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The Science of Homeopathy – page 113

ration given, such cases then react nicely to their appropriate remedies.    

One dramatic case which comes to mind is that of a 50-year-old woman who suffered from hay fever for many years. After homeo- pathic treatment, she was completely free of hay fever for over two years. Then, in preparation for a foreign trip, she received a smallpox vaccination. Her system reacted with only slight localized redness, and no systemic symptoms. Unfortunately, her hay fever returned immediately. She was then much more difficult to treat homeopathically; even the same remedies, although still indicated, did not act as effectively as before. Variolinum helped to reestablish order in the system, and the patient then responded again to the appropriate remedies.

Such cases can be quoted in great numbers by any homeopath who takes the time to elucidate the complete history of the patient. Thus, even something as popular and widespread as vaccination – one of the so-called major “successes” of modern medicine – can be a large-scale factor in the degenerating health of our populations. A striking ex- ample in recent times was the major effort on the part of the United States government to vaccinate the entire population against an ex- pected swine flu epidemic which was feared would be as severe as the 1918 influenza epidemic. As it turned out, the vaccine was not manu- factured quickly enough to have much effect, but the epidemic never materialized anyway. Of the 50 million Americans who were vacci- nated, 581 developed Guillain-Barré syndrome, a paralytic neurologi- cal disorder. This incidence represents a sevenfold increase over that of the population at large. One could attribute this to some impurities in the preparation or to some other cause, but from the homeopathic point of view such consequences are predictable whenever a foreign substance is injected into large numbers of people without regard to individual susceptibility.

 

Summary for Chapter 8

 

Summary of Disease Influence Section

 

  1. Virtually everyone has some degree of chronic disease tendency.
  2. One cannot jump major levels of susceptibility on one’s own; only powerful influences can produce such changes. One such major influence is a serious illness.
  3. Of two dissimilar diseases, the strong one repels the weaker one, but they never cure one another.
  4. Rarely, two dissimilar diseases may create a complex of diseases without curing either one.