Books

The Science of Homeopathy – page 181

clothes off, whether a hot water bottle is being used, whether the pa- tient is propped up in bed, whether a pitcher full of ice-water or tea is by the bedside, whether a chair is present for visitors, etc. In addition, the patient is observed directly: Is the expression anxious, peaceful, unusually cheerful, or stuporous? Is the color pale or flushed? Are the eyes clear or glazed? Are the lips dry and cracked, or moist? Are there any particular odors? Does the patient relate symptoms easily and free- ly, or would he rather be left alone and unbothered? Is he anxious or irritable? To a homeopath with a good knowledge of acute remedies, a simple visit to the sickroom of the patient provides a wealth of infor- mation within just the first few minutes.

The second source of information is the patient himself. If the pa- tient is in a position to give reliable symptoms, all of the symptoms are collected, and their homeopathic characteristics are noted: the exact location, the time of appearance and duration, the precise type of sensation, and the modalities which make it better or worse. In an acute case, such information, is usually very easy to elicit because the symptoms are quite dramatic and the modifiers are fresh in the pa- tient’s mind. A clinical examination is then performed to determine the precise diagnosis, seriousness, and prognosis of the ailment at that moment.

The third source of information is the friends or relatives who have been attending the patient. Often, the patient is too stuporous to pro- vide precise information, so the best information is elicited from the attendants who have a more objective perspective. Let us consider an example of an acute symptom and the pertinent factors which must be determined in relation to it. As an example, we will take the symptom: fever.

Fever could appear only in the afternoon, or only during morning hours, or only between 9 and 11 A.M., or just between 6 and 8 in the evening. Perhaps the fever goes down after eating, or it may rise only after eating. Perhaps it improves only with sleep. Occasionally, it will be found to affect only certain parts of the body or only one side of the body. It may be preceded by chills, or followed by them. There may be perspiration which relieves the fever, or perspiration may not relieve. There may be thirst with fever, or thirstlessness. Each of these symp- toms may lead the homeopath toward a different remedy.

Each symptom must be scrutinized in exactly this degree of de- tail, until a totality of acute symptoms is arrived at. From this totality, the remedy for that particular moment can be determined. Of course, the pace of symptoms changes rapidly during an acute ailment, and another remedy might be indicated after a few hours. But whatever