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Veterinary Homeopathy strikes again!

John Bentley

Critical Thinker
Joined
Apr 9, 2004
Messages
448
I have just had a terrible day with one of my old patients. She is a very sweet, 12 year old beagle. I diagnosed her with a neurofibrosarcoma on her wrist joint about a year ago. This is a particularly nasty tumor that is resistant to chemo and radiation therapy. The only real hope for a cure is to amputate the affected limb, because the tumor grows from the neural tissue of the area, thus making local excision impossible.

The client took my diagnosis and treatment option one year ago and went to see the local quack acupuncture/homeopathy vets in my town. For the last year, she has been getting homeopathic treatment for the tumor, and acupuncture for the pain. The client brought the dog back to me because the tumor is now the size of a softball, has ulcerated, and is leaking blood and goo all over her house.

Of course, she can't say enough good things about the homeopathic therapy! I have radiographed (x-rayed) the dog's chest, and discovered that tumors are now present in her lungs, and the dog no longer has any hope for a cure. The client now wants me to amputate the limb to give her (the client) some relief from the weeping ulcers on the tumor.

She also gushed about how the acupuncture has helped her dog's pain. THE DOG HAS A FREAKING FENTANYL PATCH ON! I'm sure it feels great! These quacks are charging her for acupuncture treatment for "pain" and then slap a fentanyl patch on the dog. For you non-medical types, fentanyl is about 100 times more potent than morphine.

I amputated the dog's limb, muttering under my breath that "it's not the dog's fault", and "I can't punish the dog for the stupidity of my client", and other such efforts at self-control.

With tumors in the chest, it is unlikely that the dog will live longer than 6 months. I could have cured it a year ago!
 
May I quote this in an article? I think it's gloves off time. It's bad enough when the sCAM brigade is simply stupid, but frankly they are dishonest. For example I am just reviewing a draft report on homeopathy, prepared by a certain medical organisation with global presence, which totally ignores any consideration of study quality when evaluating the evidence. No reputable journal would accept such a treatment of the data.
 
This is one in the eye for the apologists who say "Well, if homeopathy doesn't do any good, it doesn't do any harm either."

This poor dog has suffered because "allopathic" remedies were eschewed in favour of homeopathy.
 
May I quote this in an article? I think it's gloves off time. It's bad enough when the sCAM brigade is simply stupid, but frankly they are dishonest. For example I am just reviewing a draft report on homeopathy, prepared by a certain medical organisation with global presence, which totally ignores any consideration of study quality when evaluating the evidence. No reputable journal would accept such a treatment of the data.

Yes, you may.
 
I have just had a terrible day with one of my old patients.
I have nothing to offer but condolences.

Did you explain to the owner that the pain relief comes from the patch? A patch you could have sold her, and spared her dog being poked with needles?

After all, she might not understand the importance of keeping the patch on.
 
There are times when I regret not living in an age with easy access to restless mobs and small portable gallows.
 
For the last year, she has been getting homeopathic treatment for the tumor, and acupuncture for the pain. The client brought the dog back to me because the tumor is now the size of a softball, has ulcerated, and is leaking blood and goo all over her house.

Of course, she can't say enough good things about the homeopathic therapy!
I so much want to break rule 8.
 
is it against some ethical standard to tell her that the quack treatments did nothing to slow the tumor growth or slow the pain?
 
is it against some ethical standard to tell her that the quack treatments did nothing to slow the tumor growth or slow the pain?
I can't remember what country John is in. In the UK, Criticism of another vet might fall foul of part 1F of the RCVS's Guide to Professional Conduct, which states:
Veterinary surgeons must not:

a. speak or write disparagingly about another veterinary surgeon
I think this is the section under which, a year or so ago, a complaint was made about something on the website of a forum member who happens to be a vet. In that case, no mention was made of any particular vet, and the words complained of were the title of an article that the site linked to concerning homoeopaths in general. Although the RCVS decided that this did not amount to serious professional misconduct, they did request that the offending words be removed from the site.

Does pointing out that a vet uses treatments that are totally useless count as "disparaging"?
 
You know people talk about having an open mind to these poor excuses for medicine. Does that owner have an open mind? Absolutely not! They are 100% convinced that crap works and even their pet dying will not sway them from that belief.
 
I can't remember what country John is in. In the UK, Criticism of another vet might fall foul of part 1F of the RCVS's Guide to Professional Conduct, which states:
Veterinary surgeons must not:

a. speak or write disparagingly about another veterinary surgeon

What about non-veterinarians posting on, say, a Skeptics', but non-veterinarian, UK website?

Or is this an issue that can only be successfully addressed by veterinarians from the inside (apparently)?
 
^does that quack actually qualify as a vetrinarian?
If the quack is treating animals in the UK and is not registered as a vet with the RCVS, they are breaking the law. Again, I don't know what country John Bentley is in, so this might not apply.
 
John should take steps to have this woman's dog taken away from her and put out of it's misery and any other pets she might have also taken away from her. It must be legally possible somehow.
 
If the quack is treating animals in the UK and is not registered as a vet with the RCVS, they are breaking the law. Again, I don't know what country John Bentley is in, so this might not apply.

Wait, does this mean homeopaths who treat animals are counted as vets in Britain? What about chiropracters?
 
Wait, does this mean homeopaths who treat animals are counted as vets in Britain? What about chiropracters?

No, it means that in order for an animal to be treaded with homeopathy in the UK, a real vet ahs to do it. That is someone who ahs spend god knows how many years training in real science and real medicine at a real university, only to then decide to throw all reason out of the window and start torturing animals by denying them effective treatment, and then start lying to the pets owners about how the animal getting worse is actually proof that the homeopathy is working.
I am not aware of any chiropractic vets in the UK (or anywhere) but if they are treating animals in the UK, then they need to have a degree in veterinary medicine (or similar), and to be registered with the RCVS.
 

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