About Homeopathy Plus
A restored Australian archive with new context for evidence, regulation and medical safety.
Why the archive was restored
Homeopathy Plus published practitioner articles, case stories, remedy notes and commentary for many years. Other websites still cite those pages. Restoring the original URLs means a reader can follow an old reference and see what was actually discussed instead of landing on an error page.
The archive also contains difficult material. Some headlines overstate small studies. Personal accounts are written as if they establish cause. Older immunisation and autism pages conflict with current Australian guidance. Preserving those pages without context would trade historical value for confusion.
What has changed
The current site groups material into topic hubs and labels the source type before the article list. Historical claims remain identifiable as historical claims. Stories remain stories. New explainers name the relevant condition, practitioner title, regulator or clinical guidance rather than treating every source as equivalent.
High-risk pages receive stronger corrections. The Australian Immunisation Handbook, Healthdirect, the Therapeutic Goods Administration and other primary sources are linked where they are directly relevant.
What evidence-informed means here
It does not mean attaching a reference list to a predetermined conclusion. It means asking whether a source is a case report, laboratory experiment, animal study, observational study, clinical trial, systematic review or official guideline. Each can answer different questions.
Traditional use may explain why practitioners choose a remedy. It does not by itself show that the remedy prevents or treats a disease. A personal improvement may be real and important to the person, but it cannot rule out natural recovery, concurrent care or an incorrect first diagnosis.
Medical boundaries
Homeopathy Plus does not provide diagnosis, treatment plans, prescriptions or emergency advice. Do not stop medication, CPAP, cancer treatment or vaccination because of an archive page. Serious symptoms and infections require qualified care.
Corrections are welcome through the contact page. Include the URL, the sentence in question and the source that supports the correction.