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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 36

Chapter 8

A SAMPLE CASE: INFLUENZA

The choice of the correct homeopathic medicine is not a sim- ple one. One does not prescribe on a reflex basis: remedy X for a cold, remedy Y for arthritis, remedy Z for cancer, etc. Instead, each prescription must be highly individualized to the specific symptoms manifested by each patient, regardless of the formal diagnosis.
Of a group of ten patients having exactly the same disease, a homeopath may prescribe ten different remedies. Conversely, the same remedy is commonly prescribed to a variety of patients all suffering from different disorders.
Often, the decision of which remedy to give is based upon fairly subtle differences. The homeopath must be a very astute observ- er, very familiar with human nature, systematic, and thorough.
To provide an example of the subtleties of homeopathic pre- scribing, let us imagine an influenza epidemic.
Throughout a typical day, a homeopathic prescriber may see several cases and prescribe different remedies in each case. In- fluenza, being a dramatic acute ailment, is actually quite easy for homeopathic prescribing. Compared to the usual dilemmas fac- ing a homeopath, the differentiation between possible remedies in influenza is quite clear.
Virtually everyone is familiar with the common symptoms of influenza. Usually, it attacks with a fairly sudden onset. The pa- tient develops a high fever, prostration, and usually headache and muscle aches. Most patients complain of sore throat, swol- len lymph nodes, perhaps a runny nose, and later a cough. Some- times there is nausea, vomiting, and diarrhoea. These are the common symptoms by which the allopathic diagnosis ‘influen- za’ is made.