Controlled studies and clinical trials
Dana Ullman, in his 1995 book, "The Consumer's Guide to Homeopathy", devotes an entire chapter to "Scientific Evidence for Homeopathic Medicine". For example, he cites a 1991 study, in which he writes:
three professors of medicine from the Netherlands, none of them homeopaths, performed a meta-analysis of twenty-five years of clinical studies using homeopathic medicines and published their results in the journal British Medical Journal. This meta-analysis covered 107 controlled trials, of which 81 showed that homeopathic medicines were effective, 24 showed they were ineffective, and 2 were inconclusive.
The professors concluded, "The amount of positive results came as a surprise to us." [3]
Critics of homeopathy held that these so-called "effective" results were tiny, unrepeatable, and poorly controlled.
Some homeopathic practitioners may ascribe the lack of definitive support from controlled trials to the absence of an emotional doctor-patient bond that is necessary in order for treatment to be successful (an argument, opponents claim, that is common to religion and pseudosciences and contradicts the scientific method). Other homeopathic practitioners, however, believe that research does justify the effectiveness of homeopathy, and Ullman has argued that clinical research need not be invalidated by the need for a tailored remedy for a given individual. For example, he cites an article published in the December 10, 1994, issue of Lancet ("Is Evidence for Homeopathy Reproducible?"), which documents a clinical trial concerning the use of homeopathic remedies to treat asthma. He also cited several other trials, such as one involving children with diarrhea, documented in the May, 1994 issue of Pediatrics ("Treatment of Acute Childhood Diarrhea with Homeopathic Medicine: A Randomized Clinical Trial in Nicaragua"). This approach, with its willingness to make falsifiable predictions, is more characteristic of protoscience than pseudoscience.
Ullman, in fact, argues that studies have confirmed that homeopathic remedies are effective even without personalized treatment in a practitioner-patient relationship. He cites two studies, including one published in the March, 1989 issue of British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology ("A Controlled Evaluation of a Homeopathic Preparation for the Treatment of Influenza-like Syndrome"), to bolster this position. So-called "combination remedies", in which several homeopathic preparations are combined, are often sold over-the-counter in the United States, and traditional homeopathic theory tends to frown on this approach, but Ullman cites trials that suggest otherwise.
Ullman argues, in fact, "to ignore the body of experimental data that presently exist on homeopathic medicines and to deny the body of clinical experience of homeopaths and homeopathic patients, one would have to be virtually blind. One can only assume that this blindness is a temporary affliction, one that will soon be cured." Scientists looking at the same data deny that these were properly controlled experiments.
"In 1988, a French scientist [Jacques Benveniste] working at that country's prestigious INSERM institute claimed to have found that high dilutions of substances in water left a 'memory,' providing a rationale for homeopathy's Law of Infinitesimals. His findings were published in a highly regarded science journal, but with the caveat that the findings were unbelievable, and that the work was financed by a large homeopathic drug manufacturer (Nature, 1988). Subsequent investigations, including those by James Randi, disclosed that the research had been inappropriately carried out. The scandal resulted in the suspension of the scientist." (Source: National Council Against Health Fraud position paper on Homeopathy; Permission to reprint is granted with proper citation.)
Sceptic James Randi has long offered US $1,000,000 for the first proof of homeopathy in controlled conditions. In 2002 the British television show "Horizon" took him up on this challenge, repeating Ennis' previous pro-homeopathy experiments. However no homeopathic result was found. (link below)
Despite these claims, debate continues on the results of further trials, as it likely will as long as homeopathy is a flourishing business.
External Links
Citations:
- Robert L. Park: Voodoo Science. The Road from Foolishness to Fraud. Oxford University Press, New York, 2000. ISBN 0195147103
- BBC News: "Fresh clue to homeopathy mystery", http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/health/newsid_1643000/1643364.stm
- Dana Ullman, M.P.H. The Consumer's Guide to Homeopathy.
- Planer, Felix E. 1988. Superstition. Revised ed. Buffalo, New York: Prometheus Books. ISBN 087975494X
- Hand, Wayland D. 1980. Folk Magical Medicine and Symbolism in the West. In Magical Medicine. Berkeley: University of California Press, pp. 305-319.
- Phillips Stevens Jr. Nov./Dec. 2001 Magical Thinking in Complementary and Alternative Medicine, Skeptical Inquier Magazine, Nov.Dec/2001
This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
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