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The Science of Homeopathy – page 243

case. This should allow enough time for the image to become clarified in cases who, for example, take analgesics for migraine headaches, sedatives for sleep, or tranquilizers for “nerves.”
The real problems occur, however, with patients who have been taking very strong allopathic drugs for many years or decades. This problem occurs most often in cases with chronic asthma, chronic rheu- matoid arthritis, epilepsy, chronic heart disease, and severe mental dis- orders. If such cases have been treated with strong allopathic drugs for a long period of time, the main symptoms become suppressed power- fully into deeper regions of the organism, and the defense mechanism becomes severely hampered in its action.
Of all the powerful allopathic drugs, the ones which seem to be the most disturbing to the action of the defense mechanism are the systemic corticosteroids and ACTH. Corticosteroids, whether admin- istered orally or by injection into muscle, fat, or joints, have a pro- foundly weakening effect upon the defense mechanism when admin- istered over a period of a few months to many years. It is not clear exactly why this is true, but it is readily borne out by homeopathic experience. Patients who have been taking these drugs over a period of years are virtually impossible to cure. The problem is not merely the inevitable difficulty involved in finding the correct remedy while the patient is taking corticosteroids. It has also been found that even the correct remedy is prevented from acting fully in the presence of such drugs. Therefore, the only possible procedure is to try to get the patient off the corticosteroids, which turns out to be virtually impossible for most severe cases. Corticosteroid withdrawal has its own characteris- tic withdrawal period of aggravation which can be life-threatening in some cases, and then it takes at least three months for a true remedy image to become clear after their discontinuation. For these reasons, the best recommendation is to avoid such cases altogether.
As a general rule, patients on strong allopathic drugs for long peri- ods of time should be refused for homeopathic treatment. This should be the general policy for several reasons. The problems of perceiving the correct remedy in the midst of strong allopathic drugs are very difficult, and the severity of the illness after discontinuing allopathic medications may be extremely dangerous. The homeopath must have great allopathic skill to manage such cases, and must be unerring in the choice of medicines and their timing. Moreover, the prescriber’s time can become totally monopolized by the hour-by-hour, day-and- night, care required by such patients. Often, these cases have to be hospitalized, and sometimes for considerable periods of time. Finally, the legal question must always be considered; such cases are so deli-