Treating Disease with An Inadequate Stock of Medicines
r
| |
| Treating Disease with An Inadequate Stock of Medicines |
- Because there are only a limited number of proven remedies, a less perfect remedy could be used.
- While mild side effects can appear from an inappropriate remedy, they do not hinder a good start towards cure.
- Unusual characteristic symptoms in the both the disease and remedy will lead to cure without ill effects
- A remedy that shares common but not characteristic or peculiar symptoms in both the disease and the remedy will not work homeopathically.
- If an incorrect remedy is chosen, it's bad consequences can be reduced as soon as an accurately similar remedy is found.
- In the case of acute disease, if the incorrect remedy is chosen, don't wait for it to exhaust it's action, but re examine the original symptoms with newly arisen ones.
- Ongoing re-evaluations of the remaining disease are made, and the most similar remedy prescribed each time until perfect health is found.
- Where two remedies contend for preference, do not give the second remedy without re-evaluating the case.
- Sometimes, but rarely when re-evaluating the case, the second choice remedy is still indicated in preference to another remedy, and deserves to be employed.
- In non veneral chronic diseases, (that arise from psora), several anti psoric remedies in succession will be required to aid cure.
- Where there are not enough symptoms in the disease, the prescription is unlikely to be perfect.
- Diseases that only display one or two principle symptoms are called one sided and are chiefly classed as chronic.
- The principal symptom can either be internal or external (a local disease).
- Prescribing one sided diseases on an internal symptom only is usually the result of bad case taking.
- There are rare cases, which present only a few strong intense symptoms.
- Guided by these few symptoms, the most similar remedy must be chosen.
- Cure will be obtained if striking, characteristic, peculiar symptoms are matched.
- However, the more frequently the remedy will be only partially appropriate due to the lack of symptoms.
- The remedy best selected for the one sided disease will bring forward the underlying symptoms not previously seen but are part of the disease.
- New symptoms now visible belong to the disease itself and were exposed by the remedy given and must be treated as a whole.
- These newly revealed symptoms indicate the next remedy needed.
- A second prescription should be based on this new, more complete group of symptoms.
|
| |