Books

The Science of Homeopathy – page 11

death rate of children under 15 from scarlet fever, diphtheria, whoop- ing cough, and measles. Between 1860 and 1965, 90% of the decline occurred before antibiotics and immunization.

14. LaLonde, M., A New Perspective on the Health of Canadians (Ottawa: Government of Canada, April 1974). Demonstrates that public health measures are far more effective in improving health of a population than medical therapy.

15. McKinnon, R.R., “The Effects of Control Programs on Can- cer Mortality,” Canadian Medical Association Journal 82: 1308-1312 (1960). Extensive study in Canada considering age – and sex-specific cancer rate comparisons between 1931 and 1957. It is shown that can- cer control programs have no effect whatsoever on cancer mortality rates.

16. Lewison, Edwin F., “An Appraisal of Long-Term Results in Surgical Treatment of Breast Cancer,” Journal of the American Medi- cal Association 186: 975-978 (1963). Compares cancer survival rates at Johns Hopkins between 1935 and 1950 in relation to several modes of therapy. No difference in survival rates by different modes, or even in comparison with therapies prior to 1935.

17. Illich, Ivan, Medical Nemesis (New York: Bantam, 1976). A landmark work challenging the monopolistic role and effectiveness claims of the medical profession. Very well-documented and thought- ful. Presents considerable evidence that improvements in sanitation and public health measures have had the primary effect on the health of populations, while allopathic therapy has had little effect – actually a damaging effect.

18. Frobisher and Fuerst, Microbiology in Health and Disease (Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders, 1973), p. 276. Describes the suscepti- bility factor. A person in robust health may easily resist exposure to even the most viorulent microorganisms. The degree of resistance can change from hour to hour and day to day depending upon exhaustion, starvation, cold, overwork, etc. This is a standard textbook on micro- biology used in virtually all universities and medical schools in the U.S., and it states clearly that the susceptibility factor is so significant that it is virtually impossible to decide the infective dose of a specific microorganism.