Yes, but unfortunately those flat earthers are infiltrating medicine....
There are lots of consumers buying homeopathic remedies who still have no idea what homeopathy is all about, and we need to try to get the message to them.
In regards to "homeopathic", there is a real and serious thing going on, that I was unaware of, until the other day. A friend stopped by the local health food store to get some "homeopathic medicine" for her dog. I told her flat out, homeopathic remedies are worthless. She said she had used it before, and it worked well. So I looked at the bottle, read the label. It wasn't homeopathic at all, it was an herbal formula. It was called "homeopathic", but in reality it was an herbal tincture, and knowing the condition and the herbs involved, it would indeed help the poor wee beast.
A quick look at the data online confirmed this phenomenon. A "homeopathic formula"
http://www.ultimateanimals.co.uk/acatalog/Homeopathic_pet_remedies_wormer.html
Ingredients: Chamomilla, Valeriana, Borax, Cypripedium Pub, Ignatia A, Colch, Verat A in 20% USP alc. in purified water.15ml bottle.
Another one.
http://www.enaturalremedies.co.uk/purecalm_for_anxiety.htm
Melissa Officinalis
Lavandula Augustifolia
Passiflora Incarnata
Somehow herbal remedies are being sold as homeopathic remedies. Obviously animals are immune to the placebo effect, and one thing I know about pet owners, they know when something works on their pet. I did some checking and there is a huge amount of "homeopathic" stuff that is using the label, but is in fact, herbal remedies.
This may be one reason for the growth of "homeopathic" remedies. I don't know how or when "homeopathic" became a selling point, but it looks like a lot of things being marketed as "homeopathic" are in fact herbal remedies, which is a completly different issue.
I'm going to check the "human" remedies and see if this is going on there as well.
Last edited: