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The Science of Homeopathy – page 176

information which must be acquired in order to make a proper prescrip- tion. Every patient must be approached in an individualized way, and each presents particular challenges for the homeopathic interviewer.

There are, however, types of patients who pose particularly difficult problems. These, for various reasons, prevent the acquiring of a  clear totality of symptoms. Each must be dealt with in a particular way, and symptoms coming from such individuals must be viewed with great

caution until carefully confirmed.

The first group of such patients are the timid, sensitive, reserved, or withdrawn. They withhold many of their symptoms or describe symp- toms with much less intensity than is true in reality. These people usu- ally feel the interviewer is not interested in their little discomforts and will become bored or fatigued by them. They may consider it shameful to express some of their mental, emotional, or sexual symptoms. By withholding or downplaying their symptoms, such people mislead the homeopath into recording an incorrect picture, and therefore into pre- scribing an incorrect remedy.

With these people, an entirely special approach is needed. Each must be handled with great ingenuity. Primarily, reassurance must be communicated, and the patient must be shown that the interviewer is really interested in every detail, no matter how “insignificant” or “shameful.” After gentle and accepting questioning and probing, the patient gradually begins to feel comfortable and becomes willing to expose the needed symptoms.

In “closed” patients who provide very few symptoms, objective ob- servations take on added importance. The interviewer must note down every gesture, every nervous action, etc. – restlessness of the fingers, restlessness of the body or of the feet, excessive irritability, loquacity, the time taken to answer questions (whether too quickly or too slowly), difficulty in finding the right words, easy blushing of the face, facial expressions, swellings around the eyes, color of skin, falling of hair, biting of nails, timidity of expression, perspiration of palms or body, odors, etc.

The second group of difficult cases are the hypochondriacs. This group includes not only those who are excessively anxious about their health but also those who compulsively observe every detail related to health, until all perspective is lost. These people tend to relate a tremendous volume of minute symptoms which cannot possibly be valued highly by the homeopath because of these patients’ tendency to exaggerate. In such an instance, the hypochondriacal nature itself is noted, and perhaps the anxiety about health that may be present. Any other symptoms should be underlined only with great caution, and