Auckland College of Classical Homeopathy  
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Homeopathy
Treating Disease with An Inadequate Stock of Medicines
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 Treating Disease with An Inadequate Stock of Medicines
  1. Because there are only a limited number of proven remedies, a less perfect remedy could be used.
  2. While mild side effects can appear from an inappropriate remedy, they do not hinder a good start towards cure.
  3. Unusual characteristic symptoms in the both the disease and remedy will lead to cure without ill effects
  4. A remedy that shares common but not characteristic or peculiar symptoms in both the disease and the remedy will not work homeopathically.
  5. If an incorrect remedy is chosen, it's bad consequences can be reduced as soon as an accurately similar remedy is found.
  6. 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.
  7. Ongoing re-evaluations of the remaining disease are made, and the most similar remedy prescribed each time until perfect health is found.
  8. Where two remedies contend for preference, do not give the second remedy without re-evaluating the case.
  9. 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.
  10. In non veneral chronic diseases, (that arise from psora), several anti psoric remedies in succession will be required to aid cure.
  11. Where there are not enough symptoms in the disease, the prescription is unlikely to be perfect.
  12. Diseases that only display one or two principle symptoms are called one sided and are chiefly classed as chronic.
  13. The principal symptom can either be internal or external (a local disease).
  14. Prescribing one sided diseases on an internal symptom only is usually the result of bad case taking.
  15. There are rare cases, which present only a few strong intense symptoms.
  16. Guided by these few symptoms, the most similar remedy must be chosen.
  17. Cure will be obtained if striking, characteristic, peculiar symptoms are matched.
  18. However, the more frequently the remedy will be only partially appropriate due to the lack of symptoms.
  19. The remedy best selected for the one sided disease will bring forward the underlying symptoms not previously seen but are part of the disease.
  20. New symptoms now visible belong to the disease itself and were exposed by the remedy given and must be treated as a whole.
  21. These newly revealed symptoms indicate the next remedy needed.
  22. A second prescription should be based on this new, more complete group of symptoms.
 

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