Books

The Science of Homeopathy – page 163

Chapter 12

 

Taking the Case

 

THE HOMEOPATHIC SYSTEM is a scientific discipline based upon sound and verifiable laws, principles, and techniques. In its application to the individual patient, however, it is also an art. No- where is this artistic aspect of homeopathy seen so clearly as in the process of taking the homeopathic case. Although there are general guidelines for taking a case, each interview is a completely unique process demanding of the interviewer different kinds of sensitivity and different approaches to each patient. It is a living, fluid process which nevertheless leads to the information upon which scientific judgments are made.

Case-taking in chronic cases (acute case-taking will be discussed at the conclusion of this chapter) requires a great deal of experience and training which cannot be acquired from reading books. Books can provide the basic framework and a simple understanding of the goals of a well-taken case, but the drawback of book-learning in this setting is the tendency of the reader to conceptualize the process in terms of rules. In writing a book, the author of necessity must generalize his descriptions and examples, and the reader consequently gets an idea which is too pat, too simple, too black-and-white.

The only reliable way to learn the art of case-taking is to actually become involved in the process under the supervision of an experienced and effective homeopath. Initially, this may involve simply sitting in a corner and watching the homeopath take cases, and then comparing impressions after the conclusion of the interview. The ideal setting for this would be an office in which a one-way mirror has been installed; the interview can then be conducted in seeming privacy, while the stu-