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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 133

numbers range from 250,000 to 500,000." But it can become much worse: "It is calculated that in every 8.8 months we will have a doubling of the population of AIDS carriers."12
At this point established medicine could ask, "What is the alternative treatment for venereal diseases, if not penicillin?" The answer is quite complex and the issue sufficiently broad in scope as to justify more than an offhand answer. But one’s immediate reaction could be:
1. The public should be informed through the various means
of mass communication that being infected with syphilis or
gonorrhea is not the same as coming down with a common
cold, and that simply taking penicillin does not eliminate
the problem.
2. Even though the public is informed, there are still people
who will contract syphilis or gonorrhea. These people’s
infections should be treated as something very serious, and
if penicillin is prescribed, special care, attention and support should be given to the immune system with alternative
methods of treatment, especially Homeopathy, until the
patient has completely recovered.
3. The patient should be informed that in order to give his
immune system enough time to completely recover from
the shock of the disease and treatment, under no circumstances should he be reinfected within the next three years.
4. Research should be undertaken to establish precisely the
different uses and possibilities of Homeopathy, Acupuncture and other alternative venues in treating such diseases. If the claims of the early homeopaths who treated
syphilis hold true, then this form of treatment should be the
first tried, and only if it fails should the physician resort to
penicillin. In this way many people may be spared the
destructive side effects of this powerful drug.
It is not the purpose of this treatise to discuss different alternative options or possibilities as solutions to the health problem. The issue is too broad and complicated to be discussed here. But what I would like to point out now is that what is needed in order to find a solution to the health problem is the adoption of a "correct attitude" on the part of the medical establishment. What is required as a first step is a change in attitude; the next step can then follow naturally.