Homeopathy is everywhere!

I want to say something more about "randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials" (let's call them RDBPCTs).

These are referred to as the gold standard of medical research - but NOT because they are the hurdle every treatment MUST pass in order to be accepted as valid. Quite the contrary. They are in fact the last, most sensitive method of detecting whether there is ANY EFFECT AT ALL.

For example. I want to know if the temperature outside is above freezing. If it's a dull, grey day and the trees are bare, I may need to go outside with a met-office calibrated thermometer to be sure that it's not freezing. However, if I can look outside and see the sun shining and the summer flowers blooming and hear the neighbour's kids playing in the pool, do I need the thermometer?

You'll hear lots of claims that most medical treatment hasn't been validated by RDBPCT. The reason for that is that it's in the sunny summer day category. And in that case it would be positively unethical even to think about a RDBPCT.

Consider diabetes. In the "natural" course of events, it kills people. When they discovered insulin, they knew how it ought to work, and why it ought to work, and when they tried it, they found it did work. Needed quite a lot of study to refine the dose rates and how best to prepare it and so on, but basically, it worked. Not only can you see for yourself that the patients are better and not dying, you can objectively measure their blood glucose and show in that way that an effect is occurring.

There are a lot of situations like that, especially in hormone-type diseases. Addison's disease kills patients real fast. Stuff called fludrocortisone stops that from happening. Normal life, so long as you keep taking the tablets. DBPCT? I don't think so.

Nobody ever did a RDBPCT on insulin, and they never will. Can you imagine taking a group of diabetics and giving half of them insulin and half sterlie saline to inject, just to see what happens? No ethical committee would sanction such a thing. No sane patient would ever volunteer for it.

If you came up with a possibly better substitute for insulin, you might do a trial. But it wouldn't be placebo-controlled, what you'd do would be to compare the new drug to insulin and see if it was better. Nobody would get NOTHING. It's dangerous, it's unthinkable. Then again, it probably wouldn't be possible to make it a blind trial - the new drug might need to be given in a different way or monitored differently, so it would be impossible to fool people about what they were taking.

In fact, so much is objectively known about insulin and how patients respond, that what you'd probably do is recruit a group of volunteers for the new drug, start them on it, and monitor them like hawks. If there was a significant benefit compared to how insulin is already known to behave, you'd be on a winner.

Very often, new drugs are introduced for conditions where there is an existing effective treatment. Placebo-controlled trials are inappropriate there. You don't need to know if the new drug is significantly better than doing nothing at all. First, nobody is going to volunteer to perhaps be given nothing at all, when they're doing sort of OK on the existing treatment. Second, the ethical committees wouldn't let you deprive patients of treatment for this purpose. Third, the really important thing you need to know is whether the new drug is better than the existing one. So that's the comparison you do. If you can do it blind, fine, but sometimes you can't for practical reasons. In that case especially you try to make as many objective measurements as you can (like glucose for diabetes, or thyroxine for thyroid cases, or mechanical measurements of limb strength for arthritis treatments and so on).

Only if you really aren't sure whether the drug is doing anything at all would you go for the full dress RDBPCT. The thing is, ALL homoeopathy is in that category. There's nothing like insulin, or fludrocortisone, or thyroxine, that has a dramatic effect you just can't miss. Everything is subtle, marginal, debatable, possibly imaginary.

So, they do the RDBPCT (if they're allowed to, see below). And see my previous post for the statistics on that. If you have a small enough group, you might get the odd p<0.05. But you're still struggling with the numbers to see whether there's any difference at all. From the patient's point of view, what good is that?

What they almost never so is a three-way trial, comparing the homoeopathic remedy, the placebo and the standard treatment. Now if there was a study which showed not only that the homoeopathy was helping in a really obvious way, but that it had as great an effect or a better effect than the standard medicine, everybody would sit up and take notice. But there isn't.

I said, if they're allowed to do placebo-controlled trial. They may not be. That childhood diarrhoea study would have had trouble getting ethical approval in the UK, because you just don't leave diarrhoeic kids untreated. (Even the study which was done excluded severe cases, for just that reason.) At the very least, you'd have to compare one treatment to another.

Then again, if you're talking about a significant illness, the ethical committee may take the view that you can't justify taking any patient off the regular treatment and putting them on shaken-up water instead. This is where the "complementary therapy" bit comes in. If you look at the asthma studies, you'll see that they don't compare the homoeopathy to placebo or the real treatment in three separate groups most of the time. ALL the patients are on the real treatment, but some are getting the homoeopathy as well. The question then becomes, is regular medicine plus homoeopathy better than regular treatment on its own?

This is partly a necessity of the circumstances. Regular medicine is so effective and indeed lifesaving in asthma that you can't take people off it on a whim. And even the homoeopaths can't and don't claim that homoeopathy alone has the dramatic effect that real medicine has on asthma. It's also practical. If you can market it as an add-on, that'll do just as well, really.

This is why all this discussion is just so futile. Yes, there are suggested "real" medicines which need a RDBPCT to demonstrate that they work, but if the entire system of scientific medicine was so marginal, we'd all be in real trouble. Most of it is in the sunny day category. (Consider anaesthetics, just for a moment. It was just coincidence the patient fell so deeply asleep he could be cut open?) Homoeopathy, in contrast, is so close to nothing at all, that it's still struggling to prove that it's not nothing at all.

The reason it's struggling is that so many people are so determined to keep flogging this very dead horse that it can't lie down. The reason therre's never a conclusive result is that homoeopathy IS nothing at all.

Rolfe.
 
Hey, me again.

Homoeopathy and herbs. Homeopathy does use plants a lot of the time. It uses anything. They've even got data on nylon, for crying out loud. But do not on that account confuse it with herbal medicine.

Many active and effective medicines came originally from plants. Aspirin, digoxin, taxol, lots of stuff. Arguments about using the real plants versus purified derivatives are for another time and place. Nobody is disputing that plant extracts can have very beneficial (and sometimes deleterious) effects. I'm not sure about evening primrose, but there's been quite a lot of work done on it, and there's no intrinsic reason why it shouldn't be effective.

Homoeopathy has nothing to do with this. Homoeopathy is a system which first declares that you have to find out what symptoms the remedy will cause in a healthy person, and then asserts that the same remedy will CURE these symptoms in a sick patient.

It also works on dilutions of the remedies which are so dilute that they usually have nothing in them, and even with the lower dilutions there's so little that any effect is likely to be academic. Oh yes, but it declares that the more dilute the remedy is, the more powerful ("potent") it is.

Just because they started with a herb doesn't mean this farrago of nonsense has anything to do with herbalism.

You may or may not think herbal remedies are beneficial. Go discuss that on a herbalism thread. But don't fall for the idea that because a few herbal remedies seem to be useful, and there are herbs in some homoeopathy, that has any implication that homoeopathy is valid.

It hasn't.

Rolfe.
 
Rolfe said:
This is going back a bit, but hey, I need to sleep!

For FutileJester.

Thanks Rolfe!

p<0.05 is the lowest significance that is accepted for scientific purposes, and some authorities don't think that's much cop and only start listening at p<0.01.

Ah, that's a nice rule of thumb to know. So 0.05 is basically entry level for decent science, and not always considered enough.

There's also the matter of what's called "multiple endpoints". If you measure 20 different variables between the groups, then again even if there was no actual difference at all, you'd expect one of the 20 variables to be "significant" at p<0.05.

That's something I hadn't thought of before. I imagine that's an easy methodological flaw to overlook.

There is no homoeopathic remedy which has an obvious, self-evident effect on anything, and no disease process homoeopathy can point to and say, thanks to our medicine, this scourge is conquered.


In sharp contrast to evidence-based medicine.
 
Rolfe said:
I want to say something more about "randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials" (let's call them RDBPCTs).

Great posts Rolfe. Medical research is obviously complicated; it's great to get an informative summary that's so accessible.

Of course the trolls won't address any of this, but no worries. Any fence-sitters reading this thread can tell who knows what they're talking about and what it means about homeopathy. Keep it up!
 
So, if you have a homeopath treating people with homeopath stuff and with herbs, what do you call them? For instance, Young claims that he has some training in homeopathy and he has all these oils and junk and stuff I would call homeopathy on top of his oils used in toothpaste and junk to save you from the cancer causing toothpastes in the stores.

Hulda clark claims herbs kill a parasite that causes all cancers. She also poses as a medical doctor.

We have homeopathy, herbalists, and there must some more labels out there.
 
SteveGrenard said:

Thus if a particular substance was diluted by 1 million timesor less, it is no longer homeopathic and it no longer as a like can cure like and it is less potent than something diluted 100,000 times. But, according to you, if it was diluted more than 1 million times than its homeopathic again. I am glad you are now the arbiter of all things homeopathic although I am sure there are thousands of modern homeopathic researchers and physicians who do not necessarily agree with you. I am glad to know we have been debating a leader in this field whose word supercedes all modern research. Especially thaiboxer who is also such an expert. I am in awe. Thanks.

This is so convoluted it is difficult to follow, the only thing for sure is you still don't seem to understand homeopathic dilutions. I will try one more time. Hahnemann and all homeopaths start with the raw material for a remedy. The most typical dilutions are X (1:10) and C (1:100). Either 6 X dilutions or 3 C dilutions are carried out to get to the beginning (low) potency of 6X or 3C. This is where homeopaths begin, as some remedies are toxic (lead, mercury, arsenic), and 1 part per million is usually a minimal safe level of consumption. This and all higher dilutions are what constitutes homeopathy. Would you take a 2X remedy of arsenic (1%)? Didn't think so.

SteveGrenard said:

Also: I didn't know we are debating basic core (historic) principles. If so then this is not a discussion of the modern practice of a discipline but a history lesson. Fine. I seemed to have missed this parameter before. Thanks for letting me know.
It is plain silly you think it is okay for any other field to advance but that homeopathy must remain steeped in every aspect of its 18th century founding. How quaint.

Do you know anything at all about homeopathy? I really don't think so.

SteveGrenard said:

Well, I am going out to fly a kite to see if I can get some more electricity to run my computer. night

Good idea. Remember, though, you must succuss the string 10 times or it won't work...
 
Most homeopaths are not isolated people with no training but rather trained MD's, just like in the old days.

You mean you didn't know? The American Institute of Homeopathy was created 2 years before the American Medical Association was created. The AMA's first step was to kick out homeopaths from its local medical affiliates (because a large portion of homeopathy's converts were medical doctors). Its next step was the 'consultation clause', which said that if any member consulted with a homeopath, they would be kicked out.

That is kind of interesting I think!
 
T'ai Chi said:
Most homeopaths are not isolated people with no training but rather trained MD's, just like in the old days.

You mean you didn't know? The American Institute of Homeopathy was created 2 years before the American Medical Association was created. The AMA's first step was to kick out homeopaths from its local medical affiliates (because a large portion of homeopathy's converts were medical doctors). Its next step was the 'consultation clause', which said that if any member consulted with a homeopath, they would be kicked out.

That is kind of interesting I think!


Yes, if we are going to discuss history this would be the place to start. It provides the roots of the AMA's bias against anything it doesn't agree with right up to and including the present day which makes their journal less than an objective arbiter of what is or isn't. The AMA did the same thing to osteopaths but lost their battle on that one as D.O.s, state by state and internationally earned and achieved the same rights, privileges (to perform surgery and interpret tests) and prescribing privileges as regular M.D.s. Its funny but like minded people rejecting the notions of others reminds me of something else -- ethnic, religious and cultural prejudice and all that these prejudices engender ...............which is fundamnetally what is wrong with the world.

And by the way BoTox, I am not here for in lesson dilution theory/history. It is irrelevant. My argument is and always has been that we need to consider the evidence and we have seen it on both sides. Please do not expect anyone to compare modern science with its historical roots and thus quell innovation and advance. Otherwise instead of bacteria, rickettsia, virions and prions, we'd still be studying wee beasties and animacules, wouldn't we?
 
Eos of the Eons said:
So, if you have a homeopath treating people with homeopath stuff and with herbs, what do you call them? For instance, Young claims that he has some training in homeopathy and he has all these oils and junk and stuff I would call homeopathy on top of his oils used in toothpaste and junk to save you from the cancer causing toothpastes in the stores.

Hulda clark claims herbs kill a parasite that causes all cancers. She also poses as a medical doctor.

We have homeopathy, herbalists, and there must some more labels out there.

Hulda Clark calls herself a "naturopath", I believe. She has a legitimate PhD in physiology gained sometime in the 1950s, and this "ND" thing which stands for "Doctor of Naturopathy". That itself is a quack qualification, but I believe she got it by mail order from a place not even recognised by the quacks. Someone had the smart idea of translating the thing as "Not a Doctor".

Do look at the relevant pages of Quackwatch, Quackerywatch and Ratbags.com.

There are a lot of very quacky things out there, and many of the proponents mix and match as they please, often appearing just to use the labels as marketing tools. Lots of people recognise the word "homoeopathy", so that gets used sometimes as a catch-all when there may actually be little or nothing about the procedure which is homoeopathic.

Homoeopathy relies on two basic principles. The first is "like cures like". To achieve this the homoeopaths give 30C preparations (nothing in there but water) to healthy people and get them to note any symptoms or feelings they experience. These are called "provings", and if there was any validity in them (that is, if the subjects could in fact tell whether they'd been given a known remedy or water), the Million Dollar Challenge would have been won long ago. Homoeopaths then consult these lists of alleged symptoms to choose what they think is the most appropriate remedy for the patient.

The second principle is the "doctrine of infinitesimals", which declares that the more you dilute the remedy, the more powerful it becomes. Thus the more concentrated preparations are "weaker", and these are sold as OTC medicines (there's still very little even in these though). The "stronger", more dilute preparations (with nothing in them but water) are prescribed individually by the homoeopath.

This is in fact a form of Sympathetic Magic, and there is an interesting article in the Skeptical Inquirer on this subject. It's quite fascinating to compare this to a recent pro-homoeopathy publication which also takes the view that homoeopathy works by the application of magical principles.

Point is, anything which doesn't follow the Law of Similars and the Law of Infinitesimals isn't homoeopathy. Other uses of the word are marketing, often combined with an attempt to get round the laws about practising medicine without a licence - homoeopathy is one of the few areas where lay people are allowed to set themselves up as "physicians".

Rolfe
 
The second principle is the "doctrine of infinitesimals", which declares that the more you dilute the remedy, the more powerful it becomes.

Which shows that the less than 6X dilution tests are not based on homeopathic principles. This is something that SG and Tai just can't seem to grasp.
 
It provides the roots of the AMA's bias against anything it doesn't agree with right up to and including the present day which makes their journal less than an objective arbiter of what is or isn't. The AMA did the same thing to osteopaths but lost their battle on that one as D.O.s, state by state and internationally earned and achieved the same rights, privileges (to perform surgery and interpret tests) and prescribing privileges as regular M.D.s.

No, the AMA is not "biased" against homeopathy, they simply tell it like it is. Homeopathy does not work, it has not scientifically based principles and they still have not produced good studies that show homeopathy works. Osteopathy won, simply because they actually have evidence and show effectiveness.

Holy crap, SG, if you really think there is a conspiracy against homeopathy, does this mean you really think it works? DO you think it works or not? If not, why? If so, why?
 
T'ai Chi said:
The AMA's first step was to kick out homeopaths from its local medical affiliates (because a large portion of homeopathy's converts were medical doctors). Its next step was the 'consultation clause', which said that if any member consulted with a homeopath, they would be kicked out.

That is kind of interesting I think!

Homoeopaths are fraudulent quacks. The rubbish they spout and the harm they do to their patients with their content-free potions are an affront to rational thinking and scientific medicine. Is it any wonder that responsible physicians would dearly love to see this purged from the profession?

Doctors and medical researchers are human like the rest of us. They have their pet theories and they can be resistant to challenge. Barry Marshall and the Helicobacter pylori story is a good example - this was such a new idea, and came from "outside the club" as it were (from pathologists rather than gastroenterologists), that there was quite a lot of hostility. However, Marshall's theory is now accepted as fact and his findings have revolutionised the treatment of duodenal ulcers wordwide. Those who scoffed are now deeply embarrassed. This is because Marshall was RIGHT.

Scientific medicine is infinitely pragmatic. Whatever the resistance to a new idea, if it is RIGHT, it will make it. The point is to make patients better, and something which is demonstrably doing that will never be rejected. This is why there's actually no such thing as "alternative medicine". There's medicine, which is everything which works or (with limitations) which is in the process of being evaluated. Anything which looks promising will soon be included in the latter category and hopefully elevated to the former in due course. There's something else, too, which doesn't work, but it's an affront to language to call it "medicine".

If homoeopathy actually did what its proponents claim it can do, rather than relying on unrepeatable miracles which are usually only witnessed by one person, and marginal statistical claims of tiny effects in larger group trials, it would be right there in mainstream medicine. But it doesn't, so it isn't.

The goal of science is to try to find out how the universe works, and to describe it as accurately as possible. Scientific medicine tries to find out how the body works, and how "malfunctions" come about, and so progress rationally to correcting these "malfunctions". So the descriptions of physiology, and anatomy, and biochemistry and so on relate as closely as possible to the real world out there. If a real effect exists, it will, indeed must, be incorporated into this description and understood as much as possible. If a real effect doesn't exist, as with homoeopathy, then of course rational science will try to exclude it. A flat-earther isn't much use if you need somebody to help you win the Americas Cup.

Homoeopaths are a bit like surrealist painters. Instead of trying to describe the real world there in front of them, they have invented this fantasy world full of mysterious energies. It might seem self-consistent within itself, like a surreal painting or a fantasy novel, but it in no way corresponds to reality.

It's understandable how lay people get sucked into believing this stuff. It's a pretty story, and perhaps very reassuring to someone worried about illness. It's also a lot easier than real physiology and biochemistry and so on. It's not true, but within itself it's not very complicated. However, when trained doctors and vets get sucked in, that's different.

There's two ways of looking at this. One says these people are sincere, and genuinely deluded. They want to believe they're helping their patients, especially the chronic "heart-sink" cases doctors can't do much for. They've found a way to persuade themselves that they are indeed helping, a way which also means they don't have to remember all that pesky complicated science they were taught, and they don't want to give it up.

The other view says that there's only so much reality an educated scientist can ignore before it becomes fraud. And it's true that some of the behaviour of some of the prominent homoeopaths does make one wonder exactly how their thought processes are working. And there's a huge amount of money to be made out of this - not least because the overheads are so tiny.

The problem is of course that homoeopathy got its knees under the table quite early on, and because of political support in high places (the royal family in the UK) it is difficult to shift. But don't criticise rational scientists for desiring to keep the irrationalists where they belong, which is outside the medical profession.

Rolfe.
 
thaiboxerken said:
Holy crap, SG, if you really think there is a conspiracy against homeopathy, does this mean you really think it works? DO you think it works or not? If not, why? If so, why?

I second that.

We've been round this before, about three pages ago, but what the hell.

Homoeopathy relies absolutely on its lists and records of what healthy people said they felt when they took the remedy in question. Different lists of different symptoms for different remedies (called "provings"). All absolutely dependent on the belief that these symptoms were caused by the remedy. This is the basis of "like cures like". Consult the lists, find the remedy which most closely approximates to the symptoms the patient is experiencing, and that is the one to use.

Almost all the published provings were done with 30C preparations. So there was nothing in them but shaken-up water.

If there's any truth at all to this theory, it should be very easy for a healthy subject (especially a trained and experienced homoeopath) to tell whether a preparation he has been given is the real remedy, or just ordinary water, by waiting to see if he feels these documented "proving" symptoms or not. Anyone who can do that is a sure fire winner of the million bucks. Randi has said so.

If SG, or anybody else, actually thinks it works, why not go for the money? Isn't is kind of interesting that nobody has?

Rolfe.
 
SteveGrenard said:
Yes, if we are going to discuss history this would be the place to start. It provides the roots of the AMA's bias against anything it doesn't agree with right up to and including the present day which makes their journal less than an objective arbiter of what is or isn't. The AMA did the same thing to osteopaths but lost their battle on that one as D.O.s, state by state and internationally earned and achieved the same rights, privileges (to perform surgery and interpret tests) and prescribing privileges as regular M.D.s.

This is an interesting point - that osteopaths were first shunned and then accepted into the medical community. As Rolfe pointed out (another great example, thanks Rolfe!), doctors are indeed sometimes prejudiced. They also tend to accept the inevitable truth when an idea is shown to work. It's interesting to me that homeopathy predates osteopathy, yet osteopathy is now accepted and homeopathy isn't. This is evidence that although there may be bias, they will change their minds. It's just a matter of showing that it actually works.

This reminds me of the 'they laughed at Galileo too' argument. They did, but it wasn't long before they stopped laughing and recognized the value of his ideas. Certainly this happened in much less than homeopathy's 200+ years.
 
Rolfe said:
Homoeopaths are a bit like surrealist painters. Instead of trying to describe the real world there in front of them, they have invented this fantasy world full of mysterious energies. It might seem self-consistent within itself, like a surreal painting or a fantasy novel, but it in no way corresponds to reality.

Good analogy! It applies to other pseudosciences as well.
 
T'ai Chi - you seem to be saying something warrants further investigation - is that right?

If that is what you are saying then what is it you are saying should be further investigated?

Homeopathy - with it's theory of "proving", "like cures like" etc.?

Or your conclusion that there is evidence that some "super diluted" solutions can have some 'effect'?

If it is the later what effect are you actually saying warrants not dismissal but further investigation?
 
Darat said:
T'ai Chi - you seem to be saying something warrants further investigation - is that right?

If that is what you are saying then what is it you are saying should be further investigated?

Homeopathy - with it's theory of "proving", "like cures like" etc.?

Or your conclusion that there is evidence that some "super diluted" solutions can have some 'effect'?

If it is the later what effect are you actually saying warrants not dismissal but further investigation?

Oh please! Don't encourage him!

Rolfe.
 
Darat said:
T'ai Chi - you seem to be saying something warrants further investigation - is that right?


There have been several studies of homeopathy which report statistical significance. This should be studied more to see if they are spurious or not.


Homeopathy - with it's theory of "proving", "like cures like" etc.?


Well, a study of its effects (or not) of homeopathy, not studying the terms of homeopathy. :)


If it is the later what effect are you actually saying warrants not dismissal but further investigation?

The statistical effect that distinguishes some homeopathy medicines from placebo. Is it real, or not?
 
T'ai Chi said:
There have been several studies of homeopathy which report statistical significance. This should be studied more to see if they are spurious or not.

You have yet to produce these studies. They're still Leprechauns.

There is no study that shows homeopathy performing better than the placebo effect. I'm willing to be show otherwise of course.
 
Rolfe said:

Homoeopaths are fraudulent quacks.


Most of these "quacks" are trained MD's in addition. This was even more so in the past, but the trend still continues to the present day.


The rubbish they spout and the harm they do to their patients with their content-free potions are an affront to rational thinking and scientific medicine.


A lot of harm has also been done in the non-homeopathic medicines obviously. Do you disagree with that? You talk like homeopathy has done only harm. Do you think that?


But don't criticise rational scientists for desiring to keep the irrationalists where they belong, which is outside the medical profession.

Rolfe.

Fair enough. Good post.
 

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