Phil63 said:
Not only do I encourage my clients to continue their conventional treatment I make it very clear that it is in their best interest to do so. I also encourage them to discuss with their MD that they are thinking of starting homeopathy and to get their MD's approval. This is done more for their peace of mind about the safety of homeopathy than anything else. I have found that MD's certainly think homeopathy is bunk but will also tell their pt's that it is harmless. I have it written and tell them that if they are on any meds they they do not reduce or get off meds without the approval of their MD. In fact I recently had a case where a young lady had PCOS, no period for 8 months and was on several antidepressents. 5 days after the remedy her period began, she was feeling so good she abruptly stopped her meds. I made no bones that she could NOT do that and that she needed to speak with her MD immediately and I would no longer treat her if she did things irresponsably like that.
That sounds very responsible. Apart from taking money for something you believe has no scientific basis to support it, on the basis of a personal experience you admit may be coincidence - but then we're talking about a belief system here and not rational thought, so it's a difficult judgement.
However, what are we supposed to think when we see many homoeopaths consistently railing against "allopathy", declaring that "allopathy" has never done anything but harm to anyone (which must be one of the most ridiculous statements ever made), and positively insisting that homoeopathy
will not work if allopathic medicine is taken at the same time - indeed, allopathic medicine taken long in the past is often blamed for the failures of homoeopathy. I've been reading HH and H'pathy for quite some time, and I see these statements made regularly, and I don't immediately recall you chipping in with a contrary point of view.
The closest I can remember is someone lamenting that unfortunately an untreated diabetic wouldn't live long enough to be cured by homoeopathy, therefore insulin was a necessary evil - but at the same time it was claimed that the necessary use of insulin was interfering with the homoeopathy and was the reason why a permanent cure couldn't be achieved. So if we didn't immediately assume you were practising on a more ethical basis, we did have some reason for this.
If you had come here at the beginning and put forward the case you've just made, you might have had a very different reception from many people here. Choosing to conceal your story and beliefs did rather tend to allow people to believe the worst. As a vet, I do know how extremely difficult diagnosis of chronic bowel problems can be, and how often the case simply seems to do its own thing regardless. I'll leave specific discussion of ulcerative colitis/Crohn's to those who may have more expertise in human medicine than I have, but I think there's little to say other than you won the jackpot of a spontaneous recovery, and homoeopathy just happened to be what got the credit. It's just a pity your experience isn't repeatable.
I've seen quite a number of "case reports" from homoeopathic vets crediting homoeopathy for curing everything from epilepsy to bad behaviour. The one thing every one of these miracle cures has in common is that there is never even a single follow-up report of another animal with the same condition showing a similar response. Given how common UC/Crohn's is, I'd be prepared to believe you're not entirely alone. However, we get back to the blind trial, or even the properly recorded series of case studies. All these years, and it's the same thing. A few inexplicable miracles (and no evidence that those not getting homoeopathy are any less likely to experience such a miracle), and the vast majority of patients unhelped.
Now you're going to tell us how you see your homoeopathy working time and time again in your "patients". We know. I have to listen to the same delusional nonsense from professional colleagues. The main achievement of homoeopathy is to train its practitioners to believe that they are helping the majority of their patients, and that every improvement, however slight, however predictable or even however long it takes, is proof of the method.
I can understand why, having succumbed to this delusion of being able to help patients in this way, it is very uncomfortable indeed to have to consider that you might not be doing anything at all (except providing psychological support). Most vets and doctors who've "turned to the dark side" can't do it (though I know of at least two who have, and they agree with this assessment), so how likely is it that a lay person who is enjoying playing doctor will really stop and consider?
I just wish you could see what I've seen, the suffering of animals "treated" with homeopathy for prolonged periods, with their owners repeatedly hailing every little upward fluctuation in the condition as "proof" that the magic water is working, when a simple standard prescription treatment would have cleared the whole thing up in a few days or weeks. I've seen a dog with the skin missing from half its face after three years of homoeopathy for what started as a pretty ordinary sore ear. I've seen cats like skeletons, with the homoeopathic vet declaring that everything was going just fine, when a few weeks on methimazole would have had a better than 90% chance of producing a normal cat. Frankly, it's sickening.
Even more sickening is the persistent harping of homoeopaths that it works on animals, so it can't be placebo. Oh, can't it? Depends on who you regard as responding to the placebo. At least an adult human can jump ship and go to a real doctor if they feel too bad. These poor pets of the delusional new-age owners don't have that choice, and the suffering I've seen is simply dreadful
So put that beside your one lucky coincidence and think about it.
Rolfe.