How to use Homeopathy Plus
The restored site is an archive and information resource, not a treatment or booking service.
What this site provides
Homeopathy Plus gives readers access to a restored Australian publishing archive and a growing set of newer health explainers. It does not provide consultations, prescriptions, diagnosis, emergency advice or an online dispensary.
The archive preserves articles published over several years by an Australian homeopathy organization. Some pages reflect historical claims about homeopathic remedies that were common in alternative medicine circles during that period. Others describe traditional homeopathic practice as it was taught and applied by practitioners at the time.
Research to date has not found that homeopathic remedies produce effects beyond placebo for the conditions discussed in these articles. The archive remains online to maintain the historical record and because external sites still link to these URLs.
Topic hubs
Ten hubs connect the homepage to related articles. They cover remedies, functional medicine, sleep, conditions, immunisation history, autism claims, patient stories, agrohomeopathy, public debate and home prescribing.
Hub introductions explain what kind of material follows and flag the collections that need extra medical context. Some hubs contain only archive material, while others include updated explainers that clarify current Australian regulations or medical terminology.
Restored archive pages
Many older URLs were recovered from archived copies of the site. Their original subject matter has been retained because other websites may still link to them. Where an old claim could mislead a current reader, the page now carries an archive notice, a clearer explanation or a link to current guidance from health authorities.
Archive pages may describe anecdotal patient experiences, explain remedy selection according to traditional homeopathic principles, or repeat claims that appeared in the alternative medicine literature of that era. This material is presented as historical context, not as medical advice or evidence-based guidance.
Current explainers and corrections
Newer pages answer common questions about practitioner titles, Australian product rules, sleep apnoea and health terminology. These articles name the relevant regulator, professional body, treatment or condition rather than making broad claims. They add context that was often missing from older homeopathy sites: the difference between registered and unregistered health practitioners, for instance, or how the Therapeutic Goods Administration classifies homeopathic products.
If an article misstates a source, contains a dead reference or presents old material without enough context, send the page URL through the contact form.
This site cannot tell you whether a remedy is safe for your circumstances or whether a symptom is serious. A pharmacist, GP or relevant specialist is the right person for that question. Start with the topic index or all articles.