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The Science of Homeopathy – page 285

INTENSITY
OF SYMPTOMS

MINOR SYMPTOMS

REMEDY

E M/E CC

TIME PERIOD 1 MONTH

Figure 18:

CASE III:

Patient: “I feel better, but still have problems.”
Case: Major symptoms ameliorated after an aggravation, while minor symp- tomes are unchanged.

Interpretation: Correct remedy. Good prognosis.
Prescription: Wait.

CASE III:

This situation is less clear in its interpre- tation. The patient reports an improvement in terms of the chief complaint, the mental/ emotional state, and the energy, but some of the less important homeopathic symptoms (say, warm-bloodedness, craving for sweets, sensitivity to noise, constipation, etc.) show no change. This situation is en- countered in perhaps the majority of cured cases.
It is here that an overly perfectionistic homeopath can do a lot of harm. The prog- nosis in this circumstance is very good because all three of the major symptoms show a dramatic improvement following an aggravation. Treatment of the minor symp- toms at this point must be avoided. If the

prescriber is impatient, however, and gives another remedy based upon the remaining minor symptoms, the case may become disrupted.
The best course in such a case is to reas- sure the patient about the good response, and then to wait for a long time. Very like- ly, the minor homeopathic symptoms will gradually disappear over a period of three months or longer. They should not be pre- scribed upon at the moment. In case these minor symptoms remain with the patient after a long time, and if they are annoying, the homeopath should retake the case; most probably it will be found that one of the complementary remedies is then indicated.