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The Science of Homeopathy – page 237

Chapter 17

Complicated Cases

N THIS CHAPTER, we will consider cases which come to the ini- tial consultation already in a highly disordered or terminal state. These cases demand the utmost skill, experience, patience, and time on the part of the prescriber. As a general rule, most such cases should be flatly refused by beginning homeopaths, because the likelihood is that relatively unskilled prescribing will result in even further confu- sion of the case, and the patient will have suffered needlessly. It often seems that homeopathy is the only chance for the patient, since allo- pathic medicine and other therapies have been found to be unsuccess- ful. However, since both the beginning prescriber and the patient have no concept of the extreme suffering and chaos which can be encoun- tered in severe cases, they undertake the treatment and quickly dis- cover themselves in over their heads. The most compassionate course of action may be to simply refuse such cases or to refer them to a more experienced homeopath, in order to prevent the terrible suffering which may be required in order to have any chance for cure; if the ho- meopath is not capable of handling the confusions and complications,
this suffering may in the end go for naught.
Of course, there is no comparison between the damage the “cor- rect” allopathic treatment can cause to a chronically ill patient and that which can be caused by an “incorrect” homeopathic one. The side ef- fects of allopathic treatment are dreadful in comparison with even poor homeopathic prescribing. Incorrect homeopathic prescribing does not do direct harm to a patient, but it can produce enough disruption to the defense mechanism that further prescriptions are made immeasurably more difficult.