciously or subconsciously utilizing it. This is NOT to say that ALL drugs are prescribed by this principle (Howard creates a straw man argument with his reference to lithium carbonate). Further, just because there are other explanations for how or why Ritalin works does not take away the fact that the "similars" principle may also be at play. Dana Ullman 16:14, 14 September 2010 (UTC) </blockquote>
::: made me concerned that advocate(s) wanted to reintroduce the von B quote ''without'' the qualifiers, and suggesting that similars ''are'' the mechanism of medical immunization. That is not acceptable and is flatly wrong. I suspect that some of the molecular immunologists building acellular vaccines may never have heard of similars and certainly aren't designing with that principle, rather than protein structure-activity.
:::Lithium carbonate is hardly a straw man, as its activity would not be demonstrated in a proving on a non-hypomanic individual, only toxic effects in high doses.  When things demonstate exceptions to basic concepts such as similars and proving, they become significant negative data. "It can be asserted" is hardly encyclopedic, thinking of the classic assertion that if my aunt had testicles, she'd be my uncle.--[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 04:33, 17 September 2010 (UTC)
[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 04:26, 17 September 2010 (UTC)
 
== Followup on Anthony's comment about alternative medicine ==
 
While I agree with your addition, I wonder if it goes far enough. Complementary and alternative medicine, while often grouped together, are not the same. Alternative medicine, to use NCCAM's definition, is a ''substitute'' for conventional medicine, while complementary medicine can be [[integrative medicine|integrated]] with conventional medicine. Rather by definition, alternative medicine will not agree with conventional medicine, and never the twain shall meet.
 
It's not implausible that there ''could'' be complementary homeopathy, but I find it interesting that the article really doesn't address it. At best, there are arguments that homeopathy is superior to conventional methods for specific disorders. There's some hand-waving that conventional physicians use homeopathic remedies in their practice, but no discussion of the indications and rationale for doing so.  In other articles, there is discussion of the complemntary use of acupuncture, chiropractic, etc.
 
Whether or not homeopathy is CAM rather than AM, this article overwhelmingly treats it as AM. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 21:50, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
 
:Howard, I took a long rest from this article, and it seems that you would really benefit from doing so too.  I realize that by saying this you may now want to edit more often than ever.  My concern is that you are beginning to lash out at me and at this subject in an extremely emotional way. It seems that you are no longer trying to create an encyclopedic article but one that pushes your POV which remain inadequately informed about this subject of homeopathy.  Heck, even when Dr. J sought to reach out to Sandy and be friendly, rather than adverserial, Sandy told him that he wasn't interested.  That's OK too...and Dr. J didn't seek to connect personally.  Let's not make this effort by Dr. J to be as "bad" as you've tried to make it.  [[User:Dana Ullman|Dana Ullman]] 22:54, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
 
::Well, gee. I've been discovered: my whole motivation is attacking homeopathy, and I '''never, ever''' contribute to anything else at Citizendium.  Obviously, [[New Delhi metallo-beta-lactamase-1 enzyme]] is just an attack on homeopathy, as is [[CZ: Pacific War Subgroup]], as is (quite friendly) collaboration on [[opportunistic encryption]].
 
::Why is this in a subsection where I was addressing the complementary and alternative aspects of homeopathy? That was hardly emotional. I neither need nor want your advice or concern on what I should do.
 
::It ''is'' adversarial. Deal with it. Mortality & Morbidity conferences, military After-Action Reviews, engineering design reviews, etc., benefit from an adversarial approach.
 
::As far as I can tell, your definition of "adequately informed" is to accept homeopathy. The Ormus article hurt Citizendium, and I am convinced that homeopathy does as well.  I do know that I have had people refuse to join CZ specifically due to the homeopathy article. I'll believe you want to be encyclopedic when I see you contribute to things other than a single issue.
 
::If I get extremely emotional about something, I tend to be more quiet, and perhaps smile a lot. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 23:07, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
 
== Encyclopedia Britannica Online: Homeopathy lede ==
 
Possibly of interest:
 
"Homeopathy"
 
"a system of therapeutics, notably popular in the 19th century, which was founded on the stated principle that “like cures like,” similia similibus curantur, and which prescribed for patients drugs or other treatments that would produce in healthy persons symptoms of the diseases being treated."
 
"This system of therapeutics based upon the “law of similars” was introduced in 1796 by the German physician Samuel Hahnemann. He claimed that a large dose of quinine, which had been widely used for the successful treatment of malaria, produced in him effects similar to the symptoms of malaria patients. He thus concluded that all diseases were best treated by drugs that produced in healthy persons effects similar to the symptoms of those diseases. He also undertook experiments with a variety of drugs in an effort to prove this. Hahnemann believed that large doses of drugs aggravate illness and that the efficacy of medicines thus increases with dilution. Accordingly, most homeopathists believed in the action of minute doses of medicine."
 
"To many patients and some physicians, homeopathy was a mild, welcome alternative to bleeding, purging, polypharmacy, and other heavy-handed therapies of the day. In the 20th century, however, homeopathy has been viewed with little favour and has been criticized for focusing on the symptoms rather than on the underlying causes of disease. Homeopathy still has some adherents, and there are a number of national and international societies, including the International Homoeopathic Medical League, headquartered in Bloemendaal, Neth."
 
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/270182/homeopathy
 
[[User:Anthony.Sebastian|Anthony.Sebastian]] 03:27, 16 September 2010 (UTC)
 
:The first two paragraphs, I hope, are not controversial. The talk page controversy, however, has significantly involved both homeopathic attempts to claim medical logic, as well as a broader assumption, by the homeopathy advocates, that homeopathy needs to be regarded as having equal credibility to conventional medicine.  Attempts to claim that the principle of similars is the underlying mechanism for medical treatments developed, or validated, using methods of molecular pharmacology fall under my first point. Closely coupled is the homeopathic argument that homeopathy mimics body defenses manifested as symptoms, when the actual defense is quite different than the symptom producing factor -- tetanus is a good example, where the defenses are immunoglobins that have no particular symptom-producing quality, but the symptoms of  spasticity and convulsions are caused ("indirectly") by the exotoxin of ''[[Clostridium tetani]]'' and can be lethal. The defenses neutralize the toxin, and, coupled with antibiotics and surgery, eradicate the source of the toxin.
 
:In other words, there's a refutation of molecular medical arguments, but no molecular explanation of how similars affect the body. Hand-waving about memory of water isn't on the same level as immune reactions that can be demonstrated ''in vitro'' and ''in vivo'', or structure-activity interactions with cellular receptors. --[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 23:12, 16 September 2010 (UTC)
 
== "Alternative Medicine and the Laws of Physics" ==
 
Of possible interest:
 
Alternative Medicine and the Laws of Physics
 
Robert L. Park
 
''Skeptical Inquirer'', Volume 21.5, September / October 1997
 
http://www.csicop.org/si/show/alternative_medicine_and_the_laws_of_physics/
 
[[User:Anthony.Sebastian|Anthony.Sebastian]] 03:59, 16 September 2010 (UTC)
:Having read the article I feel a neutral way of presenting homeopathy would be something like "it is a type of medicine supported by neither scientific reasoning nor data. that being said this is what homeopaths think: 1, 2, 3." ([[User:Chunbum Park|Chunbum Park]] 05:40, 16 September 2010 (UTC))
 
:: I think that overstates the case. Homeopathy is based on a system that includes reasoning which is at least pseudo-scientific. There is data, though much of it is of dubious quality; in particular, "data" is not the plural of "anecdote". I don't think your text above is neutral in any sense I'd recognise.
 
:: The current draft includes "the consensus of medical and scientific opinion is that homeopathy is unfounded." I think that is accurate, neutrally stated, and sufficiently direct.
 
:: That said, I do think we should link to highly critical articles such as that one, possibly the [http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Homeopathy rational wiki] page, and certainly the [http://xkcd.com/765/ lovely cartoon] they use. [[User:Sandy Harris|Sandy Harris]] 07:40, 16 September 2010 (UTC)
 
::: See rational wiki's article "Citizendium" first. [[User:Anthony.Sebastian|Anthony.Sebastian]] 03:57, 17 September 2010 (UTC)
 
== Suggest ending Main Article draft at end of lede ==
 
Let reader use Biblio to get further information. Concentrate on thorough Biblio subpage. 06:39, 17 September 2010 (UTC)
 
: I don't think that is an adequate approach for an encyclopedia. We want a reasonably detailed explanation here. That said, the article could likely be shortened significantly without losing anything valuable. [[User:Sandy Harris|Sandy Harris]] 12:14, 17 September 2010 (UTC)
 
::At home much resource cost that could be going into even copy edit of other articles, articles that deal with topics that are likely to have more serious users? I'd wager that a good part of the hit count on this article is due to people at other wikis looking for controversy.
 
::That being said, I'm not sure how feasible it is under present policy. Assume three Health Sciences and Biology Editors are willing to nominate the truncated approach for Approval. Healing Arts Editors say it is not Approvable.  It would be one thing for a Mathematics Editor to question approval for a cryptographic topic written by a computers person, but we've gotten through effective collaboration among, say, Computers, Mathematics, and Military. Health Sciences and Healing Arts, among the workgroups, are the only case where we have different workgroups for fundamentally different views on the same subject area. It's a bug, not a feature; we don't have separate-but-equal Religion and Atheism workgroups. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 15:53, 17 September 2010 (UTC)
 
== Definition ==
 
The current definition reads "System of alternative medicine that asserts — contrary to scientific  evidence — that substances known to cause specific syndromes of symptoms can also, in very low and specially prepared doses, help to cure people who are ill with a similar syndrome of symptoms." I think that is a moderately awful definition. The problems I see are:
: The "contrary to scientific evidence" bit, or similar text, has been added at least twice and reverted at least once. I don't think it belongs in the definition.
: "syndrome of symptoms" is used twice. That's ghastly stylistically, "syndrome" is a technical medical term that may not belong here, and in any case, I suspect "syndrome of symptoms" is redundant. What else could you have a syndrome of? Or does a syndrome include more than just symptoms?
My version would be: A system of alternate medicine based on the idea that substances known to cause particular combinations of symptoms can, in very low and specially prepared doses, help to cure people who are ill with similar symptoms.
(sig added later [[User:Sandy Harris|Sandy Harris]] 23:14, 17 September 2010 (UTC))
 
""Syndrome of sympoms", indeed, is ghastly. Unfortunately, it touches on a difference between homeopathic and current medical thinking that is as important as similars. Modern physicians look first for an etiological diagnosis: what is the cause of the patient's distress? (Note here that "symptom" is being used in a lay sense here -- there are differences of theory as well).  Homeopaths consider that the "disease model", not patient-centric, and often reject a causality-based approach. Their focus is on the products of the cause (in medical thinking) or the body wisdom expressing its defenses.
 
:A better wording would be welcome, but the rejection of etiologic thinking, and the focus on similars as a means of reducing symptoms, is fundamental. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 15:53, 17 September 2010 (UTC)
 
Sandy's version:
*A system of alternate medicine based on the idea that substances known to cause particular combinations of symptoms can, in very low and specially prepared doses, help to cure people who are ill with similar symptoms.
 
 
My understanding:
*A system of alternate medicine based on the idea that large dosages of substances known to cause particular combinations of symptoms in healthy individuals can, in very low and specially prepared doses, help to cure a person whose illness causes similar symptoms.
[[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 21:49, 17 September 2010 (UTC)
 
::I  am quite willing to be corrected here, but I think the idea of an illness that creates similar symptoms is still too close to an etiologic model of disease to be accepted by homeopaths. While I don't have better words, my sense is they would say the symptoms are produced by the "wisdom of the body" as "defenses" and the remedies strengthen the defenses. --[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 23:59, 17 September 2010 (UTC)
 
 
::: That could be the next sentence.
 
 
:::*A system of alternate medicine based on the idea that large dosages of substances known to cause particular combinations of symptoms in healthy individuals can, in very low and specially prepared doses, help to cure a person whose illness causes similar symptoms.  In essence, they believe that symptoms are produced by the "wisdom of the body" as "defenses" and homeopathic remedies are designed to strengthen those defenses.
 
:::[[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 03:22, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
 
::::Add: They do not use the disease model of conventional medicine, in which there is a disease rather than an individual set of symptoms, and treatment directed at a cause of that disease as it presents in multiple patients. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 03:29, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
:::::More work:
:::::*This contrasts with conventional medicine's "disease model" of treatment that looks to treat the disease process and therefore relieve the symptoms.
:::::I'm not sure that's totally true, though.  Many conventional treatments are directed at relieving symptoms, too.
:::::[[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 03:54, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
 
(edit conflict) (undent)
There's a different philosophy in symptomatic treatment. If I sprained my ankle badly enough to need surgical repair, the cause would be relevant to a conventional orthopedist who needs to work on the damaged structures. Otherwise, the exact ligament stretch might be known, but it's not of therapeutic benefit. Symptomatic pain relief is the first consideration -- yes, rehabilitation may focus on exact etiology, but, for the sake of argument, assume it's self-limiting.
 
Sometimes, as with uncomplicated childhood otitis media, even if it is bacterial, antibiotic therapy may not be justified. Presumably, though, the child can still get acetaminophen.
 
In both of the cases above, there was awareness of an etiology, but a choice to treat only symptoms. Palliative care is often largely but not exclusively symptomatic -- still, an etiology would be necessary for chemotherapy or radiotherapy to slow the growth of an incurable tumor.  Pain management, though, is symptomatic and even more important. Where does nursing care fit?
 
The homeopaths, however, appear to exclude the idea of treatment based on etiology, as opposed to symptom relief when the cause is either self-limiting or not treatable. I spend hours daily giving comfort care to my cat buddy, relatively little of which is directed at the cancer itself, but much more in nutrition, emotional support and wound care. Indeed, I am using some complementary medicine along with a lot more conventional things.  Homeopathic ideas of symptom-oriented remedies don't enter into it. --[[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 04:28, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
 
: I don't think either that long definitions are a good idea in general, or that the proposed "next sentences" are needed in this definition. In the article, certainly; in the lede, probably. However, the definition needs to be short and direct. In particular, it needs to be short enough to look reasonable when cited on a related articles page. [[User:Sandy Harris|Sandy Harris]] 04:46, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
 
::If the definition is to be short, then, I believe the rejection of etiology is far, far more significant to homeopathy than the better-known issues of small doses. It appears to me that Hahnemann's insight dealt with symptoms being the essential manifestation of health or not-health, and only ''then'' did he go to the idea of provings and similars. My understanding is that his using provings for malaria had to do with the symptom production of quinine.
 
:::Absolutely, I forgot that we were working on the definition!  You're right, Sandy. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 21:27, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
 
::I believe there's a comment on this page, from a homeopath, that homeopathic remedies are not always administered in homeopathic femtodoses.
 
::The rejection of etiology  is also key to much of the dispute with medicine, as I mentioned in terms of clinical trials. It is also, however, central to the medical rejection of some homeopathic approaches, such as the principal treatment for malaria being based on reducing ''Plasmodium'' parasites in the blood. Quinine remains a third-line drug for malaria, but its action in reducing fever and chills is due to its ability to suppress the parasites, not (in a medical view) what effects are caused by high doses of quinine. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 04:56, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
:::Quinine remains a third-line drug for malaria, but its action in reducing fever and chills is due to its ability to suppress the parasites, not (in a medical view) what effects are caused by high doses of quinine.
 
::::I think that's the point; it's not that homeopath's don't care about etiology, they just don't concern themselves with it.  If it causes the same symptoms in a normal person, then it's used to treat the person that has those same symptoms, regardless of the cause. As you say, they might contend that the plasmodium is not what causes the symptoms, rather the symptoms are the body's response to plasmodium. To them it doesn't matter. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 21:28, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
 
:::::As my grandmother might have said, ah-HAH! Admittedly, I'm taking the example of the worst form of malaria, but a patient presenting with the cerebral form of ''[[Plasmodium falciparum]]'' malaria may well die in 18 hours. In general, the standard of medical care would be [[artemisinin|artemisinin-based combination therapy]], with [[critical care]] support for effects such as  [[acute respiratory distress syndrome]] or [[disseminated intravascular coagulation]].
 
:::::Quinine, in substantial doses and '''in combination with''' doxycycline, tetracycline, or clindamycin, be lifesaving. If I were the patient, however, and someone offered me homeopathic oral doses of oral quinine, I'd prefer a lethal dose of barbiturates, or a large-caliber bullet to the back of the neck (messy but fast).
 
:::::Now, I'd have every respect for a ''complementary'' homeopath that suspected severe falciparum malaria, and immediately transferred the patient to medical care. Assuming such care were available, I'd regard an ''alternative'' practitioner as having, as the lawyers put it, ''depraved indifference for human life.''.  [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 22:02, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
:::::: I suspect the cerebral form would have different symptoms, therefore different remedies as well. A bullet is probably not one of them. ;-) [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 23:40, 19 September 2010 (UTC)
 
:::::::Are you doubting the efficacy of a .45 caliber ACP 254-grain round, which is lead in a hardly homeopathic dose?  Nevertheless, if I had cerebral P. falciparum malaria, I know that active medical treatment is still very iffy. Seriously, we have the problem of any validation here; I cannot imagine an ethics review board that would approve any treatment for such a life-threatening disease without overwhelming laboratory evidence for the control arm. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 22:21, 20 September 2010 (UTC)
 
===Sandy's edit to the definition===
...specifically "help to cure or prevent  illnesses involving similar symptoms." While a homeopath will have to review this, I don't think "illnesses involving similar symptoms" is really a homeopathic concept. They certainly object to "diseases with similar symptoms", and tend to reject "disease" as a medical conceit. The symptoms are signals of the body's defenses to be strengthened, not the effects of a causative factor. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 04:59, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
 
:I think you're splitting hairs, but, yes, let's hear from a homeopath on this. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 21:27, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
 
:Sandy's new definition is definitely an improvement. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 21:32, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
 
::Li'l hard pressed for time. I'm happy with Alexander's definition, but if you guys feel it needs to be simpler, I have a 'simpler definition', which would read:-<blockquote>(Homeopathy is) an alternative system of medicine, which stimulates the natural healing processes of the body (with the help of sub-physiological doses of a remedy, by using its rebound effect), to restore health (homeostasis) in a sick person.</blockquote>
:::The matter in brackets is optional.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 07:36, 19 September 2010 (UTC)
:::Note that it is '''alternative medicine''' and not '''alternate medicine'''.&mdash;[[User:Ramanand Jhingade|Ramanand Jhingade]] 07:44, 19 September 2010 (UTC)
 
::::Unfortunately, "rebound effect" is not a well-defined term, certainly in medicine, so should not be used in a definition unless it is well defined in an article of its own.  The alternate definition depends heavily on homeopathic terminology, such as "natural healing processes", as well as using homeostasis is far broader a context than is used in the biological sciences -- to say nothing amout emerging concepts such as [[allostasis]].
 
::::The proposed new definition also overemphasizes the aspect of small doses and does not address the apparent rejection, by homeopathy, of the idea of "disease". Instead, it speaks of "restoring health", without addressing the  meaning of the state of non-health.
 
:::Please confirm or correct the statement that homeopaths do not believe in the concept of disease, in the sense that disease has an etiologic cause and the cause needs to be corrected. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 08:30, 19 September 2010 (UTC)
 
::::I agree with Howard here, Ramanand, that your version introduces too many vague terms to be considered for use as a one sentence definition. [[User:D. Matt Innis|D. Matt Innis]] 23:44, 19 September 2010 (UTC)
 
What about <blockquote>A system of alternative medicine based on the idea of stimulating the body's natural healing processes by administering tiny doses of substances which, when given in large doses to healthy individuals, cause similar combinations of symptoms.</blockquote> I agree that Ramanand's definition has some problems, and I think the full version is too long, but it seems to me the point about stimulating natural defenses is central. [[User:Sandy Harris|Sandy Harris]] 03:07, 20 September 2010 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 16:21, 20 September 2010

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APPROVED Version 1.1

The Approval includes two copyedits [1] Hayford Peirce 19:13, 11 October 2009 (UTC)

I'm not sure how to add yet another archive and get things to show up properly in the header here. Could someone do so? Howard C. Berkowitz 19:22, 11 October 2009 (UTC)

Beginning with semi-lower-case editorial...

As a first step, I'm going to all footnotes that contain other than bibliographic material or definitions, and either moving the substantive text into the main article, or, in some cases, linking to a subarticle.

While it may be reasonable, in a printed book or journal, to have bottom-of-the-page notes, in this format, the content of the notes will not be seen unless the reader clicks on them. How many readers do that? In effect, the text is being hidden. Howard C. Berkowitz 19:37, 11 October 2009 (UTC)

A balanced blog post on the subject

can be found here. --Daniel Mietchen 09:21, 16 December 2009 (UTC)

I added a comment, as did Paul. Truly delightful, however, is

Personally, I would really like to see a homeopathic treatment for dehydration. You'd have to have a compound that causes dehydration, but what would you dilute it in? you can't dilute it in water or saline, because those will rehydrate, and in homeopathy, you have to CAUSE dehydration to cure it...but you can't having anything that CAUSES dehydration because it would have to be diluted to the point where none of the dehydrating agent remains...

It should be noted that some camping supply stores, in the same aisle as freeze-dried foods, offer cans of "dehydrated water". Ethical staff makes sure that new users understand the purpose of same. Howard C. Berkowitz 15:06, 16 December 2009 (UTC)


Howard, you gave the wrong link for Sympathetic magic. It's http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Sympathetic_magic And make sure the period at the end does not get connected to the link. Chris Day 15:26, 16 December 2009 (UTC)

That's a reasonable way to look at it, which is unusual for a blog. D. Matt Innis 18:43, 16 December 2009 (UTC)

Put it into the External Links. --Daniel Mietchen 19:27, 16 December 2009 (UTC)

Ramanand's changes

First, the word " most biased medical " is argumentative, does not fit the language of the lede, and is clearly advocacy.

The statement supporting homeopathy in the lede, even if the references were solid, belongs, stylistically, in a later section on the mechanisms of homeopathy. One reference is, as far as I can tell, from a Brazilian university with a site in, presumably, Portuguese, which I do not read. We generally don't use non-English references, especially when they are not clearly from peer-reviewed journals or otherwise reviewed sources.

The other reference is from Khuda-Bukhsh, whom, I believe, has been in the memory of water controversy, is a review of possible molecular mechanisms of action. On first glance, it's an interesting paper, but does not talk at all about efficacy — just how homeopathic remedies may work, if they work. It doesn't belong in the lede, although it's not unreasonable to use it as a reference in a later section.

Neither addition works where it is. The first is advocacy and non-neutral. --Howard C. Berkowitz 17:45, 7 January 2010 (UTC)

The use of "biased" is definitely adversarial. Chris Day 21:12, 7 January 2010 (UTC)
With regard to the rebuttal (it works, and we know how), I am loath to see this article head down the direction of he says, she says tit for tat. Chris Day 21:21, 7 January 2010 (UTC)
The whole article is full of oxymorons, containng both viewpoints, so I don't see anything wrong with what I've inserted, unless the critics' statement is also removed (about what scientists feel). I'm fine if the word biased is removed, if it seems adversarial. The Portuguese and French is only in the references section and shouldn't be a problem.—Ramanand Jhingade 10:28, 8 January 2010 (UTC)
Well, Ramanand, the general CZ, policy, especially in the Charter, is that articles don't equally present all views. They present the preponderance of the expert views, and, in this case, the experts are in health sciences; there isn't a unifying discipline among healing arts. Not all healing arts support homeopathy.
Everyone needs to Neutrally present all views. D. Matt Innis 02:31, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
The foreign language citations have been a problem in many other articles, not just here.
I think you mean contradictions or rather or challenges, not oxymorons. An oxymoron would be a "heroically large dose of a homeopathic simillum." An oxymoron is a contradiction in terms.
Sorry, I'm in favor of removing both additions. You will need to face the reality that the article will not be as pro-homeopathy as you want, just as others wish it weren't here at all. It's a compromise. --Howard C. Berkowitz 15:48, 8 January 2010 (UTC)
I applaud, encourage and appreciate collaborative efforts to work toward improvements, but I think this lead still needs significant work to add any substantial improvement to the approved version's lead. D. Matt Innis 02:28, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
I forgot to wish all of you a Happy (belated) New Year. The presently approved article's Lead isn't 'neutal' at the moment. It should either explain homeopathy plainly or if y'all want criticism in the Lead, it should contain both viewpoints. Where's Dana, by the way, in Germany again?—Ramanand Jhingade 09:14, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
Happy New Year to you, too! Please let me know where you think the present Approved version lead (as opposed to the draft lead) is lacking and I'll be glad to take a look. Dana approved the current lead, too, but I'm sure he'd take a look if we asked him. D. Matt Innis 15:00, 9 January 2010 (UTC)
I'd posted a whole lot of links to homeopathic articles, late last year, but did not have the time to add it in the article. I was expecting someone here to do it, but no one did (not even Dana)! I already wrote what I wanted above, "It should either explain homeopathy plainly (without criticism in the very 1st sentence) or if y'all want criticism in the Lead, it should contain both viewpoints."—Ramanand Jhingade 08:34, 12 January 2010 (UTC)
We certainly can't add every link ever written to this article. This is the overview article in an encyclopedia type format and summarizes homeopathy pretty well, I think. Again, don't confuse the lead in the Draft with the lead in the main Homeopathy article. I agree the lead in the draft needs more work and is not an improvement in its current form. D. Matt Innis 12:45, 12 January 2010 (UTC)
If nothing else, bibliographic links not directly related to the text belong on the bibliography page, preferably in articles. Also, in other articles, there is some selectivity. In some cases, reviews are more appropriate than small primary studies. In other cases, peer review and responsible publications are appropriate. In yet other cases, there is more leeway on publications but the reason needs to be explained.
It's not necessarily reasonable to assume someone else will edit and add articles with which they aren't familiar, or with which they might disagree.
What principles of homeopathy are in not in the lead? It should go without saying that homeopathists believe what they are doing, or the article wouldn't be here at all. Having a small number of dissenting comments from people who question hematology simply establish it isn't universally accepted, and the details and pros and cons should be in the article, but later. Howard C. Berkowitz 13:27, 12 January 2010 (UTC)
RE: provided references from Ramanand, this must be the list and I do remember it, but it's mostly primary research. They could be used for a more detailed article to support a specific claim where reviews aren't available, but to cite them here would result in too much detail for the general nature of this article. Primary research doesn't belong in a bibliography either. I'm not sure that we have a subpage that would be appropriate for primary research, though it's an interesting idea for some other project, or way in the future for this one. Otherwise, I'd think it would be a problem with CZ:Maintainability. There are other sites that do list all the research for each particular subject. D. Matt Innis 14:51, 12 January 2010 (UTC)
This is one page (Homeopathy/Trials) that exists with a tabulated summary of some of the voluminous primary literature. I agree maintainability is an issue. I bet there are hundreds of articles like this and the main problem is reducing it to the most important articles in the field. If that could be done well it might make a good catalog. Chris Day 17:18, 12 January 2010 (UTC)
Matt, I made some time to read the entire (presently) approved article. I don't see any sentence saying there is evidence for homeopathy (the feg pdf document I've inserted in the present draft is accepted by 'mainstream' scientists as well). I object to the term 'placebo' in the lead (Edzard Ernst is known to be a ridiculed homeopathic baiter in the U.K.). I also object to the term 'fraud' in the Overview section

They also are interested in whether positive results against expectation sometimes reflect manipulation of data or perhaps even fraud.

. Like you said, can we edit the (presently) approved article?—Ramanand Jhingade 17:34, 23 January 2010 (UTC)
David (Ellis), can you please tell me what objections you have to the feg pdf document?—Ramanand Jhingade 17:42, 23 January 2010 (UTC)

(undent) Placebo in the lead is perfectly appropriate; conventional medicine routinely accepts the placebo effect as a component of therapies.

Fraud is mentioned gently as a possibility by some observers, seemingly far more gently than some of the homeopathic claims of the danger of medicine. Sorry, it's not unbalanced. Please do not go to "known" homeopathic baiters anywhere, else that you start having people bring in medical baiters from homeopathy. The problem with bait is that it often has a hook inside.

By edit the presently approved article, no, other than for typos, it's frozen. It is possible to edit the draft, and eventually to have the edited draft become the newly approved.

Again, what specific principles of homeopathy 'are not in the lede? --Howard C. Berkowitz 18:03, 23 January 2010 (UTC)

Friends, it has been a while since I check-in here. I have not re-read most of the new draft, but I can tell you that I do not like the lede paragraph. It is simply not encyclopedic or impartial. Anyway, we only recently spent a lot of time approving the previous edition. I suggest that we let it sit for 3-6 months or more before we re-do it. Dana Ullman 05:28, 1 February 2010 (UTC)
Dana, I hope you can insert sentences that read something like, "there is scientific evidence for homeopathy", using the PDF for "Scientific framework of homeopathy: evidence-based homeopathy" available at http://www.feg.unesp.br/~ojs/index.php/ijhdr/article/viewFile/286/354 wherever appropriate.—Ramanand Jhingade 08:21, 2 March 2010 (UTC)

British House of Commons Science and Technology Committee report

The committee commissioned by the British government has reassessed homeopathy as a treatment option under the national health service. It's enquiry sought written evidence and submissions from concerned parties (See News in brief: Homeopathic assessment and Evidence check: Homeopathy). Both sides of the debate were represented and presented written evidence to the committee. In addition there were oral presentations from the following individuals:

  • Mr Mike O'Brien QC MP, Minister for Health Services, Department of Health;
  • Professor David Harper CBE, Director General, Health Improvement and Protection, and Chief Scientist, Department of Health;
  • Professor Kent Woods, Chief Executive, Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency
  • Professor Jayne Lawrence, Chief Scientific Adviser, Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain;
  • Robert Wilson, Chairman, British Association of Homeopathic Manufacturers;
  • Paul Bennett, Professional Standards Director, Boots;
  • Tracey Brown, Managing Director, Sense About Science;
  • Dr Ben Goldacre, Journalist.
  • Dr Peter Fisher, Director of Research, Royal London Homeopathic Hospital;
  • Professor Edzard Ernst, Director, Complementary Medicine Group, Peninsula Medical School;
  • Dr James Thallon, Medical Director, NHS West Kent;
  • Dr Robert Mathie, Research Development Adviser, British Homeopathic Association.

A summary statement from the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee was released with the report in Feb 2010:

... the NHS should cease funding homeopathy. It also concludes that the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) should not allow homeopathic product labels to make medical claims without evidence of efficacy. As they are not medicines, homeopathic products should no longer be licensed by the MHRA.

The Committee concurred with the Government that the evidence base shows that homeopathy is not efficacious (that is, it does not work beyond the placebo effect) and that explanations for why homeopathy would work are scientifically implausible.

The Committee concluded - given that the existing scientific literature showed no good evidence of efficacy - that further clinical trials of homeopathy could not be justified.

In the Committee’s view, homeopathy is a placebo treatment and the Government should have a policy on prescribing placebos. The Government is reluctant to address the appropriateness and ethics of prescribing placebos to patients, which usually relies on some degree of patient deception. Prescribing of placebos is not consistent with informed patient choice-which the Government claims is very important-as it means patients do not have all the information needed to make choice meaningful.

Beyond ethical issues and the integrity of the doctor-patient relationship, prescribing pure placebos is bad medicine. Their effect is unreliable and unpredictable and cannot form the sole basis of any treatment on the NHS.
Source: UK Parliamentary Committee Science and Technology Committee - "Evidence Check 2: Homeopathy"

From the full report the committee also stated:

We conclude that placebos should not be routinely prescribed on the NHS. The funding of homeopathic hospitals — hospitals that specialise in the administration of placebos — should not continue, and NHS doctors should not refer patients to homeopaths.
Source: Evidence Check 2: Homeopathy, Fourth Report of Session 2009–10, House of Commons Science and Technology Committee, 20 October 2009, parliament.uk

In conclusion the chairman of the committee said:

This was a challenging inquiry which provoked strong reactions. We were seeking to determine whether the Government's policies on homeopathy are evidence based on current evidence. They are not.

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. This also sends out a confused message, and has potentially harmful consequences. We await the Government's response to our report with interest.
Source: UK Parliamentary Committee Science and Technology Committee - "Evidence Check 2: Homeopathy"

The Evidence Check definitely needs to be in the article. It has been hilarious watching the homeopaths squirming around trying to explain it away by butchering the quote from Cucherat's systematic review. It is like those reviews you see on movie posters where it says something like "Tremendous, Exciting (Evening Standard)" and then you go and look and see what the Evening Standard actually say and it is "A tremendous waste of time and money, has difficulty exciting all but the clinically insane". –Tom Morris 15:12, 3 March 2010 (UTC)
For some reason, I couldn't access Citizendium yesterday at this time. Meanwhile, I got a reply from Dr Peter Fisher to my e-mail in which he says that the individual specific rules of Homeopathy were not followed in prescribing/administering the Homeopathic remedy, so I hope good sense prevails over the 'UK Parliamentary Committee Science and Technology Committee'.—Ramanand Jhingade 13:43, 12 March 2010 (UTC)
With regard to "the individual specific rules of Homeopathy were not followed in prescribing/administering the Homeopathic remedy" what is Peter Fisher referring to? How does that impact the report? Chris Day 16:25, 12 March 2010 (UTC)
As I understand it, the individual specific rules of homeopathy mean that every patient is unique and the remedies appropriate for one will not be appropriate for another. Let's assume this is exactly correct. That would make classic randomized clinical trials, in which there is a standard treatment arm and a control arm, inappropriate, because there is no homeopathic standard.
A very similar problem, however, applies to highly individualized pharmacogenomic therapies: within a cohort of patients with, say, metastatic breast adenocarcinoma, the experimental hypothesis may be that a given treatment is applicable only to those patients with a specific BRCA gene coding. Panaceamycin is only expected to be effective in patients with that characteristic, and the others should get an aromatase inhibitor, the standard of care. Given there is a treatment, a placebo control is ethically unacceptable.
RCT's have been designed that still have statistical power, but are testing the diagnostic and treatment model, not panaceamycin. The clinician selects the treatment and sends an order to the pharmacy, where the pharmacist opens the next blind assignment envelope. If the patient is assigned to the experimental arm, the IV drug unit sent back to the care unit has panaceamycin in it if the genomic model calls for it, and the control treatment if not. If the patient is assigned to control, she gets control. It is the decision to assign that is being tested, more than the drug itself.
In like manner, homeopaths could prescribe a totally individualized remedy, but they would be blinded to whether or not the patient gets the remedy -- control could be placebo, or a medical treatment. With a sufficiently large sample, if the homeopathic model is correct, the patients receiving the remedy should do better.
It is not clear that homeopaths are willing to be tested in such a manner, which should obviate the argument about individualization not being permitted. --Howard C. Berkowitz 17:05, 12 March 2010 (UTC)
Brings me back to a question that I have never seen an answer to. How can remedies be mass marketed and sold off the shelf at places like wal-mart and whole foods and be so effective (as claimed)? These remedies are either robust or need to be highly individualized. If the latter, I don't see how how a mass market product will work. If the former, then they have indeed being found wanting (no better than placebo). Their defense against accepting the failed results of clinical trials precludes claiming successes from the mass market products. Which is it? Chris Day 19:15, 12 March 2010 (UTC)
A question, Chris, that I've asked myself. Let me respond indirectly. One of the major mass-marketed products is Oscillococcinum, about which I did write an article. What is the sound that is made by the creature from which the simillium is obtained? --Howard C. Berkowitz 19:28, 12 March 2010 (UTC)
Given that they are a £1.5bn industry we can expect to hear a lot of noise like that in the next few months. Chris Day 19:40, 12 March 2010 (UTC)
Howard, you got it right - for example, Ipecacuanha can't be given where Antim. Tart is indicated. Chris, classical homeopaths don't accept 'over the counter'/'off the shelf' products because anything between 2 to 20 remedies are mixed in one 'combination' (Hahnemann used to call such homeopaths the 'mongrel sect'), but since it's popular, the classical homeopaths can't do much about it. In India, homeopathy is a half a Billion $ 'industry' - and that is only counting the medicines sold 'over the counter' and not what is spent on homeopathic doctors - so we're not gonna let people talk rubbish about it. It really works (See the 'feg' pdf document I've posted in the previous section)!—Ramanand Jhingade 09:22, 13 March 2010 (UTC)

Ramanand, you didn't get right the essence of what I was saying: there are statistically powerful testing methods, which have been developed for biological therapies that indeed are individualized, which could answer the homeopathic objection to more traditional randomized clinical trials. I have not seen any evidence that homeopaths are willing to use such methods, but instead continue to insist on either statistically weak retrospective analyses or anecdotal/testimonial evidence. Howard C. Berkowitz 16:21, 13 March 2010 (UTC)

Howard, it is very simple: the homeopaths are perfectly happy to use clinical evidence when it shows that homeopathy works. But when it shows that it doesn't work, then the clinical trial methodology must be at fault! Heads I win, tails you lose. If clinical trials are unable to detect the effects of homeopathy, why is the British Homeopathic Association quote-mining Cucherat? What seems more likely: that homeopathy works but not to the point where the clinical trial can detect it, or homeopaths cynically misuse evidence to support their pre-ordained conclusions? It has been so amusing to watch: our politicians have seen that the King alternative therapist is actually nude. All the homeopaths have been able to do is spin, quote-mine and clutch at straws. –Tom Morris 18:38, 13 March 2010 (UTC)
I suppose there isn't really anything to do about it until there's a new Editorial Council and a reevaluation of workgroups. Howard C. Berkowitz 19:04, 13 March 2010 (UTC)
The draft is open to rewrite and, while I can't speak for everyone, I'll be glad to look at anything that gets put in it. I agree with Russell. D. Matt Innis 03:17, 14 March 2010 (UTC)
Howard, there is a lot of research going on in Homeopathy. Dr.Peter Fisher heads a research group in London and Dr.Rastogi heads a research group in India. I will email them about your suggestion. Tom, please look at the 'feg' .pdf document I posted - it is good, solid evidence that Homeopathy works!—Ramanand Jhingade 11:44, 14 March 2010 (UTC)

Friends...in due respect, anyone who takes this "report" seriously has an axe to grind or is simply under-informed.

Any rational person should and must be very suspicious of this "report." The MPs (Members of Parliament) who were a part of the Science and Technology Committee which voted for this anti-homeopathy report comprised of five members, with three members barely eking out their victory. Of the three votes, two members did not attend any of the investigational meetings, one of whom was such a new member of the committee that he wasn't even a member of the committee during the hearings, and the remaining "yes" vote was from Evan Harris, a medical doctor and devout antagonist to homeopathy. This report was not exactly a vote of and for the people. This information alone should entirely discount this "report" as a kangeroo court report that deserves that round circular file.

The very limited number of people who represented homeopathy were primarily three people. The others were entirely antagonistic to homeopathy or simply uninformed about it (such as the rep from Boots).

Despite the use and acceptance of homeopathy throughout the U.K., there is a very active group of skeptics, with significant Big Pharma funding, who work vigorously to attack this system of natural medicine. Even though there is a wide variety of serious and significant pressing issues in British medicine and science today, an active group of skeptics of homeopathy successfully resurrected in October, 2009, a House of Commons committee, called the Science and Technology Committee, with the intent to issue a report on homeopathy. A leading skeptics organization, Sense about Science, that has been pushing for the re-creation of this Committee is led by a former public relations professional who worked for a PR company that represents many Big Pharma companies. Of additional interest is the fact that other Directors of the Sense about Science organization are a mixture of former or present libertarians, Marxists, and Trotskyists who also, strangely enough, seem to advocate for the GMO industry (ironically, libertarians normally advocate for a "live and let live" philosophy, but in this instance, it seems that they prefer to take choice in medical treatment away from British consumers).

Sense about Science is a registered UK charity despite being a political pressure group. As such they have to divulge their sources of income which they do on their website. Not surprisingly, much of this comes from named pharmaceutical manufacturers.

One of the investigators for the House of Commons Science Committee is a Liberal Democrat MP, Evan Harris. He has collaborated with Sense About Science on various projects, and he was also one of the skeptic demonstrators against the national pharmacy chain, Boots, which sells homeopathic medicines. This advocacy role does not make him an unprejudiced observer as is required for this type of investigation.

A report from this kangaroo court was issued recommending that the National Health Service stop funding for homeopathy and homeopathic doctors, despite the support for homeopathy and for consumer choice from Mike O'Brien, the country's present Health Minister. This report is only of an advisory nature, and because the Health Minister has already expressed his support for consumers' right to choose their own health care, it is uncertain what, if anything, will result of this report. What was most surprising about this report was that it verified that when people repeat a lie frequently enough, such as "there is no research on homeopathy," many people actually believe it, despite its transparent falsity.Dana Ullman 05:33, 7 May 2010 (UTC)

Sources

I'm surprised that this article does not reference or discuss Paul Starr's Pulitzer Prize and the Bancroft Prize winning book on the social transformation of American medicine. Any article that wishes to understand the difference between allopathy and homeopathy needs to understand that this debate has less to do with science or medicine and everything to do with politics as the British report makes clear. Russell D. Jones 15:41, 2 March 2010 (UTC)

At one time, it was indeed appropriate to compare allopathy and homeopathy. While some dictionary definitions still use allopathy as a synonym for conventional medicine, I find the modern usage to be more often by CAM practitioners, as that-which-we-do-not-do. (For the record, I happen to find some complementary medicine useful, or at least worthy of trial in non-critical situations.)
As far as a "modern" comparison, however, I cannot do better than William Osler:

A new school of practitioners has arisen which cares nothing for homeopathy and still less for so-called allopathy. It seeks to study, rationally and scientifically, the action of drugs, old and new."(Flexner report, page 162)

Unquestionably, there was once a competition between something one could legitimately call allopathy, as a "doctrine of opposites", and homeopathy as a "doctrine of similars". Homeopaths often selectively quote Osler as saying that the homeopathic remedies were safer than most allopathic remedies of his era (i.e., late 19th-early 20th century). You'll note that there was insistence on keeping the 1905 quote from von Behring.
It ain't the 20th century any more, and conventional physicians don't prescribe based on opposites, nohow. Yes, there are political residues, but there's now a lot more in the way of evidence-based medicine...and protecting turf. Howard C. Berkowitz 19:37, 12 March 2010 (UTC)
My favorite quote from Paul Starr's book is: “Because homeopathy was simultaneously philosophical and experimental, it seemed to many people to be more rather than less scientific than orthodox medicine.” Dana Ullman 05:37, 7 May 2010 (UTC)

The memory of sugar

is being discussed here and provides a nice illustration of the topic. --Daniel Mietchen 21:56, 3 March 2010 (UTC)

I thought the "memory of sugar" tended to go either to the abdomen or buttocks, depending on genetics? :-)
Seriously, the discussion at that link is what I'd suggest is an expectation. It is possible to be neutral, I think, and mention, in the lede, that homeopathy is not generally accepted. We still do not have a way of dealing with the situation where homeopathy supporters will support a lede that doesn't consider it reasonably credible. Of course, in no other workgroup do we have an equivalent to the health sciences/healing art splits. Should Religion be joined by Atheism? Alternatively, is it possible to have a reasonable Atheism article in Religion? Howard C. Berkowitz 22:46, 3 March 2010 (UTC)
The problem just isn't there with religion and atheism. If you, say, are interested in philosophy of religion, you can get a degree in it regardless of whether you are an atheist or a theist (or something else entirely). I say this from experience - I have a BA in Philosophy, Religion and Ethics from a Catholic college but am an atheist. There are some - I guess the polite way of saying it is 'non-mainstream' - ways of getting a doctorate in religion. You could become a "Doctor of Scientology" (D.Scn) - I read today that Ron DeWolf - Hubbard's son - had been given one, and stated in court that he wasn't sure whether they gave him the Doctorate before or after he'd been given the Bachelors! Or you could get a phony Ph.D from a diploma mill - as quite a lot of the creationists have. The problem with Healing Arts is that you can quite feasibly become a Healing Arts editor with a degree from a non-mainstream parallel academic institution. When mainstream academia isn't bending over backwards to certify degrees in quackery (as two universities in Britain shamefully have), the quacks create their own academic institutions.
"Dr" Gillian McKeith "PhD" has a degree from a place called Clayton College of Natural Health in Birmingham, Alabama. Said college is not accredited by any accrediting body recognized by the Department of Education, and a number of states in the U.S. list it as unaccredited on their websites for student loans (etc.). This does not stop McKeith claiming to have a PhD on her website, nor did it stop Channel 4 television or her publisher from touting this to promote her books and TV programme. She also likes to mention how she is a member of the American Association of Nutritional Consultants. You too can be a member of the American Association of Nutritional Consultants if you send them $60! McKeith has pushed notorious nonsense like the idea that green vegetables are good for you because the green shows they have chlorophyll (true), and the chlorophyll will oxidate your blood (how? Human beings are not plants. They tend to get their oxygen through respiration rather than photosynthesis. And even if they were getting their oxygen through photosynthesis, even your local tanning salon lamps aren't quite powerful enough to penetrate your small intestines).
Another graduate of the Clayton College of Natural Health is cancer quack Hulda Clark who sells a whole variety of magic 'zapping' toys that make funny noises and shine lights and do little more to cure cancer than extract money from punters - I mean, cancer sufferers.
Take any philosopher of religion or even most theologians - they'll certainly be able to say something useful on an article about atheism in the Religion WG. Same for the non-believers within the same fields. The problem with Healing Arts is it lets people with completely bonkers views about reality approve articles on their favourite pseudoscience. If the claims of the homeopaths were true (and, blimey, even our politicians can tell what a big pile of nothing the evidence of two hundred years of homeopathy has amounted to), then most of the articles in the Biology and Chemistry workgroup need rewriting.
I'll repeat myself again: we need to fix the Healing Arts bug. It is nothing more than a bug. It is a bug that is bringing down the great work done by other WGs. It says to anyone who has spent years of their life working on getting a PhD in physics or literature or psychology or whatever that you can get a fake degree from a non-accredited university and also be considered an expert on the same level. How can I, in good conscience, tell the experts in my field to contribute given this significant vulnerability in the Editorship system? –Tom Morris 01:21, 4 March 2010 (UTC)
Religion seemed the obvious parallel, but we could, I suppose, have an Absolute Pacifism workgroup with Military -- not that quite a few professional soldiers don't hate war. Why can Engineering debunk a hoax theory but Health Sciences cannot? Howard C. Berkowitz 02:15, 4 March 2010 (UTC)
Howard, you're one of the eight Charterists. Are you a loud and strong voice therein trying to *remove* Healing Arts as a Workgroup, so that some of this nonsense could then be addressed in the future in a rational way? Hayford Peirce 02:49, 4 March 2010 (UTC)
Compromise in the Charter Committee, I believe, means that the Workgroup and some other details will be passed, without detailed guidance, to the Editorial Council. Personally, I am urging the draft to go to discussion and markup, so we can proceed to the next steps after ratification. While this is an especially galling problem, there are less egregious workgroup structure problems that also need addressing and can't happen at the Charter level. --Howard C. Berkowitz 03:21, 4 March 2010 (UTC)
Even with Pacifism and the Military, there is an implicit understanding that most of the facts are the same. The Pacifist will agree with the General that the U.S. dropped the bomb on Hiroshima or that Nelson died in 1805. They have different opinions, but they do not care out their own facts in quite the same way as the Healing Arts gang. –Tom Morris 07:32, 4 March 2010 (UTC)
No, the analogy may hold. There are those that will insist that any enemy can be defeated through passive resistance and good thoughts, just as some of the healing arts believe that it is utterly wrong to immunize against an infectious organism or use an antibiotic against one. Howard C. Berkowitz 07:43, 4 March 2010 (UTC)
Tom mentions non-mainstream ways of getting doctorates in religion. In fact the Archbishop of Canterbury still has the legal power to award them, which might explain why Church of England bishops always seem to be Dr. Peter Jackson 14:29, 12 March 2010 (UTC)

How well does it work?

We use double-blind studies to tell how well a particular medicine works. The person handout out the medicine does not know whether it's a "real medicine" just a sugar pill. In the case of pain relievers, the potency of an analgesic is rated in terms of how much more effective it is than a placebo.

If I recall correctly, as much as 75% to 90% of the effective pain relief you get from the pills comes from the placebo effect: you take your aspirin or ibuprofen or (without knowing it) your sugar pill, and your headache starts going away within an hour no matter what. The real stuff is only slightly better.

Given all that, how would we design a study to compare homeopathic treatment with conventional treatment? Is it possible to conduct a blind study, if the way the healer deals with the patient is a key ingredient of the therapeutic effect?

For that matter, how can we compare Freudian psychoanalysis to Berne's transactional analysis or modern rational-emotive therapy or to a frank chat with a trusted friend or mentor (like Father O'Malley down at the local Catholic church)?

  • I daresay one result of a careful attempt to measure outcomes could be that "bedside manner" is much more important than we've allowed ourselves to realize.

But I ask again, how do we study and quantify it? --Ed Poor 02:04, 28 March 2010 (UTC)

If one were to review the entire body of experiments that Thomas Edison conducted on electricity, one would have to say that the vast majority of his experiments were failures...and one might fall into a trap by saying that he was a failure. Of course, we KNOW that this is not true. Just because some studies have shown that homeopathic medicines don't work, there is a greater body of research to show that it does. The trick is to know WHEN homeopathic medicines work...and when they don't.
If anyone here wants to review a body of homeopathic research on a specific group of diseases (respiratory allergies) that have primarily been published in high impact conventional journals, such as the Lancet and the BMJ, you might consider reading this review of research I co-authored in a peer-review journal: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20359268 -- you can read the entire article online at: www.altmedrev.com (It is in the Spring, 2010, issue, article #6). Dana Ullman 05:43, 7 May 2010 (UTC)

Unsupported assertions

The current text has "Even in Europe, homeopathy is practiced by many conventional physicians, including 30-40% of French doctors and 20% of German doctors." and in the next paragraph "Some medical doctors, particularly in Germany, France, and several other European countries prescribe homeopathic medicines for wide variety of both self-limiting conditions and serious diseases with a high rate of patient satisfaction." There are no supporting citations.

This is obviously redundant; we need at most one of these statements. However, neither strikes me as believable without support, so I am inclined to delete both. Anyone care to comment before I edit? Sandy Harris 15:29, 26 June 2010 (UTC)

Your point about unsupported assertions has come up before, and the current text, in my opinion, is significantly misleading. "homeopathy is practiced by many conventional physicians" does not, as much as some may want it to do so, imply that conventional positions endorse all of homeopathy. By definition, if they are conventional physicians, they are not practicing homeopathy as alternative medicine, but are using some complementary techniques from homeopathy. When I was last in my internist's office, I banged my shoulder against a piece of equipment. He rubbed it a bit. Does that mean he practices massage therapy?
"Patient satisfaction" is a purely subjective assessment and is in no way evidence of efficacy. I could take the sentence starting "Some medical doctors..." and substitute "chemically pure water that has not been exposed to a simillium" and demonstrate high patient satisfaction.
I agree with deleting both. Even if citations are offered, they must be of a quality that indicates that homeopathic methods are a significant part of the practice of these physicians and they are not using it with the intent of creating placebo effects. --Howard C. Berkowitz 17:05, 26 June 2010 (UTC)
It is a fact that at universities in Germany and Austria there are chairs and lectures on homeopathy (in Vienna also at the veterinary university). There are doctors who practice both. --Peter Schmitt 23:10, 26 June 2010 (UTC)
I have no problem if the two sentences ar combined. I think we've gone over this several times on the talk pages. As Peter points out, there are obviously well established 'conventional' medical professionals that use homeopathy for treatment of medical conditions. This is pretty much common knowledge at this point, so I don't see the need for citing a source for the mere fact that some medical physicians use homeopathy in their practices. However, when we add specific numbers such as 30-40%, it does seem to beg for a reference. It shouldn't be hard to find such a reference if it is out there. Otherwise, removing the numbers and just stating the fact shouldn't be a problem.
I don't think we will be able to find any scientific sources that conclude that they use it only on undereducated healthy people as a placebo. In fact, I think the opposite is more likely the case. D. Matt Innis 01:22, 29 June 2010 (UTC)

Would someone who has access care to correct the glaring English mistake in the first paragraph of this approved article? Ro Thorpe 00:16, 2 July 2010 (UTC)

I'm sorry, Ro, I must have a blind spot that is preventing me from seeing this glaring error. Could you be so kind as to point it out? D. Matt Innis 01:42, 2 July 2010 (UTC)
Oh, so go ahead and shoot me! I found it (after reading your request for Hayford to repair it :) D. Matt Innis 01:46, 2 July 2010 (UTC)
Bang, bang - but you've removed it! Many thanks! Ro Thorpe 12:16, 2 July 2010 (UTC)

I provide many solid references to the use of homeopathic medicines by physicians in Europe in an article I wrote at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dana-ullman/homeopathic-medicine-euro_b_402490.html (It is NOT my intent for anyone to reference this article in OUR article at this website. Instead, we can use many of the references provided. This article also has many references throughout the article showing that people who use homeopathic medicines tend to have more education than those who don't.)

I urge us to be very careful in significant changing this article because a lot of time and thought went into it previously. Dana Ullman 18:05, 14 July 2010 (UTC)

Review by a sceptical layman (i.e. me)

I'm reviewing the draft. Here is a rough summary of my changes and concerns:

  • I rewrote the paragraph in the lede section about the "long safety record". The reason homeopathy has a long safety record is the very same reason that not travelling has a long safety record: if something is inert and chemically indistinguishable from the delivery mechanism, it will be safe. Safety and efficacy is a balancing act. The reason homeopathy is safe is precisely because it isn't efficacious.
  • I'm not wild about long, windy footnotes about Romanization. I've thus split off the Romanization note about the word "qi" on to a separate page.
  • The section that is disputed about the number of practitioners in France and Germany is in the wrong place. The way in which homeopathy is prescribed or accessed doesn't seem to be to be a principle of homeopathy - homeopathy is homepathy whether it is prescribed by a homeopath or bought over the counter. I've thus moved it into the section which used to be titled "Professional homeopaths: who are they?" which I have retitled "Homeopathy in practice". This section seems to be the place to discuss provision, prescription, education, regulation and the like.
  • The paragraph starting "Homeopathic remedies can be prescribed by professional homeopaths" seems to be a tricky one. Depending on the country and the regulatory regime, homeopathy can be prescribed by a wide variety of people. Sadly (in my opinion), in Britain, quacks of all sorts can have their merry way with the public. Pretty much anyone can set themselves up as an alternative practitioner, so long as they don't make their claims too specific. But in other countries, this varies. It seems the important distinction that needs to be made is that homeopathy - unlike, for want of a better description, real medicine - can be prescribed by anyone.
  • The rest of the section on "A typical homeopathic visit" seems to have some glaring problems. The homeopath is supposed to have EMT training in order to be "adequately trained"? (Heh. Surely, if heart attacks are the problem, what you need to do is to dilute high-fructose corn syrup into non-existence and it'll clear right up? I thought they believed in the law of similars. What's a defibrilator doing in the homeopath's office?) But anyway, this adequate training is according to who? According to government regulations? According to the homeopathic groups? According to us? According to some third-party regulator like the CNHC?
  • The article describes "classical homeopathy" at length, but I haven't seen any discussion of what the alternatives are to classical.
  • There is a lot of repetition of parts of the article. The 'Principles' section is repeated in the section on 'The claims for homeopathy'.
  • No criticism seems to be made of the "treating the whole person" idea. I'm not even sure that this is a desirable thing. If I break my arm, I want my arm fixed, not someone to waffle about my "disturbance in the overall homeostasis of the overall being". In fact, when I broke my arm as a child, I'm very glad that I had access to a surgeon to fix it. This kind of rhetoric seems to be just an evasion tactic - if the studies don't show that homeopathy actually fixes anything (and, well, it wasn't going to put the bones in my elbow back together), then they can justify this kind of thing by pointing out that the person feels vaguely better in some holistic sense.
  • The paragraph about corticosteroids seems to be totally out of place. Oh, it sort of makes sense - it is a follow on from the last paragraph about homeopathy and asthma.

I've got a more radical suggestion. This article obviously needs a fairly ground-up rewrite. Here's what I reckon we should do. The current article seems to have been put together in a rather piecemeal way. Instead, I think the best way is to see if we can come together and work out a list of the fundamental questions that a good article on homeopathy should answer - then build a simple structure around those questions, and fill them in. We may be able to repurpose some of the text from the existing article.

I'd suggest the following list of questions:

  1. What is homeopathy?
  2. Is there any known mechanism for homeopathy?
  3. Is homeopathy clinically effective?
  4. What are the main issues of contention regarding homeopathy?
  5. Why have there been campaigns against homeopathy like the 10:23 campaign?
  6. What is the history of homeopathy? Who is Samuel Hahnemann?
  7. How is homeopathic care provisioned and regulated in different countries?

Before formulating a structure for any potential rewrite, I'm interested in seeing if anyone has any other questions that they'd want to add. –Tom Morris 12:30, 4 July 2010 (UTC)

Tom, I only have a few minutes right now, but let me share a thought or two. My greatest unanswered question is "what is the cognitive process of a homeopath in a patient interaction?" In other words, homeopaths say that every remedy is individualized. Whenever I posed this question to Dana, it was brushed aside, saying that one had to be a trained homeopath to understand.
Odd, but I have written quite a few articles on differential diagnosis in medicine, and some of my most interesting professional work is in expert systems to "individualize" (e.g., what dosage forms are most convenient for the patient and are most likely to be taken on schedule? What other diseases are present -- are there synergistic as well as problem interactions? Are there patient preferences? Are certain side effects more or less likely? Somehow, I manage to muddle through this sort of thing, yet I keep being told there are Inner Secrets to Homeopathy that prevent a straightforward explanation. Now, I'm not a classic layman in conventional medicine, but I can't think of a field where I don't have a basic understanding and the ability to quickly get a much deeper understanding -- and also know what I don't know. In the last six months or so, I've had to do the research to do peer interactions, on the specific diseases of people (two- and four-legged) for whom I'm an advocate and case manager -- involving human iron metabolism, feline squamous cell carcinoma, and peripheral nerve myelin protein 22 and inflammatory polyneuropathy. But I can't begin to understand how a homeopath thinks?
In fairness, I'm not sure how much time I'm willing to expend on homeopathy, at least unless I get comparable collaboration on less controversial, and possibly useful to more people, health science articles (to say nothing of other fields). Howard C. Berkowitz 13:26, 4 July 2010 (UTC)

Luc Montagnier

French virologist Luc Montagnier has said at a prestigious international conference when he presented a new method for detecting viral infections that it bore close parallels to the basic tenets of homeopathy. This has been published in the 'Sunday Times' (London), as well as 'The Australian' - here's a link to the article: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/health-science/nobel-laureate-gives-homeopathy-a-boost/story-e6frg8y6-1225887772305

I hope one of you (at least Dana) make time (I don't have the time) to insert this matter into this article.—Ramanand Jhingade 16:26, 5 July 2010 (UTC)

Here's another link: http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Archive/skins/pastissues2/navigator.asp?login=default&AW=1279125246109Ramanand Jhingade 16:37, 14 July 2010 (UTC)

I certainly have no intention of amending the article with newspaper articles, especially those that indicate nothing but a "close parallel." Has Dr. Montagnier's proposal been discussed in mainstream journals?
The first article, in The Australian, mentions a "memory of water" type argument, and cites rejection by other scientists. I'd note that his Nobel was for virology, not physical chemistry. The second is behind a paywall. Howard C. Berkowitz 16:58, 14 July 2010 (UTC)
Hi friends! Actually, I got sent this link to a recent issue of the "New Scientists" by none other than Nobelist Brian Josephson: <http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20727682.300-60-seconds.html>
"Clear as a Nobel"
Luc Montagnier, the French virologist who won a Nobel prize in 2008 for linking HIV with AIDS, last week made controversial claims that highly dilute solutions of harmful viruses and bacteria emit low-frequency radio waves, allegedly from watery nanostructures formed around the pathogens. Similar claims have been made for homeopathic remedies." Dana Ullman 17:40, 14 July 2010 (UTC)
That link goes to the daily news summary, not anything on homeopathy. As quoted, though, they are "controversial claims". No details. Howard C. Berkowitz 17:57, 14 July 2010 (UTC)
It is necessary to have that link in this article to show that homeopathic remedies are not 'placebos', as some people allege.—Ramanand Jhingade 15:40, 16 July 2010 (UTC)
It is another piece in the puzzle. It is primary research, but it is by a Nobel Prize winner, so it is news about homeopathy. We shouldn't treat it as scientific fact, but it is a fact that a prominent scientist has made the statement that involves a quality of water. It is in no way scientific consensus, an in fact may lead to this guys ruin for whatever reason. We have included news about the British Medical Association's recent position statement concerning homeopathy and this article specifically mentions that statement as well. This is the draft, so I won't categorically remove something that is written comprehensively, neutrally, and objectively about the subject. D. Matt Innis 12:59, 17 July 2010 (UTC)

(undent) Matt, you give it a perfectly good context--as news. It doesn't show, or not show, anything about homeopathic remedies being placebos, or effective, or ineffective, or any particular clinical correlation. As far as I understand, he's made an observation in physical chemistry and RF fields interacting with water, nothing else. I sincerely hope he's not hurt, as he was incredibly dignified while there were attempts to discredit his initial discovery and characterization of HIV -- his Nobel was very deserved. Howard C. Berkowitz 19:42, 17 July 2010 (UTC)

My point in providing the link to the NEW SCIENTIST is to verify that this research is "notable," and as such, a short note is worthy here. Dana Ullman 05:35, 21 July 2010 (UTC)


Matt, you are wonderfully reasonable. Howard is not accurate when he says that Montagnier has "made an observation". Montagnier conducted RESEARCH, and he wrote about it in a peer-review journal. He spoke about it to a group of fellow Nobel Prize winners. And ALL of this was so notable that the "New Scientist" commented about it...and linked it directly to homeopathy. I have no problem if we choose to have the word "controversial" used in describing this new work. The fact of the matter is that this new work discusses "electromagnetic signaling" which may help explain how homeopathic medicines may work. Dana Ullman 18:29, 9 September 2010 (UTC)
Then why isn't the peer-reviewed journal cited, rather than Wired and The Australian? Further, one may write (e.g., an editorial) in a peer-reviewed journal, but not have one's work peer-reviewed by that journal. The peer review process becomes more credible if another independent researcher reproduces of these results. Please provide citations of these events if you want me to believe this is substantive.
Nobel Prize winners, rather by definition, tend to be specialists. One might speak on medicine to a group of Chemistry laureates, and have no special critical review.
It's interesting that we are still arguing how homeopathic medicines "may" work, when it's rather routine to understand the molecular pharmacology of conventional medicines. Sorry, this still comes across as hand-waving for something with a trivial base of evidence.
Have I fired five or six rounds? Howard C. Berkowitz 18:38, 9 September 2010 (UTC)

Evidence that homeopathy works

I hope one of you (at least Dana) can insert sentences that read something like, "there is scientific evidence for homeopathy", using the PDF for "Scientific framework of homeopathy: evidence-based homeopathy" available at http://www.feg.unesp.br/~ojs/index.php/ijhdr/article/viewFile/286/354 wherever appropriate. I haven't seen anyone object to it here anyway.—Ramanand Jhingade 15:15, 21 July 2010 (UTC)

the word "skeptic"

Wasn't it decided a long time ago that aside from the two existing examples in the article that pro-homeopathy advocates (and anyone else) could NOT use the word "skeptic" in future edits? Just want to make sure. Hayford Peirce 21:50, 5 August 2010 (UTC)

I remember that as a specific ruling by Larry. In my experience, it's almost always used by advocates of a position; the neutrality policy wouldn't be hurt if it were banned. Howard C. Berkowitz 22:41, 5 August 2010 (UTC)
But what about people who are skeptics? Are we not allowed to say that Michael Shermer - who runs the Skeptic's Society and publishes Skeptic magazine - is a skeptic? –Tom Morris 23:02, 5 August 2010 (UTC)
As a direct quote or a self-identification, sure. As condescension to disbelievers, no. Howard C. Berkowitz 23:04, 5 August 2010 (UTC)
Ah, but is it? I consider 'skeptic' to be much less of an insult than 'homeopath'! –Tom Morris 23:06, 5 August 2010 (UTC)
I think it is -- it comes up repeatedly in fringe articles, be they moon landing hoax, UFO, etc. -- anything not a true believer. Howard C. Berkowitz 23:13, 5 August 2010 (UTC)
If *I* use the word, Tom, it's a compliment. If Dana uses it, it's pejorative. That's why Larry (or someone) banned it from this article, if I recall correctly. (I have 20 years' of Skeptical Inquirer on my bookshelf.) Hayford Peirce 23:21, 5 August 2010 (UTC)

What the...?

Homeopaths respond to these concerns by noting that using homeopathic medicines can delay or reduce the use of conventional medicines that are ineffective and dangerous.

If this were The Other Wiki, that'd be an instant "citation needed"! I know homeopaths like to bang on about the evil 'allopaths', but do they honestly respond to the opportunity cost argument with a reversed opportunity cost argument? That's so... indescribably crazy. I certainly would like some verification on that. –Tom Morris 00:42, 6 August 2010 (UTC)

Remember our motto: be bold -- remove it, and let whoever put it there back it up with some facts if they want to restore it. Hayford Peirce 01:42, 6 August 2010 (UTC)
Oh, now we're bold, haha. It's a response to the use of homeopathy for use with things like childhood ear infections, a commonly self limiting condition that is often treated with antibiotics which have unwanted and sometimes dangerous side effects. It probably could be explained a little better when it's all cleaned up. After all, that is the homeopath response. D. Matt Innis 21:50, 7 August 2010 (UTC)
On the other hand, I can point to many medical studies advising against antibiotics in uncomplicated otitis media. Going back to Osler at the turn of the 20th century, he correctly pointed out that "allopathic" drugs were often harmful -- but he then said both homeopathy and (classically defined) allopathy were "cults" that needed to be replaced. One doesn't need to turn to homeopathy to find best practices that avoid both overprescribing and underprescribing. Howard C. Berkowitz 21:59, 7 August 2010 (UTC)
Yup, absolutely agree. D. Matt Innis 01:10, 8 August 2010 (UTC)

principle of infintesimals

I'm thinking that principle needs defining. I'm thinking that the 'principle of infintesimals' is the concept that is controversial. Perhaps one of our homeopaths could explain? D. Matt Innis 12:32, 12 August 2010 (UTC)

Throughout this article, the infinitesimal dose and law of similars have been used interchangeably, but they aren't the same. http://www.similima.com/org20.html has given a brief description of the "infinitesimal dose". The law of similars is just, "using the most similar remedy" - to put it plainly. I don't have the time to check and insert those changes, but I hope you Matt, or may be Dana can do so. The infinitesimal dose can also be defended with the "memory of water" and Monsieur Montagnier's research (see Dana's post above).-Ramanand Jhingade 13:49, 13 August 2010 (UTC)
Certainly using them interchangeably is not accurate. D. Matt Innis 15:05, 13 August 2010 (UTC)
I think the term "interchangeably" was wrong to use - what I meant was that the term "law of similars" is used in the article and draft article, when it's supposed to be "the infinitesimal dose", in some places.—Ramanand Jhingade 15:50, 13 August 2010 (UTC)
So it seems to me that infinitesimal dose needs to be defined. The law of similars can obviously involve large doses of products. Obviously Homeopaths use more than infinitesimal doses in their treatments; otherwise we wouldn't have side effects from a nasal product that has zinc in it. We are not getting this point across. D. Matt Innis 17:47, 13 August 2010 (UTC)
I don't think it's worth the time, since that will also be criticized here (maybe you can use the web-site I mentioned above to do that). The nasal product, "Zicam" wasn't a homeopathic product at all, because it had milligram doses of zinc, which is against homeopathic principles. Homeopathic remedies start with mother tinctures and can go up to higher potencies (more dilute) from there.Ramanand Jhingade 09:50, 23 August 2010 (UTC)
Zicam was marketed as homeopathic, and licensed under special regulations applying to homeopathic products. Sorry, for legal purposes in the US, it was a homeopathic product. Howard C. Berkowitz 15:49, 24 August 2010 (UTC)
I know it was, but it was against homeopathic principles.—Ramanand Jhingade 15:39, 25 August 2010 (UTC)

(undent) Please do not use color for emphasis.

In the context of the United States, your simple statment that it "was against homeopathic principles" is legally irrelevant, as the FDA makes the decision if something is to be regulated as a homeopathic preparation (or food supplement), exempt from a good deal of the regulation of other drugs, or if it is a conventional regulated substance. The FDA determined Zircam was homeopathic, and, while I suppose you might argue, in an article about homeopathy and the FDA, such an argument is irrelevant here. If you reject the argument that a governmental organization cannot make such decisions for a country, then I can argue that homeopathy can't be accepted as a national means of practice in India.

With all things that it approves, the FDA depends on the manufacturer's application. More is accepted is fact in a homeopathic New Drug Application that isn't required to undergo controlled trials. Howard C. Berkowitz 16:57, 5 September 2010 (UTC)

Answer to an "unanswered question": Popularity is no metric of efficacy

Sorry, but the addition "The simple reason for homeopathy's growing popularity is because it works." is completely unacceptable without overwhelming evidence that it does work. Were this to be accepted without sourcing, the logic could be applied to popularity of politicians, especially not in office, supporting the premises their programs work.

I propose to delete this. Popularity is relevant to marketing but not efficacy. Howard C. Berkowitz 15:48, 24 August 2010 (UTC)

Those questions were begging for an answer. If you delete my answer, you must delete the questions preceding my statement as well!—Ramanand Jhingade 15:45, 25 August 2010 (UTC)
Your statement, unsourced, was not an answer. It was purely your opinion, phrased as informal commentary. Also, it is a rather sweeping opinion that goes to the heart of the article, with no evidence behind it. Howard C. Berkowitz 16:45, 25 August 2010 (UTC)
While Howard is right in saying that "popularity" is not a metric of efficacy, popularity is (by definition) its own metric, and statistics about homeopathy's popularity now and in the past has a place in an encyclopedia. Further, I give reference to a half-dozen

surveys that further verify that people who tend to receive homeopathic care tend to be more educated than those who don't.

The following link to an article that I authored provides references to this information (please know that I am not suggesting that we link to this article but only to use the references in this article in our encyclopedia listing: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dana-ullman/homeopathic-medicine-euro_b_402490.html Dana Ullman 19:14, 9 September 2010 (UTC)
Post hoc, ergo prompter hoc? I can give even more studies that verify more people who drink milk become heroin addicts. Popularity is a principally a metric of efficacy -- of marketing. If it is significant here, Lady Gaga should be even more expert than Dana, and probably has a better figure. Howard C. Berkowitz 19:20, 9 September 2010 (UTC)

Allopathy

"Today, "allopathy" is used by practitioners of alternative and complementary medicine, like homeopaths, osteopaths, naturopaths, chiropractors and so on to refer to conventional, western medicine."

Since practitioners of conventional, western medicine rarely use the term, however, there's no good argument to insist on calling them allopaths. Yes, there are a few historical references, especially when talking of osteopathic vs. allopathic medical schools, but the term used by conventional western physicians tends to be...conventional western physicians.

Ramanand, if I refused to call you anything other than Jean-Paul, would that change your name? Howard C. Berkowitz 16:57, 24 August 2010 (UTC)

Practitioners of alternative and complementary medicine, like homeopaths, osteopaths, naturopaths, chiropractors and so on refer to conventional, western medicine as "allopathy" even today. If you don't like it, you can add something like, "conventional, western physicians do not refer to themselves as allopaths".—Ramanand Jhingade 15:50, 25 August 2010 (UTC)
Each profession defines what it calls itself. That is not the role of other professions. Would you accept the specific words "practitioners of conventional western medicine call homeopaths frauds?" No? Then why do you have the right to define a name, regarded by many as either historically inaccurate -- they don't use the principle of opposites -- or a sneering attack?. I wouldn't have the slightest objection if homeopaths called themselves Similarists, Hahnemannists, etc. -- but that is how they characterize themselves, not how they characterize others. Howard C. Berkowitz 16:44, 25 August 2010 (UTC)

Ruling needed

Mr. Jhingade reinserted "although osteopaths, homeopaths, naturopaths and other alternative medicine practitioners continue to call it allopathy." I will remove this unless an Editor says otherwise, as I believe it has been ruled that one discipline is not permitted to define a name for another. Shall I say "although biologically-oriented scientists consider homeopaths to be quacks? (noise made by the simillium of Oscillococcinum, of course)" At best, this might go in the allopathy article.

Osler deprecated both allopathy and homeopathy by the time of the Flexner report, although, somewhat earlier, he had attacked some of the drugs used by self-descibed allopaths. I'd note the latter was 19th century.

Be very careful, incidentally, in using "osteopath" versus "osteopathic physician". The latter, in the US, does use "allopath" but in a very narrow context dealing with the history of schools. Undergraduate and graduate medical education from traditionally "osteopathic" or "allopathic" education is largely identical, although some additional manipulative techniques may be taught in some historically osteopathic programs -- or by qualified faculty in historically "allopathic" programs. Assuming equal certification, with many boards merging, the scope of practice of DO's and MD's are identical. U.S. osteopathic physicians do not use the term allopathy in regular practice. Indeed, I know a few that don't use manipulation or any special osteopathic methods. As an aside, in the state of Virginia, to perform acupuncture, one must be licensed as a physician; the two I used were, respectively an MD with a OMD degree from Vietnam and a OB/GYN certification from FACOG; the other was an DO internist board-certified in internal medicine.

In the UK -- I can't speak authoritatively for the rest of Europe -- osteopathy is indeed a CAM discipline and its practitioners' scope of practice is not the same as a physician.

I would add that the opinions of naturopaths are irrelevant to this article.

Could we please stop refighting this revert battle? My impression is that rulings have been made.Howard C. Berkowitz 17:30, 5 September 2010 (UTC)

Practitioners of alt. med. still call it allopathy (Look at the American Association of Osteopathic Physicians web-site, the National Center for Homeopathy web-site and so on). I'm sure Dana will support me on this one. I'm looking forward to a ruling too and I believe such a ruling will support the homeopaths' viewpoint, because this article is titled Homeopathy and not, "Criticism of Homeopathy".—Ramanand Jhingade 08:44, 6 September 2010 (UTC)
If you are arguing from the perspective of the American Association of Osteopathic Physicians, you are either ignorant of the historical reason they do that, or deliberately making a false argument that American osteopathic physicians, as distinct from osteopaths in Europe, are in any way "alternative". DOs pass the same undergraduate and graduate certifications as MDs. I suppose I'll have to remind one of my DO friends, a world authority on field and disaster medicine, that he's "alt" and the surgeons shouldn't listen to him. If nothing else, there is a distinction between alternate and complementary.
As far as the National Center for Homeopathy website, what part of "one discipline doesn't specify what another calls itself" do you fail to grasp? I'm sure I can find medical sites that call homeopaths frauds and quacks; would you accept that designation? I'd have to go back into the archives, but I seem to recall that Larry ruled on this a long, long time ago. Dana does not have any editorial authority over what non-alternative practitioners call themselves.
If you think these comments are "attack on homeopathy", I refer you to the commentary of Dirty Harry Callaghan regarding the .44 Magnum. Howard C. Berkowitz 01:46, 7 September 2010 (UTC)

Matt's reversions

Matt, I see you have already reverted what I had added. I don't want to indulge in any "edit warring", so please restore what I had added. I have mentioned the reasons in the sections preceding this.—Ramanand Jhingade 16:20, 25 August 2010 (UTC)

Since you merely identify this a "Matt's reversions", it's difficult to what you specifically have in mind. Did Matt move the questionable material here for discussion? If he did, then it's appropriate to discuss it here, within policy limits, before it goes back.
If he deleted without making it clear what he was deleting, or why he was making a Healing Arts Editor decision to delete it, he needs to put it here. Otherwise, you cannot simply demand that it be put back without consensus or an Editor ruling. Howard C. Berkowitz 16:51, 5 September 2010 (UTC)
I'm in a hurry, but will make a quick reply. I hope Matt brings things here for discussion in future.—Ramanand Jhingade 08:38, 6 September 2010 (UTC)

"Attack piece"

The statement "Some other researchers claim that there is scientific evidence that homeopathy helps in many problems and diseases[3]" was added with the edit note that "the lede can't be an attack piece."

The lede also cannot be a place where non-substantive opinion can be used to "neutralize" the main thrust of expert opinion. Again and again, it's been pointed out that CZ's current neutrality policy does not mean that equal emphasis must be given to each position.

I recommend deletion of the above statement as far too general, and, for that matter, worded in a manner that really doesn't counter but says "well, yes but..." There's an old medical story about a radiologist who crawls, bloody and battered, into his emergency room. Asked what happened, he said it was "consistent with being mugged." Things in the lede need a bit more substance than "consistent with." Howard C. Berkowitz 17:19, 5 September 2010 (UTC)

I don't see any probs with that ref and I'm sure Dana, the only other Homeopath here will support me on that.—Ramanand Jhingade 08:34, 6 September 2010 (UTC)

Similars and "allopathic drugs"

First, I contend there is no such thing, in modern terms, as an allopathic drug. Got any references, such as Goodman and Gilman, that use the term? No, homeopathic texts don't get to define practices in general medicine. Taking a recent addition that I believe must be either radically changed or updated, I quote:

"Recent research has shown that some conventional drugs, which are normally used to do something, can do the opposite also - a rebound effect, similar to homeopathy's law of similars.[1][2]

[3][4]. [5][6] [7][8]. [9][10]"

First, it's impossible to respond to this deluge of citations without any details. Second, for these to be "allopathic" drugs, based on the "principle of opposites", the papers must include that language. Do they?

Second, it's a leap to equate a rebound phenomenon to allopathy; the dose-over-time, molecular control mechanisms, etc., are much more than "opposites". One of the classic examples of rebound, nasally applied vasoconstrictors, doesn't take place when the dose and duration are properly controlled. In general, if the vasoconstrictor is needed for long enough to cause rebound, use of antiinflammatories, such as corticosteroids, cromolyns, or antihistamines should be under active consideration to replace the direct vasoconstrictor.

It was with considerable restraint that I didn't immediately move this to the talk page. Ironically, there are very pleasant, collaborative discussions going on in a number of military and history articles. Maybe getting to kill people makes for more restrained discussion. Howard C. Berkowitz 19:04, 5 September 2010 (UTC)

The rebound effect is well documented and accepted in medical circles, so please don't delete that sentence or the refs I inserted (I've improved on the way it used to read, so pls take a look).—Ramanand Jhingade 08:31, 6 September 2010 (UTC)
Well documented? "Rebound effect' doesn't appear in the index of the standard textbook, Goodman and Gilman's The Pharmacologic Basis of Therapeutics (9th Edition). Now, as I have mentioned, the term "rebound" is indeed used in very specific contexts, such as the response of nasal mucosa to topical vasoconstrictors.
"can lead to the opposite effect, when stopped - a rebound effect, which means they are following homeopathy's law of similars." is not especially an improvement. Of course there are drugs that have adverse effects when stopped inappropriately. Corticosteroids, selective neurotransmitter uptake inhibitors and opioids all come to mind. "Similars" have nothing to do with it, in the sense that a corticosteroid, in a Proving, would be inflammatory. Instead, the adrenal cortex has reduced its production of endogenous steroids because it has sensed a certain blood level.
It's vaguely amusing to hear you comment about people ignorant of homeopathy, when there seem to be so many opportunities to be unaware of molecular pharmacology. But, there are different tastes -- where's the eye of newt and blood of bat when you need them? Howard C. Berkowitz 01:18, 7 September 2010 (UTC)

Dead link

http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/511604 Reference 102 about the value of talking to patients. Howard C. Berkowitz 19:08, 5 September 2010 (UTC)

Then I suggest we remove the sentence attributed to Vandenbroucke.—Ramanand Jhingade 13:56, 6 September 2010 (UTC)

Thankless CZ

Editing CZ is a thankless job. I'm sure the people who are ignorant about a subject (like Homeopathy) can move on to Facebook, Orkut, Linked in, Twitter or some other networking site/s and make a lot of friends and get to know them really well - we hardly know anything about each other here. Howard, you're probably a nice guy I can get to know better and probably dine with. Sandy, Im sure I can make an interesting 'date'. Why don't y'all look for me on Facebook?—Ramanand Jhingade 13:56, 6 September 2010 (UTC)

I have nothing against friendship, and I do think I've found a number of good friends here. Nevertheless, the essence of what I see as appropriate writing at CZ depends on courtesy, but above all, logic -- western if you will -- and evidence. I have a LinkedIn account, but not Facebook, Twitter, etc. -- and don't want them. On the other hand, I am very active on an assortment of professional mailing lists. Howard C. Berkowitz 18:50, 6 September 2010 (UTC)
First off, I greatly doubt either of us would enjoy a date. 'Sandy' is a short form of 'Alexander', and I'm neither unattached nor gay.
Second, some of your other apparent assumptions are just as bogus. People generally aren't here for social networking, but to contribute toward building an encyclopedia. Nor does not being an expert on homeopathy preclude contributing.
I'm resisting the urge to write a more pointed reply because it would violate CZ:Professionalism#What_behaviors_are_unprofessional.3F. Sandy Harris 23:47, 6 September 2010 (UTC)

Confusing deletions

It's somewhat difficult to tell why things are deleted when the only reasons given are in edit notes, which aren't always easily accessible if, for example, minor edits follow them in the log.

This was deleted, possibly due a claim that it was unsourced -- yet it is sourced. It's a reasonable statement and belongs in the article.

This does not mean that that people treated with homeopathy do feel better as a result - the clinical literature clearly shows this, but Vandenbroucke suggested that this could be because its practitioners treatments spend more time with people than doctors do. "Even if people give you the wrong explanation about what you seek treatment for, the fact that they spend a long time speaking with you might help," Vandenbroucke suggests.[11]

"Homeopaths contend that flawed trials cannot be used to show that homeopathic treatment is ineffective (please read the previous paragraph for information about the positive trials)." This new sentence, especially the underlined words, is argumentative rather than informative. --Howard C. Berkowitz 18:50, 6 September 2010 (UTC)

I didn't do the above editing, though I support it. Just because Vandenbroucke says that statement does not mean it is true, especially when there is at present no data to support it. This idea borders on the preposterous that the "extra" time that homeopaths spend with their patients leads to the therapeutic benefits that homeopathic patients experience. If THAT were the case, then, psychologists would be our finest healers (and sadly, they are not). Although the first interview with a homeopath is typically an hour, the follow-up visits are usually 10-30 minutes, just a little longer than a conventional MD.
As for "flawed" trials, see my longer message in the next section where I talk about the importance of "internal validity" in trials AND "external validity." Dana Ullman 01:09, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

Dana Ullman's thoughts on this article to date

Sorry to be away from the article for so long...

I am very concerned about this present “draft” of the homeopathy article. I feel that it has lost its “encyclopedic” tone, and instead, it is a mixture of encyclopedic information along with strong “point of view” skepticism. Although I do not have a problem with proper skepticism, it is the tone of it AND where it is placed in the article that is critical.

For instance, in the very top portion of this article are paragraphs #3 and #4 which are not encyclopedic in tone or content.

I will try to avoid doing “editing” the article myself. Instead, I will propose here in the TALK section my ideas for what should be said, and I hope that those people who want to maintain a high-quality objective and encyclopedic article will make appropriate changes to the Draft. Needless to say, I will not sign my name, as a Healing Arts Editor, to anything that does not maintain a certain objective tone. And by “objective tone,” I obviously do not mean that this article should just a promo for homeopathy.

My sincere thanx for whoever re-formating my contribution so that we can communicate about them in bit-sizeable chunks. Good work! Dana Ullman 15:37, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

Dana on 3rd paragraph

Ultimately, I recommend some changes in the 3rd paragraph…here’s what I suggest for replacement for this paragraph.

While many medical practitioners prescribe some homeopathic remedies, a significant majority of the scientific and conventional medical community (including a number of national medical representative bodies like the British Medical Association), consider homeopathy to be unfounded and pseudoscientific.[1] Skeptics of homeopathy insist that there is no plausible mechanism to explain how the remedies might work, given that many of them are so dilute that they contain not a single molecule of the active ingredient. However, homeopaths and scientists from varied specialties, including Nobel Prize winning virologist Luc Montagnier, assert that there are viable theories about how homeopathic medicines may act, though as yet, no one explanation has been verified. Advocates assert that the homeopathic “principle of similars” is, in part, the basis for modern day immunizations, allergy treatments, and select other conventional treatments (ie, the use of Ritalin and other amphetamine-like drugs used to treat hyperactive children), while critics have compared it to sympathetic magic.
I wrote the current text. To me it seems accurate and encyclopedic, much better than either what it replaced or your suggestion.
My "While the founder of modern homeopathy was a medical doctor, some modern medical practitioners do prescribe some homeopathic remedies, and some governments do recognise homeopathy as legitimate treatment" instead of your "While many medical practitioners prescribe some homeopathic remedies" gives more arguments favorable to homeopathy, but states them more carefully, your "many" seems dubious to me.
My "the consensus of medical and scientific opinion is that homeopathy is unfounded." seems to me a simple statement of fact.
I removed the claim that it is "pseudoscientific", which seems to me true but unnecessary here. Criticism is fine; gratuitous insults are not.
I do not think the British Medical Association or your "However, ..." or "Advocates assert ..." belong in the lede. The lede needs to be a simple summary of key points. The BMA, Montaignier and Ritalin might all be discussed later, but they do not belong here. Sandy Harris 03:34, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

Greetings, Sandy...we've not interacted yet...let's work together. First, the claim in the present draft that "There is no plausible mechanism..." is false and has no place here. There ARE plausible explanations, though simply none that have been confirmed. Dana Ullman 15:20, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

It depends on the interpretation of the word "plausible". Certainly there are explanations, but I'd say none are plausible. Sandy Harris 02:31, 15 September 2010 (UTC)
Sandy suggests above that my reference to "many physicians" prescribing homeopathic medicines "seems dubious." Perhaps it would help if he re-read our article here where in the "Homeopathy in Practice" section gives some specific figures: "In Europe homeopathy is practiced by many conventional physicians, including 30-40% of French doctors and 20% of German doctors. Some homeopathic treatment is partly covered by some European public health services, including in France and Denmark. In France, 35% of the costs of homeopathic medicine prescribed by a medical doctor are reimbursed from health insurance."...Clearly, the term "many" is not dubious. Dana Ullman 15:48, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
See the discussion under "unsupported assertions" above. Those claims do belong somewhere in the article, if they can be supported, but the lede as it stands seems to me a good summary. Sandy Harris 23:21, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
I have a question for Sandy and Howard and other skeptics. At present, in this lede, there is the sentence: "To a skeptic, the 'principle of similars' is merely an appeal to sympathetic magic." Out of curiosity, do you believe that there is a certain wisdom of the body? Do you believe that the human organism tries to adapt to infection and/or stress by creating symptoms in order to survive? If you answer YES or MAYBE to EITHER of these questions, then using drugs that mimic the body's defenses make sense, and as such, we HAVE to delete or change this ill-founded sentence. Please also remember that the "high potencies" is only a part of homeopathy and that most homeopathic medicines sold in health food stores and pharmacies today are in small, material doses. It is inappropriate (and inaccurate) to assume that ALL homeopathic medicines are in doses beyond Avogadro's number. Dana Ullman 16:34, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
That sentence is fine. What we believe is not at issue. The paragraph is trying to summarise the position about homeopathy of skeptics and critics. I'd say that, if anything, it understates their revulsion. Granted, other parts of the article should give a much more favorable view, but the negative views should be there as well. Sandy Harris 23:21, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
Individual belief is outside the scope of the article, but no, I don't think there is a "wisdom of the body", and, using the medical definition of symptom, the body doesn't create any symptoms -- the mind does. Symptoms are subjective, and signs are objective. A sign may be evidence of a defense mechanism, but it's far more likely to be evidence of a disease process.
The great fallacy I see here is the assumption that proving-based drug mimic the actual defenses. The body's direct defenses against Clostridium tetani exotoxin in tetanus are immunologic. Those defenses are supported by administering synthetic tetanus immune globulin -- we learned to avoid the horse serum preparation as too risky -- to give initial passive immunity, and tetanus toxoid to build active immunity. These don't "mimic" the defenses; they are the defenses. The body really doesn't have defenses against the neurologic effects of the toxin, but benzodiazepines, neuromuscular blocking agents, baclofen and dantrolene provide what, I suppose, could be called "symptomatic" relief. Without getting into all the receptors, we have a pretty decent idea how these drugs reduce the spasticity; we don't need to go the route of finding similars.
I'm not opposed to using unusual explanations when there are no better ones. "Wisdom of the body" sounds like something for a Religion Editor. I do use complementary methods when I have some reason to believe in a favorable risk-benefit. As soon as I hear that something is risk free, alarm bells go off. There are always tradeoffs. I'm facing a terrible one now, as the American Veterinary Medical Association described euthanasia as a means of comfort care that has the side effect of death -- yet I have a beloved cat who has a greater will to live than any human I've ever encountered. Howard C. Berkowitz 23:56, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

The text you are questioning is "There is no plausible mechanism to explain how the remedies might work, given that many of them are so dilute that they contain not a single molecule of the active ingredient. To a skeptic, the "principle of similars" is merely an appeal to sympathetic magic." I think that is OK as it stands.

It could be replaced with something that both states the skeptical position better and mentions that not everyone is skeptical:

To a skeptic, there is neither any solid evidence that homeopathy is effective nor any plausible explanation of why it should be, and the "principle of similars" is merely an appeal to sympathetic magic. Homeopaths, however, believe that they have good answers to these criticisms.
Close. Let me urge that sympathetic magic show as a wikilink, as it is not just a throwaway pejorative, but an anthropological term that shows up across many cultures. Consider dropping the "merely". When I wrote the article on sympathetic magic, it wasn't intended to disparage, but to explain a cultural pattern.
Is it necessary to bring up both the Avogadro argument and similars in the lede, purely from a standpoint of complexity? Yes, I understand that potentiation is an argument that can be countered with the Avogadro point, but similars seem more basic than potentiation in understanding the core argument of homeopathy.
I am not trying to be argumentative when I say that arguing that the principle of similars is an equivalent or superior explanation, to a drug that was designed using molecular structure-activity relationships, is inflammatory. It's one thing for the homeopaths to say why their own preparations work, but it's pushing too hard to say that the homeopaths have better explanations for the drugs developed under different paradigms. Howard C. Berkowitz 02:46, 15 September 2010 (UTC)

4th paragraph

I believe that the present 4th paragraph has NO place in the top section. Discussion of the “possible dangers” from the patient or the doctor’s decision to not use conventional treatments has NO place here. If others wish to insert this information under its proper section, I do not have a problem, though we must then acknowledge: Homeopaths respond to the possible dangers from using homeopathic medicines in replacement of conventional medical care by asserting that there are much greater dangers by using conventional medicines as a first method of treatment.

It probably needs mention of the fact that homeopaths retort that conventional medicines may also have large risks. I'm inclined to think it does belong in the lede, since these risks are a basic issue about homeopathy. However, I don't feel remarkably strongly about that and would be interested in hearing other opinions. Sandy Harris 03:44, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
I would prefer to see it go unless the homeopaths present a statistical risk-benefit argument, based on modern medical practices, not 1900, that the hypothesis is true that the clinical outcome is better with homeopathic treatment than medical or no treatment. The risks of most medical treatments are quantifiable, as are the benefits, with the understanding that statistical aggregates do not apply to individuals.
There are any number of times I've chosen something with significant risk, because there was reasonable evidence the risk was greater than the benefit. Obviously, a cardioplegia solution that stopped my beating heart was risky, but the risk of not having the open-heart surgery was greater. There was reliable data for risk at each stage of the procedure.
When other children would chant "your mother wears army boots," I'd point out that they were part of her uniform. The "medical treatment is more dangerous", without substantial data, rings equally relevant to me. Howard C. Berkowitz 04:34, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
"I would prefer to see it go unless ..." is not clear to me. Are you saying that text on homeopathic rejoinders should not be inserted, or that we should follow Dana's suggestion and remove the current 4th paragraph from the lede? Sandy Harris 05:30, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
Unless the homeopathic rejoinder has strong statistical support, it should not be in the article. It's one thing if there is a formal risk-benefit analysis proving a hypothesis, but if it's no more than "well, medical treatments are dangerous," it's irrelevant defense. Howard C. Berkowitz 06:25, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

In due respect, the formal risk-benefit analysis needs to go BOTH ways. What evidence do you have for the "dangers" of receiving homeopathic treatment...and please do not give individual cases. I do have access to numerous cost-effectiveness studies showing significant cost savings to people who utilize homeopathic medicines. Dana Ullman 15:34, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

Bluntly, it does not need to go both ways. Homeopathy is desperately trying to claim a place at the table in the face of enormous evidence that molecular medicine is effective. It seems your position is that homeopathy and medicine are of equal status and that every claim against homeopathy must be counterattacked by one about medicine. If, indeed, homeopathy is so much an alternative to medicine, this is useless.
Incidentally, it would be wise for you to identify your financial interests in the promotion of homeopathy, such as (from http://www.homeopathic.com/main/bio_dana.jsp):
  • Dana Ullman, M.P.H. (Masters in Public Health, U.C. Berkeley) is "homeopathic.com" and is widely recognized as the foremost spokesperson for homeopathic medicine in the U.S.
  • Dana founded Homeopathic Educational Services, America's largest publisher and distributor of homeopathic books, tapes, software, and medicine kits. For 10 years he served as formulator and spokesperson for a line of homeopathic medicine manufactured by Nature's Way, one of America's leading natural products companies.
See Bob Badgett's developing article on conflict of interest. It is one thing for a practitioner to charge for professional services, but it is generally considered unethical for physicians to refer patients to testing facilities, publications, etc., from which they derive income.
You are the one making the claims that medicine is so dangerous. I didn't make claims about ""dangers" of receiving homeopathic treatment", which is a change of subject. I will say, however, that it is dangerous to seek homeopathic treatment in lieu of medical treatments of established efficacy. Now, that seems a backing-off from the dangers of conventional medicine, but there seems a dearth of such studies from sources not vested in homeopathy. Again, these studies need to be overwhelming to dispute the CZ policy of providing the mainstream view.
"NPOV", incidentally, is WP-speak and discouraged here.
Incidentally, apropos of being encyclopedic, how about contributions other than your single subject? Some of us are interested in building an encyclopedia, not fighting a never-ending battle with single-issue advocates or, as Sandy responded to Ramanand, social networking. Howard C. Berkowitz 16:48, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
Wow, Howard, you're now getting disperate...and I'm sorry to see this. First, for your information, I was personally asked by Larry Sanger (the founder of Citizendium) to edit here, and he asked me to become a Healing Arts Editor. I have never hid any fact about my background. In fact, most people appreciate my knowledge and expertise, except those few people who are threatened by facts, research, references to data, and the substantiation of information.
You and Sandy were asking me for "evidence" that conventional medicine has certain risks. While I could have laughed at this seemingly innocent (or naive) request, I simply responded by asking you to provide evidence that there was danger to homeopathic treatment. Instead of providing this evidence, you have chosen a different strategy to get your bias into this article. Let's avoid such tactics...and let's try to work together to write something fair, accurate, verifiable, and encyclopedic. Dana Ullman 22:26, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
No, I don't believe it is possible to collaborate with you to write something that is fair, accurate, and is not far more supportive of the benefits of homeopathy than is supportable by the views recognized by the bulk of medical opinion and data. I believe the best I can do is point out evasions, selective and often inaccurate statements about pharmacology, misquotations (e.g., saying Sandy or I asked for "evidence" medicine has risks), and what I believe to be a significant conflict of interest. I do so in discussion here, to be sure other members of the community see it, rather than jump into revert wars.
I have never suggested that medical treatment does not has risks; medical treatment always has risks. What I find to be hand-waving is the implication that homeopathy has no risks, including the delay of effective treatment.
You will note that I have asked for an Editor ruling on what I consider continued misues of von Behring as an authority that homeopathy works. I find it sad that regardless of what was done to design a treatment, the data-free argument that similars might be an explanation continues to be brought up.
Larry Sanger is not a health professional, and, I suspect, asked you to be a Healing Arts Editor because you are visible in that field. I would be much less antagonistic to your contributions were you to focus on what homeopaths believe and do, rather than the frequent -- and frequent inaccurate -- attacks on medicine, such as your condescending remark that there are no antifungal and antiviral agents of demonstrated efficacy, and, indeed, demonstrated risk. Indeed, the risk of unmodified amphotericin B has led to significant molecular work to reduce toxicity. You give the impression, however, that Hahnemann got it all right in the early 19th century, and medicine continues to get it wrong.
Professional collaboration does not require that participants like one another. It does not help when they are patronizing, and, if they can't take focused criticism without changing the subject, perhaps the kitchen of knowledge is a bit too hot. Howard C. Berkowitz 22:53, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

Howard, my concern about your editing is that you are just fabricating fights. You wrote above that I said "there are no antifungal and antiviral agents of demonstrated efficacy." Where (!) did I say OR simply imply that? Nowhere! I even repeated my point that we all have to be careful in making broad statement such as the "collective weight of evidence". THIS is what I mean by "straw men." You create arguments with yourself by making up what I say.

Where did you imply that? In an unsigned entry following mine of Howard C. Berkowitz 04:25, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
I am surprised and even a bit shocked to hear your assertion that antibiotics are effective for viral and fungal infections,
Obviously, I disagree, because I then listed numerous examples of antimicrobials effective against such infections.
If you want to accuse me of starting fights with myself, I'll simply conclude that one of me will always win. Howard C. Berkowitz 04:38, 15 September 2010 (UTC)


To clarify (again), my point is not that there are no risks to homeopathic treatment. However, IF we wish to highlight that there are certain risks to homeopathic treatment, we also have to acknowledge that it is widely recognized that there are much greater risks from conventional medical treatment. Dana Ullman 03:43, 15 September 2010 (UTC)

Certainly we should say somewhere in the article that there are also risks with other treatments, and that one of the arguments for homeopathy is that many of its remedies are low-risk. However, "it is widely recognized that there are much greater risks from conventional medical treatment" strikes me as something an encyclopedia cannot subscribe to without a lot more evidence.
In any case, I do not think a detailed discussion of risk issues belongs in the lede. I am inclined to thin the lede should raise the question, and in my opinion the current text does that adequately. Sandy Harris 04:12, 15 September 2010 (UTC)
I agree that a detailed discussion is out of place in the lede. If I may, I'll offer a fairly well-established risk of using homeopathic therapy as a first resort: myocardial infarction (heart attack). Assuming there are no contraindications to thrombolytic therapy, the window for optimal benefit from thrombolysis is 3-6 hours after onset, with declining benefit out to 12 hours. Thrombolysis can reverse the damage to the heart muscle if done within the window. I can cite any number of conditions where death can occur in hours or days without definitive therapy--tetanus is one. Of course, the best treatment for tetanus is prevention -- and TDAP and other immunizations are not designed by the principle of similars.
It's one thing to say that homeopathic remedies might be lower-risk in non-emergent situations, but that isn't what is being said. Of course, one could also say "it is widely recognized that there are much greater benefits, in serious conditions, from appropriate conventional therapy." No, appropriate conventional therapy does not, as been charged, extend to antibiotics for uncomplicated otitis media. Howard C. Berkowitz 04:38, 15 September 2010 (UTC)
In due respect, no one (!) has said or suggested that homeopathic medicines should be a treatment of first resort for heart attacks. THIS is what I mean by my concern for your tendency to create fights/arguments. Let's both avoid creating straw men. That said, I agree with Sandy that the lede should not have a detailed discussion of risks issues, though I would think that we might all agree that it is widely recognized that homeopathic medicines themselves are "basically safe." Also, can I ask us all to try to avoid inserting our own comments within the comments of other writers because it makes it challenging for people to determine who is saying what. Thanx. Dana Ullman 16:51, 19 September 2010 (UTC)
If it's alternative medicine, then it is the first resort. If it's complementary medicine, then there should be guidelines for the scope of practice of homeopathy. In the past, however, Ramanand has said homeopathy should be a first reatment for all manner of conditions. There was an extensive argument about acute asthmatic attacks, which, as I remember,
I am not creating a straw man. Please document when homeopathy should not be the treatment of first resort. Otherwise, I'll assume alternative medicine with no limitations.
Let me clarify my position. I would tend to say that homeopathic medications, themselves, are basically safe. I am very concerned that homeopathy, as a system of treatment, can be as deadly dangerous as a non-surgeon trying an advanced surgical procedure. You have yet to give information that documents what limitations homeopaths accept.
Please stop with the straw man accusations. I do not believe that any consensus is possible between alternative (i.e., not complementary) medicine and coventional medicine. Actually, I'd be far more likely to consult a shamanic healer than a homeopath, as there's a fair bit of documentation that shamans have a good understanding of psychosomatic medicine. I don't know what consensus could exist between someone that rejects the idea of treating the pathogens of infectious disease, and someone that has an understanding of modern microbiology. We, sir, are not on the same side and will not be. Howard C. Berkowitz 17:24, 19 September 2010 (UTC)

Rest of article

Further evidence of the strong POV and non-encyclopedic tone of this Draft is:

--under OVERVIEW: The first two sentences are “attack sentence.” It is clearly inappropriate to provide critique of a subject before adequately describing it FIRST. Those sentences must be removed or placed elsewhere.

I'd say at least the entire first paragraph and probably the whole "Overview" section should be deleted. None of it is real overview of the field. Sandy Harris 03:50, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
I agree with Sandy. There is no need for this "Overview" section, though I do believe that we need to place some of this information about the status and popularity of homeopathy in a section "Homeopathy in Practice." Dana Ullman 15:45, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

-- under OVERVIEW: Some sentences here are just confusing, especially this one and especially its last phrase: They are interested too in why some studies appear to have positive outcomes—do these reflect real efficacy, or can they be accounted for by flaws in study design or in statistical analysis, or "publication bias"—the tendency for small studies with chance positive outcomes to be published while studies with negative or inconclusive outcomes are not.

-- under HISTORICAL ORIGINS, it is confusing and surprising how or why Paracelsus was described as an “astrologer.” This field was not a primary area of his contributions. Just as the bio for Isaac Newton does not describe him as an astrologer, even though he actually wrote more on THIS subject than on mechanistic physics, we editors here know that Newton’s primary contributions to the modern-day have nothing to do with astrology. Needless to say, people here who want homeopathy to sound “quackish” tend to provide this biased information.

-- under HISTORICAL ORIGINS: Inaccurate information has been provided about the present status of the word “allopathy.” There is a long AND significant modern-day usage of this term by conventional medical organizations, medical schools, and state and national governments. Evidence for this is at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Allopathic_medicine (see “Hopping's huge list of links). Clearly, the term “allopathy” is still in extremely common usage, and it is simply inaccurate to say that it isn’t. In this light, Osler’s quote has no meaning here, though it may have a place in the article on “allopathy.”

-- under THE LAW OF SIMILARS: As much as I like the subject of “hormesis,” I do not associate its application with the law of similars nor do I know any reference to that. As such, the word “hormesis” has no place in THIS section. We could replace this word, hormesis, with the word “pheromones” because these substances are known to have a powerful effect in extremely small doses AND it is widely known that pheromones from one species are only sensed by those of a “similar” species.

-- under CLINICAL TRIALS TESTING THE EFFICACY… There are many sentences and paragraphs here that I could recommend changes, but I will emphasize those that are most important or most incorrect:

I recommend removal of the following short paragraph & its accompanying quote.

While many of these have indicated positive effects, generally, trials that are larger high-quality trials have tended to show little or no statistically significant effects, as was concluded by the authors of the second Lancet study cited above when they re-analyzed these trials.
“There is increasing evidence that more rigorous trials tend to yield less optimistic results than trials with less precautions against bias.”[98]

My explanation: First, the quote does not verify the sentence it is supposed to substantiate. Second, the article it quotes also asserts that it is a general finding in ALL clinical research that the higher quality trials tend to show less positive results. Third, the fact of the matter is that there are many high quality trials published in “high impact” journals that have shown statistically significant effects, including the four trials by Reilly, et al, the four trials on the treatment of influenza using Oscillococcinum, and the three trials on childhood diarrhea by Jacobs, et al.

We need to be careful in our review of research to avoid skewing the facts with “fudge” words. For instance, one could say that the “collective evidence” of the thousands of studies conducted by Thomas Edison was that electricity was not possible (because only ONE experiment in 1,000+ worked).

The challenge that we have in describing the efficacy (or lack of it) using homeopathic medicines is that we have to evaluate internal validity (how “high quality” were the trials?) AND external validity (is the specific medicine tested commonly used by homeopaths to treat people with that specific condition?). Skeptics of homeopathy tend to evaluate the internal validity issues and totally ignore the external validity issues…and BOTH are essential. To ignore external validity is akin to saying that antibiotics do not work for infections because the “collective weight” of studies on viral, fungal, and bacterial infection shows that these drugs do not work for this common group of diseases. Get it?

No. I don't get it, because I can demonstrate, in vivo and in vitro, that antibiotics do work for viral, fungal and bacterial infections. This is hand-waving and hardly encyclopedic.
I have repeatedly challenged you to respond to why homeopaths seem uninterested in the sort of trials used for customized pharmacogenomic medicine, which do have internal and external validity, and never have gotten an answer. Howard C. Berkowitz 04:25, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
I am surprised and even a bit shocked to hear your assertion that antibiotics are effective for viral and fungal infections, but I have no interest in arguing with you about these subjects here, though these strange assertions may influence your credibility with others. I take much more seriously your unfounded assertion that homeopaths are not interested in research that has internal and external validity. What is your evidence here?
Shocked? Now, if you are holding to the generally obsolete assertion that antibiotics are purely natural products, that's one thing. Let's see...viral? Neuraminidase inhibitors for influenza (as well as the older amantadine and rimantidine), ribavirin for Lassa fever and possibly other hemorrhagic fevers, protease inhibitors (as part of HAART) in lowering HIV levels...well, interferons might or might not be considered antibiotics, but have distinct roles in treating viral diseases. Fungal? Amphotericin B (amphotericin B lipid complex, amphotericin B cholesteryl sulfate, and liposomal amphotericin B); the conazole series; griseofulvin; flucytosine -- and that's not considering topical-only agents. Howard C. Berkowitz 17:07, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
Howard, you're missing my point here. My point is that one must be careful using the term "weight of evidence" because such terms group together various disparate treatments for various disparate conditions. Although I used the term "antibiotics," perhaps I should have used a name of a specific antibiotic, thereby showing that it may be effective for one type of infection but not for "all types" of infection. Likewise, testing homeopathic Arnica for one ailment may prove efficacious, but testing it for two other ailments might show that it is ineffective. One should not say that the "weight of evidence" is that Arnica is not effective. Instead, it is more accurate to say that Arnica is effective one condition but ineffective for two others. Get it now? I hope so...
My intention is not to "fight." My intention is for us to work together to provide verifable accuracy. Dana Ullman 22:37, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
Now I am confused. When you challenged fungi and viruses, it seemed you were challenging the existence of antimicrobial agents (a better term than antibiotic) for those organisms. I gave counterexamples.
No person with reasonable competence in infectious disease suggests there exists Panaceamycin, good for everything, any more than, presumably, Arnica is good for everything. Antimicrobial agents have reasonably well defined spectra, but, since they are directed against mutable living organisms, any competent hospital has a table ("antibiotogram") of the preferred agents for community-acquired and hospital-acquired infections in that locality.
Now, does the "weight of evidence" support appropriate antibiotic use? Yes! "Appropriate" does not include using antibiotics for self-limiting conditions unlikely to be affected by any antibiotic. Appropriate means considering the overall clinical picture -- sounds like the argument you make about syndromes -- such as not using penicillin G for exquisitely penicillin-sensitive streptococci, if the culture shows coinfection with Staphylococcus aureus or other penicillinase-secreting organism. One has to consider potential development of resistance, as well as the practical means of administration--if there is no one qualified to inject a parenteral antibiotic in home care, the antibiotic is irrelevant no matter how effective it may be against the organism. If there's a choice in a patient with a hearing loss, you avoid the especially ototoxic aminoglycosides.
Incidentally, I was just scratching the cognitive process in determining how to treat an infection. Howard C. Berkowitz 03:03, 15 September 2010 (UTC)
Just as doing double-blind and placebo controlled research testing surgical procedures have their methodological and ethical challenges, research on homeopathy has to be sensitive to the method itself. You cannot just test a homeopathic medicine and its effects on a bacteria in a petrie dish, nor can I test acupuncture by putting a needle in a petric dish full of bacteria. You've been told this many times in the past, and yet, you repeatedly feign ignorance about homeopathy and homeopathic research. Please...you're a smart guy. Let's discuss research that does exist. Dana Ullman 15:59, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
I repeat: there are usable methods that have been described for pharmacogenetic medicine. Let the clinician diagnose the individual treatment and send orders for it to the pharmacy. The pharmacy breaks the blinding code and dispenses either the ordered individual treatment or the control arm, the latter which may or may not be placebo. The safety committee monitors, and, assuming the study goes to completion, statistically evaluates the hypothesis that the experimental treatment arm is superior to control.
Incidentally, the piece of laboratory glassware is a Petri dish. If, however, you are referring to bacterial sensitivity testing, production tends to be done with radiochemistry, radioimmune reactions, or immunofluorescence. Consider me dumb since I don't know I'm feigning ignorance about homeopathy. Howard C. Berkowitz 17:07, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
"I've been told"...but by someone I find plausible? You have yet to answer my question about the cognitive process of a homeopathic session, claiming that only a homeopath can understand it, yet no medical discipline makes such a claim of inner mysteries. Howard C. Berkowitz 17:07, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
Howard, I am perfectly able to describe the cognitive process of a homeopath, but I don't think THAT has a place here. I've told you this before (many times!), and yet, you repeated request it. I'm writing this again because it seems that you don't want to remember. Sadly, you consistently seem to want to pick a fight, and you make these strange claims about homeopathy and homeopaths without evidence. To me, it just seems that you have a chip on the shoulder. I have no problems with you making verifiable statements or asking questions, but I do have a problem with you creating boogey-men when none exist.
I will say this: homeopaths usually prescribe their medicines for the overall "syndrome" of the patient, not just their "disease." Dana Ullman 22:46, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
I keep repeating it because you keep refusing to answer it, which I remember very well. Apparently, homeopathy is unique among healing arts and health sciences in not addressing cognition in practitioners.
I suppose that if I can't do better than century-old immunology and pronouncements that regardless of the molecular pharmacology that went into developing a drug, our old buddy similars might be the real explanation.
Sadly, you consistently want to pick a fight with anyone who doesn't regard homeopathy as the greatest thing for health. Howard C. Berkowitz 23:14, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

--Under GOVERNMENT AND INSTITUTIONAL… -- If we choose to include reference to the Great Britain’s House of Commons’ Science and Technology’s report on homeopathy, we have to make it clear that this report was voted on by an extremely small minority of its members. Of the 14 members, 10 did not consider this issue worthy of voting. Ultimately, a “majority” of only THREE members voted for this anti-homeopathy report. Of these 3 votes, two members were so new to the Committee that they did not attend a single hearing on the subject of homeopathy. The third vote for the “report” came from Evan Harris, a vitriolic antagonist to homeopathy who was not re-elected this year, losing to a 20-something year old political neophyte. Finally, because this report was “advisory” only in nature, the health minister overruled it and didn’t accept its conclusions. If anyone wants to make reference to THIS report, we have to add these important facts. I personally suggest that we do not cover this complicated and inconclusive decisions.

It should also be noted that whoever wrote the above was obviously also aware of these facts and choose not to present them. This type of biased reporting should not have a voice here. Let’s strive for more encyclopedic objectivity. Dana Ullman 01:21, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

Repeated defenses of homeopathy, with nothing more than supposition and coincidences, don't belong here either. In my opinion, Mr. Ullman, you will not regard anything short of an article that gives homeopathy as much credibility as conventional medicine as acceptable -- and that, sir, is a promo. Howard C. Berkowitz 04:25, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

Logical fallacies

Take the proposed statement "Advocates assert that the homeopathic “principle of similars” is, in part, the basis for modern day immunizations, allergy treatments, and select other conventional treatments (ie, the use of Ritalin and other amphetamine-like drugs used to treat hyperactive children), while critics have compared it to sympathetic magic. "

If anyone used the principle of similars to plan these treatments, there might be a case. I sincerely doubt, however, that this was ever done; the advocates making after-the-fact, observational rather than molecular, correlations that are extremely dubious. Take a modern immunization, especially an acellular one -- it is designed on a molecular basis to produce desired immunoglobulins and other specific substances; similars were not involved in the design. It's rather hard to say that "similars" is a better explanation than what the molecular pharmacologists intended, and can demonstrate.

Are there homeopathic provings that demonstrate that large doses of cromolyns cause basophil and mast cell degranulation? If not, the molecular explanation that they desensitize the granules, and in turn block the release of histamine and other inflammatory messengers, is a much better shave with Occam's Razor.

I hope we do not have as lengthy a debate on the Tooth Fairy, especially from advocates that are America's leading spokesman for tooth fairies and thus have a financial conflict of interest. Howard C. Berkowitz 01:57, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

Just to throw yet another bit of reality, the use of amphetamine-like drugs, as well as non-amphetamine drugs such as Strattera, for attention deficit disorder — not limited to children — and not discussing other psychotropic drugs is, to put it mildly, showing selection bias. There's as much evidence of neurotransmitter effects than of "similars". Further, if one were to generalize to other psychotropic drugs, one couldn't use the principles of similars to produce hypomania in a normal control. It has repeatedly been demonstrated that lithium carbonate, for example, is not euphoriant. In high doses, it's a depressant -- remarkably so, since the subject will be dead. Howard C. Berkowitz 04:25, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
We cite in this article a quote from Emil Adolph von Behring (the "father of immunology") who asserts, "In spite of all scientific speculations and experiments regarding smallpox vaccination, Jenner’s discovery remained an erratic blocking medicine, till the biochemically thinking Pasteur, devoid of all medical classroom knowledge, traced the origin of this therapeutic block to a principle which cannot better be characterized than by Hahnemann’s word: homeopathic." Whether physicians today (or yesterday) refuse to believe that the "principle of similars" is utilized in medicine, it still can be asserted that they are consciously or subconsciously utilizing it. This is NOT to say that ALL drugs are prescribed by this principle (Howard creates a straw man argument with his reference to lithium carbonate). Further, just because there are other explanations for how or why Ritalin works does not take away the fact that the "similars" principle may also be at play. Dana Ullman 16:14, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
Ah yes. von Behring. 1901 Nobel Prize for 19th century work. Got some authoritative immunology less than a century old? Maybe someone that knew about immunoglobulins?
"It can be asserted" and "just because there are other explanations" doesn't support similars, any more than the Illuminati might be responsible for all evil in international relations. "Might" isn't encyclopedic.
Actually, I prefer the wicker man to the straw man.
I'm disgusted, but I will not give up because the integrity of CZ means something to me. To stop responding to handwaving would be to give in to the stamina of homeopathic advocates.
You were the one that brought up various drugs. I added lithium carbonate as one example. How is it a straw man? In therapeutic doses, it has no effect on non-hypomanic patients. Easy to call things straw men when you don't like them, and drop back to "it can be asserted." The capability of assertion does not make for encyclopedic quality. Howard C. Berkowitz 17:16, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

Regarding 'point of view'

No "point-of-view" disparagement required for conclusions/inferences drawn from science. Any such disparagement itself reflects "point-of-view". The lede as it reads now reflects medical science's judgment of homeopathy. Personally, as a scientist, I consider an open mind a virtue, but I try not to have it so open my skeptical inquirer falls out. Anthony.Sebastian 03:16, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

As I've suggested, we have to face the issue that the two advocates appear not to want the general judgment to appear, unless it is immediately accompanied by a Seinfeld-like "but that's OK, and homeopathy works." Howard C. Berkowitz 04:25, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

Biology-Health Sciences Editor ruling needed

Immunology clearly falls into these fields, not Healing Arts. I contend that it is ludicrous for this article to be using von Behring as a source of authority. It's fair enough to mention a 1901 Nobel Prize winner in a historic context, but a ruling is needed if his statements on homeopathy and immunotherapy can be used as substantiation for plausible modes of immune response. Immunology has progressed a bit in over a century.

It's futile to argue this with Mr. Ullman, and I believe we have enough relevant Editors to settle this point. Howard C. Berkowitz 18:35, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

Agreed (sorry for butting in). (Chunbum Park 09:56, 15 September 2010 (UTC))
Don't feel sorry, Chunbum, your particpation and opinion is a valued part of the decision process.
This appears to be a bigger issue than homeopathy. It appears that you are asking to limit an editor on an article. We don't have a mechanism for that. We've really left that to the devices of other editors to challenge unusual statements by other editors. I would expect that even Dana would appreciate a immunologist's input, but regardless, they'd both still need resources to cite. I'm not sure that a Health Sciences Editor can overrule a Healing Arts editor on an article, but he can certainly challenge anything that counters his beliefs. I would think the EC or EiC would have to rule on something like that. Of course, that would be the Managing Editor should the new charter take effect. D. Matt Innis 12:59, 15 September 2010 (UTC)
That's much what I was thinking. To take a parallel example relevant to Howard, the article on the Iraq War might, and in my view should, discuss the question of its legality. But I don't suppose the article is affiliated to the Law Workgroup. So what happens with a hypothetical conflict between, say, Howard and a law editor on that question? I think the new EC has to think about the whole system here, not just leave it to the ME to invent precedents. Peter Jackson 15:03, 15 September 2010 (UTC)
Perfect example, Peter. The new charter should allow the new ME to make a decision on the fly based on ample input from everyone (especially editors) and then the EC can take its time to review the ME decision and either overrule it or support it. Hopefully, that will develop a sort of "case law" that eventually develop into policy based on a democratically expert debated concepts rather than customary consensus. Meanwhile, authors will be able to move on to different content while the decision is reached elsewhere. D. Matt Innis

(undent) All of you make good points, but the specific may be a little easier. If I were to state the problem in EC terms, it is that different disciplines acquire knowledge at different rates. Were this, for example, a Literature article, Oscar Wilde or G. B. Shaw's comments would be relevant. If this were aviation engineering, however, I think it is relatively obvious that Orville and Wilbur Wright's commentary would not be very relevant to an Airbus (most recent model) or Boeing 787 Dreamliner. While I've often wondered how a classic military genius such as Belisarius would do with airmobile forces, he'd have a bit of catching up.

Von Behring, and indeed Hahnemann, were giants in their time. Today, however, von Behring wouldn't know how to find his way to the protein sequencer or the molecular visualization workstation.

The policy, therefore, might say that to cite an authority as more than a historic point, that authority has to be reasonably familiar with current concepts. It may be even faster now, but, a few years ago, based on MEDLINE growth, the amount of information in health sciences doubled every seven years. Some fields, such as molecular pharmacology, went from nonexistent to major disciplines. There's not going to be a citation that "Von Behring is obsolete", but that's a reasonable inference.

Peter, I would be absolutely delighted to have an article on the legality of the Iraq War. The article is not now affiliated with law, or several other relevant workgroups, due to the three workgroup limit. In doing the main draft of these articles, I had quite enough to do with the "what" and "how" without getting into the just war theory or international law. I would be happy, over an appropriate beverage, to discuss what I personally consider to be vague language in the UN Charter.

Unquestionably, Matt, workgroups need to be revised. I have been doing some experimentation with subgroups, but they are not a sole answer. Howard C. Berkowitz 17:19, 15 September 2010 (UTC)

I think the word "ruling" in the section title is an error. Certainly comment, or even contributions, from those editors would be useful and (I assume) welcomed by all concerned, but I do not think they have the authority to rule here.
The paragraph quoting von Behrig starts "Scientists and medical doctors today do not think that the principle of similars is generally true or useful, and they explain the efficacy of vaccination without referring to it. Physicians of the 19th century however did consider that the principle could be valuable." That strikes me as fair. Given that context-creating text, I see no objection to the von B quote.
As I see it, there are serious issues with this article, and Howard is right about most of them. However, on this particular point, I see him as tilting at a windmill. Sandy Harris 02:52, 16 September 2010 (UTC)
One never knows...the windmills might be giants. Seriously, I really don't have a problem with historical quotes in historical contexts. Such contexts, though, would include both Osler's preference for 19th century homeopathy over 19th century allopathy, and his later statement that both allopathy (as used at the time) and homeopathy were both "cults" that needed to be replaced by scientific medicine.
Recent comments on this talk page, however:

Whether physicians today (or yesterday) refuse to believe that the "principle of similars" is utilized in medicine, it still can be asserted that they are consciously or subconsciously utilizing it. This is NOT to say that ALL drugs are prescribed by this principle (Howard creates a straw man argument with his reference to lithium carbonate). Further, just because there are other explanations for how or why Ritalin works does not take away the fact that the "similars" principle may also be at play. Dana Ullman 16:14, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

made me concerned that advocate(s) wanted to reintroduce the von B quote without the qualifiers, and suggesting that similars are the mechanism of medical immunization. That is not acceptable and is flatly wrong. I suspect that some of the molecular immunologists building acellular vaccines may never have heard of similars and certainly aren't designing with that principle, rather than protein structure-activity.
Lithium carbonate is hardly a straw man, as its activity would not be demonstrated in a proving on a non-hypomanic individual, only toxic effects in high doses. When things demonstate exceptions to basic concepts such as similars and proving, they become significant negative data. "It can be asserted" is hardly encyclopedic, thinking of the classic assertion that if my aunt had testicles, she'd be my uncle.--Howard C. Berkowitz 04:33, 17 September 2010 (UTC)

Howard C. Berkowitz 04:26, 17 September 2010 (UTC)

Followup on Anthony's comment about alternative medicine

While I agree with your addition, I wonder if it goes far enough. Complementary and alternative medicine, while often grouped together, are not the same. Alternative medicine, to use NCCAM's definition, is a substitute for conventional medicine, while complementary medicine can be integrated with conventional medicine. Rather by definition, alternative medicine will not agree with conventional medicine, and never the twain shall meet.

It's not implausible that there could be complementary homeopathy, but I find it interesting that the article really doesn't address it. At best, there are arguments that homeopathy is superior to conventional methods for specific disorders. There's some hand-waving that conventional physicians use homeopathic remedies in their practice, but no discussion of the indications and rationale for doing so. In other articles, there is discussion of the complemntary use of acupuncture, chiropractic, etc.

Whether or not homeopathy is CAM rather than AM, this article overwhelmingly treats it as AM. Howard C. Berkowitz 21:50, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

Howard, I took a long rest from this article, and it seems that you would really benefit from doing so too. I realize that by saying this you may now want to edit more often than ever. My concern is that you are beginning to lash out at me and at this subject in an extremely emotional way. It seems that you are no longer trying to create an encyclopedic article but one that pushes your POV which remain inadequately informed about this subject of homeopathy. Heck, even when Dr. J sought to reach out to Sandy and be friendly, rather than adverserial, Sandy told him that he wasn't interested. That's OK too...and Dr. J didn't seek to connect personally. Let's not make this effort by Dr. J to be as "bad" as you've tried to make it. Dana Ullman 22:54, 14 September 2010 (UTC)
Well, gee. I've been discovered: my whole motivation is attacking homeopathy, and I never, ever contribute to anything else at Citizendium. Obviously, New Delhi metallo-beta-lactamase-1 enzyme is just an attack on homeopathy, as is CZ: Pacific War Subgroup, as is (quite friendly) collaboration on opportunistic encryption.
Why is this in a subsection where I was addressing the complementary and alternative aspects of homeopathy? That was hardly emotional. I neither need nor want your advice or concern on what I should do.
It is adversarial. Deal with it. Mortality & Morbidity conferences, military After-Action Reviews, engineering design reviews, etc., benefit from an adversarial approach.
As far as I can tell, your definition of "adequately informed" is to accept homeopathy. The Ormus article hurt Citizendium, and I am convinced that homeopathy does as well. I do know that I have had people refuse to join CZ specifically due to the homeopathy article. I'll believe you want to be encyclopedic when I see you contribute to things other than a single issue.
If I get extremely emotional about something, I tend to be more quiet, and perhaps smile a lot. Howard C. Berkowitz 23:07, 14 September 2010 (UTC)

Encyclopedia Britannica Online: Homeopathy lede

Possibly of interest:

"Homeopathy"

"a system of therapeutics, notably popular in the 19th century, which was founded on the stated principle that “like cures like,” similia similibus curantur, and which prescribed for patients drugs or other treatments that would produce in healthy persons symptoms of the diseases being treated."

"This system of therapeutics based upon the “law of similars” was introduced in 1796 by the German physician Samuel Hahnemann. He claimed that a large dose of quinine, which had been widely used for the successful treatment of malaria, produced in him effects similar to the symptoms of malaria patients. He thus concluded that all diseases were best treated by drugs that produced in healthy persons effects similar to the symptoms of those diseases. He also undertook experiments with a variety of drugs in an effort to prove this. Hahnemann believed that large doses of drugs aggravate illness and that the efficacy of medicines thus increases with dilution. Accordingly, most homeopathists believed in the action of minute doses of medicine."

"To many patients and some physicians, homeopathy was a mild, welcome alternative to bleeding, purging, polypharmacy, and other heavy-handed therapies of the day. In the 20th century, however, homeopathy has been viewed with little favour and has been criticized for focusing on the symptoms rather than on the underlying causes of disease. Homeopathy still has some adherents, and there are a number of national and international societies, including the International Homoeopathic Medical League, headquartered in Bloemendaal, Neth."

http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/270182/homeopathy

Anthony.Sebastian 03:27, 16 September 2010 (UTC)

The first two paragraphs, I hope, are not controversial. The talk page controversy, however, has significantly involved both homeopathic attempts to claim medical logic, as well as a broader assumption, by the homeopathy advocates, that homeopathy needs to be regarded as having equal credibility to conventional medicine. Attempts to claim that the principle of similars is the underlying mechanism for medical treatments developed, or validated, using methods of molecular pharmacology fall under my first point. Closely coupled is the homeopathic argument that homeopathy mimics body defenses manifested as symptoms, when the actual defense is quite different than the symptom producing factor -- tetanus is a good example, where the defenses are immunoglobins that have no particular symptom-producing quality, but the symptoms of spasticity and convulsions are caused ("indirectly") by the exotoxin of Clostridium tetani and can be lethal. The defenses neutralize the toxin, and, coupled with antibiotics and surgery, eradicate the source of the toxin.
In other words, there's a refutation of molecular medical arguments, but no molecular explanation of how similars affect the body. Hand-waving about memory of water isn't on the same level as immune reactions that can be demonstrated in vitro and in vivo, or structure-activity interactions with cellular receptors. --Howard C. Berkowitz 23:12, 16 September 2010 (UTC)

"Alternative Medicine and the Laws of Physics"

Of possible interest:

Alternative Medicine and the Laws of Physics

Robert L. Park

Skeptical Inquirer, Volume 21.5, September / October 1997

http://www.csicop.org/si/show/alternative_medicine_and_the_laws_of_physics/

Anthony.Sebastian 03:59, 16 September 2010 (UTC)

Having read the article I feel a neutral way of presenting homeopathy would be something like "it is a type of medicine supported by neither scientific reasoning nor data. that being said this is what homeopaths think: 1, 2, 3." (Chunbum Park 05:40, 16 September 2010 (UTC))
I think that overstates the case. Homeopathy is based on a system that includes reasoning which is at least pseudo-scientific. There is data, though much of it is of dubious quality; in particular, "data" is not the plural of "anecdote". I don't think your text above is neutral in any sense I'd recognise.
The current draft includes "the consensus of medical and scientific opinion is that homeopathy is unfounded." I think that is accurate, neutrally stated, and sufficiently direct.
That said, I do think we should link to highly critical articles such as that one, possibly the rational wiki page, and certainly the lovely cartoon they use. Sandy Harris 07:40, 16 September 2010 (UTC)
See rational wiki's article "Citizendium" first. Anthony.Sebastian 03:57, 17 September 2010 (UTC)

Suggest ending Main Article draft at end of lede

Let reader use Biblio to get further information. Concentrate on thorough Biblio subpage. 06:39, 17 September 2010 (UTC)

I don't think that is an adequate approach for an encyclopedia. We want a reasonably detailed explanation here. That said, the article could likely be shortened significantly without losing anything valuable. Sandy Harris 12:14, 17 September 2010 (UTC)
At home much resource cost that could be going into even copy edit of other articles, articles that deal with topics that are likely to have more serious users? I'd wager that a good part of the hit count on this article is due to people at other wikis looking for controversy.
That being said, I'm not sure how feasible it is under present policy. Assume three Health Sciences and Biology Editors are willing to nominate the truncated approach for Approval. Healing Arts Editors say it is not Approvable. It would be one thing for a Mathematics Editor to question approval for a cryptographic topic written by a computers person, but we've gotten through effective collaboration among, say, Computers, Mathematics, and Military. Health Sciences and Healing Arts, among the workgroups, are the only case where we have different workgroups for fundamentally different views on the same subject area. It's a bug, not a feature; we don't have separate-but-equal Religion and Atheism workgroups. Howard C. Berkowitz 15:53, 17 September 2010 (UTC)

Definition

The current definition reads "System of alternative medicine that asserts — contrary to scientific evidence — that substances known to cause specific syndromes of symptoms can also, in very low and specially prepared doses, help to cure people who are ill with a similar syndrome of symptoms." I think that is a moderately awful definition. The problems I see are:

The "contrary to scientific evidence" bit, or similar text, has been added at least twice and reverted at least once. I don't think it belongs in the definition.
"syndrome of symptoms" is used twice. That's ghastly stylistically, "syndrome" is a technical medical term that may not belong here, and in any case, I suspect "syndrome of symptoms" is redundant. What else could you have a syndrome of? Or does a syndrome include more than just symptoms?

My version would be: A system of alternate medicine based on the idea that substances known to cause particular combinations of symptoms can, in very low and specially prepared doses, help to cure people who are ill with similar symptoms. (sig added later Sandy Harris 23:14, 17 September 2010 (UTC))

""Syndrome of sympoms", indeed, is ghastly. Unfortunately, it touches on a difference between homeopathic and current medical thinking that is as important as similars. Modern physicians look first for an etiological diagnosis: what is the cause of the patient's distress? (Note here that "symptom" is being used in a lay sense here -- there are differences of theory as well). Homeopaths consider that the "disease model", not patient-centric, and often reject a causality-based approach. Their focus is on the products of the cause (in medical thinking) or the body wisdom expressing its defenses.

A better wording would be welcome, but the rejection of etiologic thinking, and the focus on similars as a means of reducing symptoms, is fundamental. Howard C. Berkowitz 15:53, 17 September 2010 (UTC)

Sandy's version:

  • A system of alternate medicine based on the idea that substances known to cause particular combinations of symptoms can, in very low and specially prepared doses, help to cure people who are ill with similar symptoms.


My understanding:

  • A system of alternate medicine based on the idea that large dosages of substances known to cause particular combinations of symptoms in healthy individuals can, in very low and specially prepared doses, help to cure a person whose illness causes similar symptoms.

D. Matt Innis 21:49, 17 September 2010 (UTC)

I am quite willing to be corrected here, but I think the idea of an illness that creates similar symptoms is still too close to an etiologic model of disease to be accepted by homeopaths. While I don't have better words, my sense is they would say the symptoms are produced by the "wisdom of the body" as "defenses" and the remedies strengthen the defenses. --Howard C. Berkowitz 23:59, 17 September 2010 (UTC)


That could be the next sentence.


  • A system of alternate medicine based on the idea that large dosages of substances known to cause particular combinations of symptoms in healthy individuals can, in very low and specially prepared doses, help to cure a person whose illness causes similar symptoms. In essence, they believe that symptoms are produced by the "wisdom of the body" as "defenses" and homeopathic remedies are designed to strengthen those defenses.
D. Matt Innis 03:22, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
Add: They do not use the disease model of conventional medicine, in which there is a disease rather than an individual set of symptoms, and treatment directed at a cause of that disease as it presents in multiple patients. Howard C. Berkowitz 03:29, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
More work:
  • This contrasts with conventional medicine's "disease model" of treatment that looks to treat the disease process and therefore relieve the symptoms.
I'm not sure that's totally true, though. Many conventional treatments are directed at relieving symptoms, too.
D. Matt Innis 03:54, 18 September 2010 (UTC)

(edit conflict) (undent) There's a different philosophy in symptomatic treatment. If I sprained my ankle badly enough to need surgical repair, the cause would be relevant to a conventional orthopedist who needs to work on the damaged structures. Otherwise, the exact ligament stretch might be known, but it's not of therapeutic benefit. Symptomatic pain relief is the first consideration -- yes, rehabilitation may focus on exact etiology, but, for the sake of argument, assume it's self-limiting.

Sometimes, as with uncomplicated childhood otitis media, even if it is bacterial, antibiotic therapy may not be justified. Presumably, though, the child can still get acetaminophen.

In both of the cases above, there was awareness of an etiology, but a choice to treat only symptoms. Palliative care is often largely but not exclusively symptomatic -- still, an etiology would be necessary for chemotherapy or radiotherapy to slow the growth of an incurable tumor. Pain management, though, is symptomatic and even more important. Where does nursing care fit?

The homeopaths, however, appear to exclude the idea of treatment based on etiology, as opposed to symptom relief when the cause is either self-limiting or not treatable. I spend hours daily giving comfort care to my cat buddy, relatively little of which is directed at the cancer itself, but much more in nutrition, emotional support and wound care. Indeed, I am using some complementary medicine along with a lot more conventional things. Homeopathic ideas of symptom-oriented remedies don't enter into it. --Howard C. Berkowitz 04:28, 18 September 2010 (UTC)

I don't think either that long definitions are a good idea in general, or that the proposed "next sentences" are needed in this definition. In the article, certainly; in the lede, probably. However, the definition needs to be short and direct. In particular, it needs to be short enough to look reasonable when cited on a related articles page. Sandy Harris 04:46, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
If the definition is to be short, then, I believe the rejection of etiology is far, far more significant to homeopathy than the better-known issues of small doses. It appears to me that Hahnemann's insight dealt with symptoms being the essential manifestation of health or not-health, and only then did he go to the idea of provings and similars. My understanding is that his using provings for malaria had to do with the symptom production of quinine.
Absolutely, I forgot that we were working on the definition! You're right, Sandy. D. Matt Innis 21:27, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
I believe there's a comment on this page, from a homeopath, that homeopathic remedies are not always administered in homeopathic femtodoses.
The rejection of etiology is also key to much of the dispute with medicine, as I mentioned in terms of clinical trials. It is also, however, central to the medical rejection of some homeopathic approaches, such as the principal treatment for malaria being based on reducing Plasmodium parasites in the blood. Quinine remains a third-line drug for malaria, but its action in reducing fever and chills is due to its ability to suppress the parasites, not (in a medical view) what effects are caused by high doses of quinine. Howard C. Berkowitz 04:56, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
Quinine remains a third-line drug for malaria, but its action in reducing fever and chills is due to its ability to suppress the parasites, not (in a medical view) what effects are caused by high doses of quinine.
I think that's the point; it's not that homeopath's don't care about etiology, they just don't concern themselves with it. If it causes the same symptoms in a normal person, then it's used to treat the person that has those same symptoms, regardless of the cause. As you say, they might contend that the plasmodium is not what causes the symptoms, rather the symptoms are the body's response to plasmodium. To them it doesn't matter. D. Matt Innis 21:28, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
As my grandmother might have said, ah-HAH! Admittedly, I'm taking the example of the worst form of malaria, but a patient presenting with the cerebral form of Plasmodium falciparum malaria may well die in 18 hours. In general, the standard of medical care would be artemisinin-based combination therapy, with critical care support for effects such as acute respiratory distress syndrome or disseminated intravascular coagulation.
Quinine, in substantial doses and in combination with doxycycline, tetracycline, or clindamycin, be lifesaving. If I were the patient, however, and someone offered me homeopathic oral doses of oral quinine, I'd prefer a lethal dose of barbiturates, or a large-caliber bullet to the back of the neck (messy but fast).
Now, I'd have every respect for a complementary homeopath that suspected severe falciparum malaria, and immediately transferred the patient to medical care. Assuming such care were available, I'd regard an alternative practitioner as having, as the lawyers put it, depraved indifference for human life.. Howard C. Berkowitz 22:02, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
I suspect the cerebral form would have different symptoms, therefore different remedies as well. A bullet is probably not one of them. ;-) D. Matt Innis 23:40, 19 September 2010 (UTC)
Are you doubting the efficacy of a .45 caliber ACP 254-grain round, which is lead in a hardly homeopathic dose? Nevertheless, if I had cerebral P. falciparum malaria, I know that active medical treatment is still very iffy. Seriously, we have the problem of any validation here; I cannot imagine an ethics review board that would approve any treatment for such a life-threatening disease without overwhelming laboratory evidence for the control arm. Howard C. Berkowitz 22:21, 20 September 2010 (UTC)

Sandy's edit to the definition

...specifically "help to cure or prevent illnesses involving similar symptoms." While a homeopath will have to review this, I don't think "illnesses involving similar symptoms" is really a homeopathic concept. They certainly object to "diseases with similar symptoms", and tend to reject "disease" as a medical conceit. The symptoms are signals of the body's defenses to be strengthened, not the effects of a causative factor. Howard C. Berkowitz 04:59, 18 September 2010 (UTC)

I think you're splitting hairs, but, yes, let's hear from a homeopath on this. D. Matt Innis 21:27, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
Sandy's new definition is definitely an improvement. D. Matt Innis 21:32, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
Li'l hard pressed for time. I'm happy with Alexander's definition, but if you guys feel it needs to be simpler, I have a 'simpler definition', which would read:-

(Homeopathy is) an alternative system of medicine, which stimulates the natural healing processes of the body (with the help of sub-physiological doses of a remedy, by using its rebound effect), to restore health (homeostasis) in a sick person.

The matter in brackets is optional.—Ramanand Jhingade 07:36, 19 September 2010 (UTC)
Note that it is alternative medicine and not alternate medicine.—Ramanand Jhingade 07:44, 19 September 2010 (UTC)
Unfortunately, "rebound effect" is not a well-defined term, certainly in medicine, so should not be used in a definition unless it is well defined in an article of its own. The alternate definition depends heavily on homeopathic terminology, such as "natural healing processes", as well as using homeostasis is far broader a context than is used in the biological sciences -- to say nothing amout emerging concepts such as allostasis.
The proposed new definition also overemphasizes the aspect of small doses and does not address the apparent rejection, by homeopathy, of the idea of "disease". Instead, it speaks of "restoring health", without addressing the meaning of the state of non-health.
Please confirm or correct the statement that homeopaths do not believe in the concept of disease, in the sense that disease has an etiologic cause and the cause needs to be corrected. Howard C. Berkowitz 08:30, 19 September 2010 (UTC)
I agree with Howard here, Ramanand, that your version introduces too many vague terms to be considered for use as a one sentence definition. D. Matt Innis 23:44, 19 September 2010 (UTC)

What about

A system of alternative medicine based on the idea of stimulating the body's natural healing processes by administering tiny doses of substances which, when given in large doses to healthy individuals, cause similar combinations of symptoms.

I agree that Ramanand's definition has some problems, and I think the full version is too long, but it seems to me the point about stimulating natural defenses is central. Sandy Harris 03:07, 20 September 2010 (UTC)

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