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Tutorial 13 - Finding a Good Homeopath |
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Finding a Good Homeopath
One of the most common questions I am asked is, "How do I find a good
homeopath?" This can be a surprisingly difficult question to answer -
read on and you will see why.
In Australia, as in many other parts of the world, homeopathy is
regarded as a "low risk" system of medicine yet in a perverse way, this
low risk status works against it. Because homeopathy is so safe,
governments have little desire to legislate who can and who cannot
practice it. For this reason, anyone can set up as a homeopath -
whether they have completed four years of undergraduate study or have
read just one book. In the same way, practitioners of other therapies,
and even doctors, may dispense homeopathic remedies to an ignorant
public when they may have had little or no training. In the light of
this reality, how does one find a good homeopath?
If living in Australia, first check that your practitioner is
registered with the Australian Register of Homeopaths (AROH). AROH acts
as the watchdog that protects the public from under-qualified people
who claim they are fully trained professionals. It registers only those
homeopaths who have trained to government endorsed standards. If the
therapist, practitioner, or doctor you are seeing for your homeopathic
treatment is not a member of AROH, be aware that they have not met
these minimum standards.
The Australian Homeopathic Association (AHA) is the largest and
only national homeopathic association. It is also an association member
of AROH. Homeopaths belonging to AHA must also have AROH registration.
You can search the AHA website (www.homeopathyoz.org) for a homeopath near you knowing they have trained to the minimum standard considered acceptable for practice.
To help you further identify those who can actually apply what they
have learnt, I have drawn up a comparison of good and bad practises.
These practises mainly concern how a homeopath should or should not
manage a chronic problem with homeopathy - there will be minor
variations for acute treatments. Please use these practises as a guide
to help you find someone who really deserves to wear the title of
homeopath. You be the judge!
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Poor Practise |
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Consultations are of an adequate length
First consultations for a chronic or constitutional prescription should be at least 1 - 1 1/2 hours (babies may only need 1/2 - 1 hour).
Follow-up consultations do not have to be as long and may only be 1/2 hour duration.
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Does not allow enough time for consultations
Short
consultations make it impossible for your practitioner to collect all
the information needed to make a good homeopathic prescription or
analyse how well you responded to the remedy.
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Treats only by homeopathy and general "naturopathic" concepts
Homeopaths understand that health is sustained by nutritious food,
sunshine, exercise, harmonious relationships, clean air and water, but
when these natural necessities are no longer enough, they will use
homeopathy to correct the underlying bioenergetic imbalance that led to
the failure in health. Homeopaths use remedies to mimic an unwell
person's symptoms. These remedies stimulate rather than suppress the
body's healing efforts and help it return to health. In contrast other
therapies, including modern medicine, relieve symptoms by palliation or
suppression, neither of which promotes long-term health. For this
reason, good homeopaths do not mix other therapies into your treatment.
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Uses homeopathy as one of many modalities for treatment
Poor practitioners have no awareness of which therapies stimulate and
which suppress. For this reason they will happily combine anything
"natural" with homeopathic treatment as long as it provides short-term
symptom relief. If your practitioner is mixing homeopathy, herbs,
supplements, bodywork therapies or even pharmaceuticals into your
treatment, a confusing array of messages is being sent to your body.
This can be counterproductive. Your practitioner may be a "jack of all
trades" but is certainly master of none.
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Listens carefully to your story and symptoms without judgement
A good homeopath will enjoy what they are doing, be interested in your
wellbeing, happily answer your questions, and listen to your story
impartially and objectively. Rather than being shocked by your
"strange" symptoms or unusual behaviours, a good homeopath will see
them as fascinating part of the imbalance you would like them to
correct.
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Is arrogant, judgemental or seems bored
A practitioner who behaves in this manner is obviously in the wrong
job. They would do a lot better by themselves and you if they referred
you to someone else and looked for different employment.
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Conducts basic observations and refers for other investigations when necessary
Your homeopath should conduct basic observations and examinations as
needed such as blood pressure, temperature, pulse, listening to your
chest with a stethoscope, and ear and throat examinations. They should
also recognise when your symptoms may indicate the presence of a more
serious condition and refer you so further diagnostic tests can be
performed.
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Never assesses you physically or refers for other investigations when needed
This practitioner either lacks the skills to carry out basic physical
assessments or is failing to collect adequate information for the
homeopathic prescription. Important information may be missed that
could have implications for how your case should be managed.
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Prescribes according to your "symptom totality"
Your homeopath should be interested in all the mental, emotional and
physical reactions you experience in your state of ill health. This
cross-section of symptoms, past and present, will reveal which remedy
is best for your complaint.
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Focuses on only one or two obvious symptoms
If your practitioner only focuses on only one or two immediate symptoms
they may be saving time but will not be collecting enough information
to find the correct remedy for your health complaint. Likewise, if your
practitioner is only interested in your mental and emotional symptoms
because "all disease arises from the mind", they are failing to
prescribe on all available information. Collecting the "symptom
totality" takes more time but still provides the most reliable
information for making a prescription and follow-up case management.
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Prescribes according to your symptoms rather than a disease name
In homeopathy we treat diseased people rather than diseases. Homeopathy
works best when prescribed according to the person's unique response
to, and experience of their illness rather than prescribing on the
common symptoms of the disease itself. For this reason different people
with the same complaint may each need a different remedy.
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Prescribes according to a disease name rather than your symptoms
A practitioner who gives you a remedy "for pneumonia" or "for
arthritis" rather than for the unique symptoms you experience with
these problems, does not know what they are doing. This method of
prescribing is like taking a stab in the dark that will more often miss
than hit. Find yourself another practitioner.
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Does not rely on "energy" machines for making the prescription
Good homeopathic prescribing still relies on the human skills of
collecting symptoms, grading their importance, choosing the closest
matching remedy according to this grading, interpreting the person's
response to the remedy, and adjusting the prescription as necessary.
Machines that "measure energy" cannot accurately replace these skills.
A good homeopath may use a computer for case notes or analysis but they
will not attach you to a machine to make a prescription.
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Diagnoses and prescribes according to the readout from a machine
Alarm bells should ring if a practitioner uses a "bioresonance" type
machine to make a homeopathic prescription. Once again, this very act
indicates that they are untrained in homeopathy and do not know how to
find the remedy that would be most helpful. These machines detect
superficial changes in the bioelectrical energy across the body and in
a superficial and suppressive way, make a prescription for them. While
short-term improvements can be obtained, these machines lack the
ability to prescribe for lasting and deep-seated change.
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Prescribes one remedy at a time
It is often said in homeopathy that the first prescription is the
easiest to make, and that the measure of a homeopath is in their
follow-up case management. Your homeopath should collect your symptoms,
prescribe a single remedy that matches them, assess the changes this
prescription has made at the next appointment, and then re-prescribe a
better matching remedy if need be. This cyclic method of case analysis
and prescribing is the best way to maintain clarity of progress during
treatment to systematically move you towards better health.
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Prescribes combined remedies (complexes) or multiple remedies to be taken on the one day
Practitioners only prescribe in complexes if they do not know how to
match your symptoms to the single correct remedy. This "shotgun" method
of treatment is a sure sign they know little more about homeopathy than
you. Multiple remedies, whether given in complexes or rotated rapidly
over a short period of time, confuse your "symptom picture" and make
future prescribing difficult. It can be like looking into a muddied
pool rather than at clear, clean water.
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Prescribes more often in liquids than in pilules or tablets
Using liquid remedies is the most advanced way to prescribe homeopathic
remedies. Prescribing in liquid means that the dose can be easily
adjusted to suit the needs of the patient. More or less dilution of the
remedy will make it energetically stronger or weaker and varying the
number of succussions (vigorous shakes) it receives before each dose
will alter its energetic intensity. Neither of these things can be done
with pilules or tablets. Liquid dosing also allows the remedy to be
repeated more rapidly than would be possible with pilules or tablets.
More frequent repetition in liquids reduces the risk of aggravations (a
temporary intensification of your symptoms) and speeds the rate of cure.
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Only prescribes in pilules or tablets
Because there is no easy way to alter the energetic intensity of
pilules or tablets homeopathic aggravations (short-term
intensifications of symptoms) are more likely to occur if the remedy is
repeated too frequently. Also, pilules and tablets cannot be repeated
as frequently as liquid remedies and so produce a slower rate of
improvement, especially in chronic disease. While pilule and tablet
prescribing is still effective it is probably best thought of as "good"
homeopathy rather than "best".
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Prescribes a test dose to assess your sensitivity to the remedy
Patient sensitivity can vary to homeopathic remedies. Some people are
quite sensitive and respond strongly to the remedy while others display
gradual improvement with long-term dosing. Sensitive individuals are
more likely to experience an aggravation with repeated doses or doses
that are too strong. For this reason a good homeopath will give you a
test dose of the prescribed remedy to assess how strongly you respond
before deciding how often you should take it.
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Prescribes a pre-determined number of doses without assessing your sensitivity
Routine dosing in a "one size fits all" manner is certainly easier for
the practitioner but does not meet the needs of their sensitive
patients - aggravations are more than likely. Practitioners who
prescribe regular doses without first checking for sensitivity are
either poorly trained or do not have their patient's best interests at
heart. You would be wise to invest your money elsewhere.
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Tries to avoid aggravations
While they are non-toxic and usually mild, well-trained homeopaths try
to avoid aggravations for the comfort of their patients. They
understand that aggravations occur when the dose is too large or the
remedy has been repeated too frequently for that person's sensitivity
to it. They also know that that the body's healing response will be
halted during an aggravation, extending the time it takes for the
person to improve.
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Tries to produce an aggravation
Some practitioners believe that aggravations are positive effects that
show the correct remedy has been chosen. For this reason they dose
repeatedly and aggressively until an aggravation has been achieved and
then call them "healing crises". While aggravations are generally
short-lived and mild, this behaviour shows a little concern for the
comfort of the patient and an ignorance of foundational homeopathic
principles. Aggravations, while occasionally unavoidable, are
unnecessary and should not be sought.
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Avoids making changes at the beginning of treatment
As a general rule, good homeopaths advise their patients not to make
any changes to diet, supplements, and lifestyle at the beginning of
treatment. They want to keep everything the same to clearly see what
changes take place when the remedy is introduced. Once the effect of
the remedy has been established, changes may be made.
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Introduces changes at the beginning of treatment
Practitioners who make changes to diet, lifestyle, and supplements at
the beginning of treatment risk not being able to clearly see what is
happening in relation to their prescription. Unnecessary changes at the
beginning of treatment can confuse the symptom picture and make overall
case management difficult.
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Continues your prescription medicines
While all homeopaths would prefer you came to them before
your health problems required prescription medicines, and while some of
these medicines may make it more difficult for the homeopath to manage
your case, a good homeopath is still able to commence homeopathic
treatment in spite of them. When you have conditions such as high blood
pressure or diabetes, a good homeopath will also monitor things such as
blood sugar levels and blood pressure readings during your treatment so
adjustments can be made to your medications if needed. As improvement
takes place, your homeopath will also encourage you to talk to your
prescribing doctor about reducing some of your medicines or stopping
them altogether if they are no longer needed.
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Encourages you to stop prescription medicines
A poorly trained practitioner may expect you to alter your medications
without first consulting with your doctor. They may also refuse to
treat you homeopathically on the basis that treatment would be
impossible unless some or all of your prescription medications are
stopped. It goes without saying that you should find another
practitioner as soon as possible in either of these two instances.
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Able to be contacted between appointments
Adjustments to your treatment may be needed as you respond to the
remedy during the course of your treatment. A good homeopath will
advise you of this probability and provide a way for you to contact him
or her so this can be done should the need arise.
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Not contactable between appointments
Your practitioner cannot be contacted between appointments and does not
advise you on what to do in the meantime. If you have any concerns you
just have to "wait it out".
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Happy to work with your doctor or specialist
At your request,
your homeopath will be happy to work with your local doctor or
specialist and to share information with them on the homeopathic
management of your health problem.
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Reluctant to work your doctor or specialist
Your practitioner is reluctant to share information with your doctor or
specialist and is inclined to make derogatory comments about them or
other practitioners in general.
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