Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Call it coincidence, but twenty years ago is when I immigrated to California from my
native Belgium as a medical doctor, acupuncturist and above all, in my heart and
mind, a homeopath. I have been fortunate to have encountered the most brilliant
medical minds in Europe and here in the US. New drugs, new vaccinations, new
genetic discoveries, new techniques to probe deeper and deeper in the human
body ... there seems to be no limit to the wonders we can expect from allopathy. Most
people believe that modern medicine has arrived at the peak of scientific
achievement, from which it will go from triumph to
triumph.
Yet there is disturbing news on the horizon. Since World
War II we have considered infectious diseases on the verge
of eradication; in fact Secretary of State George Marshall
made a speech to that effect in1948. Yet they are the
number one cause of death in the world, and old-fashioned
diseases like whooping cough, TB and cholera are coming
back in record numbers. Microbes are becoming more and
more resistant, due in part to the flagrant overuse of
antibiotics by medical doctors and factory farms. These antibiotics, which we thought
would eradicate infectious diseases in our lifetime, are becoming increasingly
powerless against the new strains of resistant bacteria. Diarrhea, which we think of as
a relatively harmless infectious disease, kills millions of children worldwide every
year, making it the second leading cause of death after cardiovascular disease. TB,
malaria, diarrhea, and sexually transmitted diseases are the real silent epidemics. Our
attention may be diverted by the horror stories about AIDS and the Ebola virus, but
these silent epidemics affect far more people.
Nor is much said about the 600,000 new victims of cancer every year in the US. In
fact, in light of the newest genetic therapies, allopathic scientists predict that cancer
will be conquered by the year 2010. As a medical doctor, I do pray that they are right,
but as a homeopath, I doubt it. There are too many risk factors in the unhealthy
American lifestyle and too many hereditary factors (which in homeopathy we call
miasms) which allopathic medicine cannot touch with genetic therapy. Cancer is now
the number two cause of death, not a hopeful sign for the immediate future.
Medical practices outside of "official" medicine always have been an important part of
the public's health care. In fact, until the early decades of this century, allopathic
medicine coexisted with homeopathic and herbal medicine in this country, as it still
does in nearly every other country in the world. In fact I know of no other country in
which one form of medicine has such a monopoly of legal protection and insurance
reimbursement as allopathic medicine does in this country. Alternative healers,
through the centuries, have offered a multiplicity of ways to address the confusion
and suffering that accompany disease. The notion of alternative medicine as quackery
(a term originally applied to allopathic physicians for using toxic doses of mercury to
"cure" syphilis ) has been reinforced by a once commonly heard definition of it as any
treatment not taught in an accredited medical school. This definition is no longer
valid, as most medical schools have added nontraditional courses in response to
growing public interest in alternative therapies. With this change in attitude came a
change in name to complementary or integrative medicine, indicating that allopathy
and alternative methods can be used together to support each other.
At the same time that we see tremendous interest in complementary medicine among
the public-and a slow but increasing interest among medical doctors-we also see
tremendous ignorance. One mistake I see among allopathic practitioners is to lump all
the different forms of non-allopathic healing into one basket. But certain formsnotably acupuncture, homeopathy, and chiropractic-require years of study of health
done in this country and published in mainstream medical journals. With the
government finally funding research, we can look forward to more of it in the years to
come.
I have no problem with my allopathic colleagues scrutinizing the potential risks and
benefits of alternative medicine. Let's examine some of them and see if homeopathy
can pass muster.
Quality of care is often the first argument brought up by my colleagues. Homeopathy
definitely has the potential to provide the same (or better) quality of care as
allopathic medicine. In the past, as we mentioned, the most brilliant physicians were
the homeopaths, and homeopathic licensure had the same components as allopathic
licensure (in terms of the content and length of time of training, testing and
certification, a defined scope of practice, review and audit and codified disciplinary
action). The fact that homeopathy does not currently have this licensure system is a
reflection on the political and economic forces at work in this country, not a reflection
on homeopathy itself. Licensure efforts for homeopathy are underway in a number of
states, at the same time that an increasing number of already-licensed professionals
are incorporating homeopathy into their practices. In other words, this objection is
only a temporary one until the United States can catch up with Europe, the former
Soviet States and India in providing professional training and licensure for
homeopaths.
Quality of products is another potential argument against alternative modalities.
Random tests of supplements and herbs often show that the contents do not measure
up to what is on the label. And the labels do not contain adequate warnings about the
potentially toxic effects of large overdoses of some supplements and herbs. But
homeopathic remedies are completely safe, non-toxic (in most potencies they don't
even contain one molecule) and very inexpensive. And a true homeopath prescribes
one single remedy at a time, therefore avoiding possible interactions among multiple
remedies. Allopathy would do well to learn from this, since we physicians have the
tendency to prescribe a multitude of drugs for various symptoms. This has never
worked before and it never will, for it creates a jungle of side effects on top of the
symptoms of the disease itself. And we may not forget that 100,000 deaths a year in
this country are caused by conventional drugs.
Quality of science is probably one of the main allopathic arguments. Conventional
medicine is touted as the leader in the management of infectious and surgical
diseases. But allopathic medicine still does not have good weapons against cholera,
for example. Yet homeopathy was already successful against the great epidemic
diseases of 150 years ago: cholera, typhoid fever, diphtheria, scarlet fever. In a great
flu epidemic earlier in this century, the statistics in London hospitals showed the
mortality rate at allopathic hospitals was 55%, but less than 5% at homeopathic
hospitals. Allopathic medicine claims to be based on the double-blind method, and
discredits any form of alternative medicine which cannot fully support every remedy
or procedure with double-blind research studies. Yet allopathic medicine itself
violates this principle every day. Surgeries, for example, are difficult to test by this
method. When surgeries are assessed by outcomes (how many people were doing
better at the end of five years, for example), millions of surgeries per year are shown
to be futile or unnecessary. And sadly enough, according to allopathic research, 67% of
prescriptions are made based on the side-effects of drugs-in other words, not
according to the original double-blind protocol.
When we look at the last twenty years, homeopathy as a healing modality has gained
the attention of the public. Without any doubt, homeopathy could be advanced by
professional standards and greater availability of instruction to interested health care
professionals. That the public has embraced alternative medicine has been proven by
the excellent 1998 study by David Eisenberg of Harvard Medical School, which