Books

The Science of Homeopathy – page 10

cers, with specific reference to age, sex, and geographic differences. Compares cancer rates from 1937 to 1969.

8. Curriel et al., Trends in the Study of Morbidity and Mortality, Public Health Papers No. 27 (Geneva: WHO, 1965). An extensive summary of morbidity and mortality rate changes for a wide variety of diseases. Corroborates studies quoted above.

9. Health Information Foundation Research Series No. 11, Mea- suring Health Levels in the United States, 1900-1956 (New York: Foundation, 1960). A technical book on vital statistics, elucidating the strengths and weaknesses in morbidity and mortality rate studies.

10. Combined Staff of Clinic, “Recent Advances in Hypertension,” American journal of Medicine 39: 634-638 (Oct. 1965). An excellent review of the effectiveness of drug therapy in treating hypertension. Demonstrates improved survival among malignant hypertensives, but no benefit (while increased morbidity from drug side effects) in ordinary hypertensive patients. Treatment may actually accelerate angina or cerebral ischemic attacks in some patients. even among the severe malignant hypertension patients, untreated patients with no end-organ damage have a good prognosis – again demonstrating the variability in susceptibility from patient to patient.

11. Dubos, René, Mirage of Health: Utopian Progress and Bio- logical Change (New York: Anchor Books, 1959). Probably the ma- jor work contradicting the myth that allopathic medicine has affected therapeutically the health of populations.

12. Dubos, René and Jean, The White Plague: Tuberculosis, Man, and Society (Boston: Little, Brown, 1953), pp. 186, 231. Well-docu- mented account of the rise and fall of tuberculosis. Demonstrates clearly that the tuberculosis mortality rates had already declined 50% on their own by the time the tubercle bacillus was isolated, 75% by the time the first sanatorium was established in the U.S., and 90% by the time antibiotics were developed to combat it. Therefore, medical sci- ence cannot claim to have conquered tuberculosis by its methods.

13. Porter, R.R., “The Contribution of the Biological and Medi- cal Sciences to Human Welfare,” Presidential Address to the British Association for the Advancement of Science, Swansea Meeting, 1971 (London: The Association, 1972), p. 95. Comments on the decline in