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The Science of Homeopathy – page 260

must be established and tested thoroughly in the arena of actual clini- cal results. To this end, teachers must be trained thoroughly to the highest standards. These teachers, with the help of the finances and talents of an interested public, can then establish full-time schools for the training of homeopathic prescribers. The very professionalism and clinical successes of these schools should be able to overcome the in- evitable political and legal resistance to the emergence of a new pro- fession, and eventually licensing procedures will be established so that the public can have a way of identifying a qualified prescriber from an unqualified one. As schools are established and homeopathic prescrib- ers become known in their communities, formal clinical research can be conducted to prove conclusively the success of homeopathic treat- ment. The allopathic profession can be openly invited to participate in objective studies comparing the effectiveness of the two methods. Simultaneously, research should be conducted by physicists to investi- gate the electromagnetic processes involved in homeopathic remedies and their actions. As the successes of high-quality prescribers become more widely known, books and articles can be written to improve the public’s understanding of the true laws and principles governing health and disease.
The acceptance of homeopathy according to this general scenario will necessarily be gradual and time-consuming. The financial implic- tions alone, of such a change are staggering. Although homeopathic prescribers are paid very well for the great amount of time they spend with patients, the total cost of the entire medical care of each individu- al would be drastically reduced. Instead of constantly spending money on palliative drugs and increasingly frequent hospitalizations, the so- ciety would merely have to pay for a relatively inexpensive course of homeopathic treatment which in most cases would involve intensive treatment for only a matter of months – or at the most a few years. From then on, visits would be quite infrequent and very inexpensive compared to the chronic costs of today’s allopathic medical care.
The pharmaceutical industry would necessarily undergo drastic changes. Most likely it would be forced to decline to a mere fraction of its present size. Hospitals would have drastically reduced burdens and would be able to reduce costs (in contrast to the presently uncontrolled rise in hospital costs). The entire context of training of medical doctors would eventually be changed to take into account the natural mecha- nism of healing, rather than merely focusing upon the end-products of disease. Of course, the value of allopathic methods will never be lost. Such fields as emergency medicine, surgery, orthopedics, and obstet- rics will always be needed, as well as a measure of palliative allopathic