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What does homeopathy mean?

What does homeopathy mean?

homeopathy
      Homeopathy


Homeopathy is a system of alternative medicine that was grown in the late 1700s. It's established on the idea that "like cures like," meaning a substance that causes certain symptoms in a healthy person can be used in very small, diluted amounts to treat alike symptoms in someone who is sick. Fundamental belief is "the law of minimum dose," which suggests that the more a substance is diluted, the more useful it becomes. Homeopathic remedies are made by repeatedly diluting natural substances (like plants, minerals, or animal products) in water or alcohol, often to the point where there's no original substance left. The aim is to stimulate the body's own healing powers. While many people use homeopathy for various conditions.



What is not allowed in homeopathy?

The things "not allowed" in homeopathy can be broken down into a few categories:

1. Practices for Homeopathic Practitioners:

Practicing Allopathy (Conventional Medicine): Homeopaths are not allowed to practice allopathic medicine or prescribe conventional drugs.

Making False or Misleading Claims: Homeopathic practitioners are generally not allowed to make claims about their remedies being scientifically proven to work if there's no actual scientific evidence.

"No Cure, No Payment" Contracts is usually considered unethical.

Homeopaths are ethically bound not to Neglecting Patients or Withdrawing Without Notice.

2. Handling of Remedies (from a patient's perspective, often advised by homeopaths):

Touching the pills: Many homeopaths advise against touching the sugar pellets directly, suggesting they be taken from the bottle cap.

Some homeopaths recommend avoiding Consuming strong-smelling substances close to taking remedies like foods, drinks, or substances like coffee, mint, garlic, onions, or camphor around the time of taking remedies, as they believe these could interfere with the remedy's absorption or action.






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