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HOMOEOPATHS ARE prescribing their potions for malaria prevention, it was
reported in The Times yesterday. This is worrying, even to Melanie
Oxley of the Society of Homeopaths, because, as she says, there is no
evidence that homoeopathy can guard against malaria.
Of course, malaria is not a special case. There is no evidence that
homoeopathy can guard against or cure anything at all. A review of clinical
trials of homoeopathy published in The Lancet in 2005 concluded that
homoeopathy has no more than a placebo effect on patients.
This is not surprising. Homoeopathy is based on two main hypotheses. The first
is the “Law of Similars”: the idea that illnesses are cured by small doses
of substances that cause their symptoms. Since arsenic causes shortness of
breath, for example, small doses of it will cure diseases that also cause
shortness of breath, such as asthma.
The second idea is that the smaller the dose, the stronger the cure. A
homoeopathic potion is created by repeated dilution of the active ingredient
in water. The dilution is repeated so often that a drop of the potion will
be lucky to contain a single molecule of the active ingredient. When
homoeopathic pills have been infused with nothing but water, how could
anyone expect them to prevent malaria or cure asthma? Despite the impotence
of homoeopathy, Ms Oxley and the NHS Direct website still conclude that it
should be used alongside conventional medicine. Homoeopathy should be a
complementary, not an alternative therapy.
This is a peculiar conclusion. After all, many procedures will do nothing to
protect you against malaria, such as jumping up and down on one leg or
reciting three times “Mother Earth, protect me”. Yet no one ever recommends
these as complements for conventional medicine.
The sensible reaction to the fact that homoeopathy does not work is simply not
to use it. This was the suggestion of Professor Michael Baum and the other
doctors who signed his open letter in The Times in May suggesting
that the NHS should stop providing homoeopathy. They complained that money
wasted on homoeopathy could be spent on therapies that actually work. And
that is true. But this understates the case against homoeopathy on the NHS.
Bogus treatments are not merely wasteful, they are dangerous. Several of
those who have taken homoeopathic prophylactics have contracted malaria.
It is outrageous that the NHS should knowingly promote this quackery. And it
is knowing. The NHS Direct website points out that homoeopathy is contrary
to everything we know about chemistry and medicine, and that there is no
experimental evidence to support its preposterous claims. Yet the NHS still
promotes it, because “despite the lack of clinical evidence, homoeopathy
remains one of the most popular complementary therapies in the UK”.
Popularity is no excuse. Many medical treatments are “confidence goods”; their
quality cannot be judged by lay people. Consumers need reassurance that
confidence goods are fit for purpose, such as certification by a
professional body. We visit doctors and NHS hospitals, in part, to receive
this kind of reassurance about the remedies provided.
Most people will quite reasonably take the fact that the NHS offers
homoeopathy as certification that it works. Since the NHS knows that
homoeopathy does not work, it is intentionally misleading the public. The
popularity of homoeopathy only aggravates the crime.
There will always be charlatans who exploit ignorance and superstition. The
Government need not outlaw them. Human folly should be permitted when it is
only the fools themselves who suffer from it. But where folly is likely to
harm others, higher intellectual standards should be required. This
principle explains why we cheerfully tolerate voodoo as a religion but frown
upon voodoo economics and absolutely ban voodoo engineering.
Yet, no matter how much private nonsense should be tolerated, state-sponsored
nonsense is never acceptable. For the State’s actions always involve
compulsion, if not in what we receive, at least in what we pay for. And no
one should be compelled to pay for nonsense. Taxing us to fund homoeopathy
is outrageous. It is no better than forcing us to pay for a space programme
based on Aristotelian physics or a meteorological service based on
numerology.
The Enlightenment idea that beliefs should be based on evidence and reason is
losing ground. Many Westerners claim a right to believe whatever they like —
from Christianity to astrology to homoeopathy — whether or not their views
are supported by even a shred of evidence.
And, despite their intellectual frivolity, they also claim a right to be taken
seriously. They expect their prejudice (or “faith”, as they prefer to call
it) to be protected by limitations on free speech and to be pandered to in
tax-funded hospitals and schools.
Tony Blair is eager to oblige them. Of course, he is himself a man of
superstition. But even among more rational politicians I sense a drift
towards the idea that state services should reflect the distribution of
stupidity in the population. It is a shame. Nothing could be less in need of
government subsidy than stupidity.
We live at the historical high point of human civilisation. It is neither a
fluke nor a miracle. Our liberty and prosperity flow from of our commitment
to Enlightenment values. Our leaders should never forget it.
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I think your find now that articles published in the medical journals actually agree that homeopathy DOES work, its just that unfortunately there is no money in it for the greedy pharmaceuticals so they choose to ignore it and discredit it at all opportunities.
Matt, Bournemouth,
Wellcombe inst. in 1930 decided to discredit reasoning behind, homeopathy & forms of biofeedback devices.The miliatry took intreast and developed it into both mind control, stealth weapon systems. Mainstream science, can`t grasp the sinewave of a substrate can be broadcast to another location.
Sue, Northampton, UK
I read all the arguments with interest! What a lot the "real" doctors have to protect these days. Lousy waithing times, two minute discussions with their prescription pads to hand, and medicines which so often have absolutely dreadful side effects. Ritalin pumped into small children - who do not appear to benefit from it at all in the long term, and nowadays they are even too lazy to provide the family doctor care that previous generations fought to make available to all - despite the fact that their practices now have multiple practitioners rather than the two or three partners they used to have.
One argument - both my babies suffered from dreadful colic. The "doctors" prescribed different gloopy substances and I gave it - no effect! I finally went to a homoeopath with my youngest, and he gave him a remedy and a couple of minutes later he filled his nappy with a tremendous force, and was calm. If this was a placebo effect - why did the other junk not work?
Debbie Rushton, Brongest, Wales
Homoeopathy has helped people who suffer from many diseases. Most people turn to homoepathy when nothing else can help them, and once they have tried everything else.
Medical doctors dont always have success either!!
chantelle, brisbane, australia
I'd like to see the health service force people to choose one or the other. Stupid people can be weeded out of the gene pool when they choose flowers and water to cure their pancreatic cancer and the smart people can choose conventional medicine. We could also track the results of both and discover whether medicinal alternatives really do cure anything...which of course they won't hence the gene pool cleansing.
I think the dilution is because water has a memory of the flower or whatever once being in it. So does that mean by drinking water we're killing a being with the ability to think? Vegetarians beware. Also I can't help but think when we go to the bathroom water from inside our bodies is eventually washed out to sea and even after treatment water holds the memory and properties of the bowels of billions of people...maybe that's why we get sick in the first place. I don't actually believe that by the way I was just wondering why they think water is good then.
Lisa, Sydney, Australia
Talking about the homeopathy efficacy..., it´s a big mistake use the concept of doses comparing with molecular unions.
Homeopathy helps to human body to avoid the disease, every homeopathic medicine is personal and shouldn´t be used like general view.
Can we have some homeopathic medicine to avoid the malaria contagion? Of course, our simillimum.
Rafael, Madrid, Spain