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The Science of Homeopathy – page 12

19. Dubos, Mirage of Health, pp. 66-67. “Similarly, almost all hu- man beings, Americans included, become exposed to a host of micro- bial parasites of one sort or another. Bacteria such as tubercle bacilli, streptococcus, or staphylococcus, many types of viruses potentially capable of producing influenza, intestinal disorders, or various forms of paralysis, all kinds of protozoa and worms, are commonly present in the tissues of individuals who consider themselves hale and hearty. A generation ago each and every person lived in almost constant daily contact with tubercle bacilli, became a little tuberculous, yet had a fair chance of enjoying a normal, creative life. In brief, the presence of pathogens in the body can bring about disease, but usually does not. The world is obsessed – naturally so – by the fact that poliomyelitis can kill and maim several thousand unfortunate victims every year. But more extraordinary, even though less dramatic, is the fact that millions upon millions of young people become exposed to polio viruses all over the world, yet suffer no harm from the infection.”

20. Smith, J.W., et al., “Studies on the Epidemiology of Adverse Drug Reactions. V. Clinical Factors Influencing Susceptibility,” Annals of Internal Medicine 65: 629-640 (oct. 1966). “Nine hundred hospitalized medical patients were surveyed over one year for ad- verse drug reactions. Reactions were detected in 10.8%. Reactions were most common in patients with serious illness who received many drugs. Patients with abnormal renal function, infections, or with pre- vious drug reactions appeared predisposed to drug reactions.”

21. Ferguson, M, Brain Revolution (New York: Taplinger, 1973). eighty-four percent of patients with asthma who died had used aero- sols: a study in England, p. 133.

22. Shader and Di Mascio, Psychotropic Drug Side Effects (Balti- more: Williams & Wilkins, 1970). A large work enumerating the vo- luminous actions of all types of drugs and drug combinations on the mental and emotional state.

23. Martin, E.W., Hazards of Medication (Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1971). The standard reference work on drug side effects.