however, the coffee-drinking and its effects especially on sleep are antidoted primarily by Nux vomica, and not so often by Chamomilla. But the remedy has in fact proved to act as an antidote against bad consequences of coffee and narcotics. Even if it does not effect a complete cure, ‘it, at least, changes the aspect of the case and makes it more amenable to treatment’ (Allen, Clinicals), i.e. after Chamomilla a new remedy picture may come to the surface, allowing further prescription.
The Chamomilla Child
Two very characteristic and frequently confirmed symptoms in Chamomilla children are the following:
‘Piteous moaning of a child because it cannot have what it wants.’ And: ‘Whining restlessness; the child wants this and that, but when given it, the child will not have it or pushes it away.’ Kent explains: ‘If it is for something to eat, for something to play with, for its toys, when these are handed to the child it throws them away; slings them clear across the room. Strikes the nurse in the face for presuming to get something or other that the little one did not want, yet has asked for.’
This extreme ‘capriciousness’, together with all the symptoms that have been described above concerning the irritability, crossness and ‘ugliness’ of mood and demeanour, is most seen in children, and especially at the age of dentition. We also see the well-known key¬notes, such as ‘one cheek red, the other pale’, the amelioration from being carried, etc.
But there are also a lot of other pathological states in children of this age. For example spasmodic states: ‘Child suddenly stiffens body and bends backward, kicks when carried, screams immod¬erately and throws everything off.’ Or: ‘Child lies senseless, completely without consciousness; frequent changes in the face,