Richard G. Petty, MD

Acupressure for Sleepiness

I’ve been using and teaching about the use of acupressure for boosting energy for a very long time. Since the early 1980s I’ve used pressure and tapping of some specific acupuncture points to give myself a quick jolt of energy. I’ve also had some success in helping patients with chronic fatigue by giving them some acupressure methods to use on a daily basis.

So I was very interested to see the publication of a small study involving 39 students in the Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine. The students were participating in three days of all-day lecture classes. They were taught to apply acupressure – either tapping or massaging – either five stimulating or five relaxing points. The students were not told the intended effects of the different points.

Acupressure stimulation points were:

1. The top of the head

2. The top of the back of the neck on both sides

3. On the back of the hands in between the thumb and forefinger

4. Just below both knees

5. On the bottom of the feet — at the center just below the balls of the feet

Acupressure relaxation points were:

1. Between the eyebrows

2. Just behind the earlobes

3. On the front of the wrists

4. On the lower legs above the ankles and toward the midline

5. On the top of the feet in between the large and second toes

The methods that the students were shown consisted of applying pressure to these points with light tapping of the fingers and massaging with the thumbs or forefingers.

The study was a cross-over design: Half of the students applied the stimulation acupressure regimen at lunchtime during the first day of class followed by two days on the relaxation regimen, and the other half followed the reverse schedule.

The results showed that students reported significantly less sleepiness and fatigue on the days they used the acupressure stimulation regimen. This is a fertile area for research. People have also claimed to be able to fatigue with both Thought Field Therapy (TFT) and Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT), and I’ve certainly found them to be useful on some occasions. The challenge now is to replicate this acupressure research and also to try out TFT and EFT in a similar study design.

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Adjunctive Homeopathy in an Intensive Care Unit

Although we normally try to get articles quickly, we are sometimes thwarted and they can be delayed in arriving. I have only just got my hands on a study abstract that was published by a research team from Graz in Austria last October. The investigators from the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Homeopathy examined the use of homeopathy in a group of severely ill people in an Intensive Care Unit.

This was a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to see whether homeopathy would be able to influence the outcome of critically ill people with severe sepsis. Seventy people entered the study, and 35 received homeopathic treatment and 35 received placebo, in addition to their regular treatment. The main outcome measure was survival. At day 30 there was no difference between the survival rates of the people receiving homeopathy and placebo. But at day 180, the survival rate in the homeopathy group was 75.8% compared to 50% in the placebo group.

One study does not make a revolution, and it is still early days for this kind of experimental work. Yet two things stand out from this small investigation:

1. The homeopathy was being used as an adjunct to conventional medical care. I sometimes get worried when practitioners of unorthodox medicine say that they would ONLY use herbs or homeopathy. The best approach has to be to combine conventional treatments with those unorthodox ones that can be shown to be helpful.

2. Trained homeopathic physicians did the prescribing. This is important: some studies have foundered because the studies tried to test just one remedy. Yet homeopaths individualize each treatment. So two people may have the same infection, but because they have different personalities and constitutional make-ups, they will receive different treatments.

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Mr. Black, R.I.P.

I have previously written about the privilege that I have had over the past four years of sharing a great deal of time with a wonderfully wise old soul who appeared in the body of horse.

Well, sad to report, on Friday March 10th 2006, he passed away very suddenly. Early on Friday morning we heard from our farm manager that he seemed to have colic. Horse colic can be a very serious problem in horses, since they are unable to vomit, and distended bowel can perforate. There was no obvious reason why he should develop his first ever attack of colic, apart from the fact that he was twenty-seven years old. And one other thing. Just three days earlier the daughter of his original owner and friend from Virginia who had known the horse all his life, came to visit him. They were thrilled by his incredibly good condition. Mr. Black’s only worry was that someone might take him away from his retirement home!

Despite his age, this was a horse that still wanted to run and jump with the younger ones. He liked to show off to some of the young competition horses that he still had the ability to out run them. The prospect of slowing down and being unable to keep up would not have appealed to him at all.

So although I may be anthropomorphizing here, I think that he had been given the opportunity to see his former owners one last time, and thought that this would be a good time to get out while he was still at the top of his game: still able to perform with all the younger horses, for whom he was an object of veneration.

I know that someone will ask why we couldn’t cure him of his colic. After all, in the days that I was treating a lot of individual patients, I have had humans fly from all over the world to come and see me for an opinion. They came because our success rates have often been far above average. So why couldn’t we pull Mr. Black around? We certainly tried. A superb vet saw him three times in 12 hours and did some very creative things to try and help him. He also received Rescue Remedy, two homeopathic remedies, acupuncture and Reiki, all in very precise coordinated combinations.

Yet he had obviously decided that it was his time to go. And that leads me to the last part of providing integrated health care. It is learning to understand when it is a person’s time to go and learning to accept it. That does not mean becoming passive and giving in! It means understanding what the whole organism is saying and whether we are trying to keep someone alive not for their sake, but because we would miss them. When it became clear that Mr. Black was not going to stay with us, I took him to see all the other horses. They all rubbed noses and said their goodbyes. The other horses took a keen interest in everything that was going on, so we let them watch as he departed, so that they would all know that we will never leave them alone if they are sick or when their time comes.

I’ve never liked the idea that medicine should be a wrestling match between a person and an illness. This is a false duality and ultimately an impossibility that can paralyze treatment and prevent the maintenance of wellness. Illness and even death are inevitable parts of life and it is really important that we learn the art of active co-existence. Do everything that you possibly can to get a good outcome for all involved, but then detach from that outcome. That’s the loving, compassionate and truly integrated approach to care.

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Acupuncture for Migraine

It was frustration at being unable to help so many people with migraine, that first lead me to begin my training in acupuncture. At the time I was working as a young research fellow in the main migraine clinic in London and I quickly discovered that acupuncture could be a wonderful treatment for many people suffering from this illness. I did my advanced training in acupuncture in China and even there – working with some of the best practitioners in the world – I confirmed my observation that acupuncture is no panacea. But it is a very helpful addition to our therapeutic toolbox.

There is a most interesting article in this week’s Lancet Neurology, that was also picked up by the BBC. The study came from Germany, and involved 960 patients who were randomly assigned to normal migraine medication treatment, traditional acupuncture, and sham – or fake – acupuncture. People in all three groups got better, and there was nothing to choose between the treatments in terms of efficacy.

So what does that mean? That acupuncture was in this trial as good as medications. But it adds to the growing literature that indicates that the precise placement of needles is not always as important as we used to think. But we also need to know exactly where the “sham” needling was done. During my years with the Research Council for Complementary Medicine and Prince Charles’ Foundation for Integrated Medicine, I saw a great many studies and proposals for studies in which the “sham” needles had actually been placed in highly active acupunctures points.

When I was training in China, most of my fellow students had trained in classical acupuncture in Europe, and some were outraged when they heard Chinese professors of acupuncture say that only some acupuncture points were always in the same place, and that it was not necessary to follow all the classical teachings. Some of the Europeans felt that the Chinese were destroying an ancient legacy. The Chinese simply responded by saying that the practice of acupuncture was being evolved on the basis of clinical observations and empirical research. It looks as if they were correct!

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Integrated Health and Aging

An important principle of the emerging laws of health and healing is that anything helpful should help more than one system of the body at a time. So a diet that might help mitigate the effects of aging in the skin should also have beneficial effects on the major organs of the body.

So I was encouraged to see a new report indicating that cardiovascular health and a healthy lifestyle are associated with maintaining the health of our brains as we age. This is, of course, intuitively obvious, but it is always nice to see such things confirmed by empirical research.

The new report is from a multi-Institute collaboration of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) published online in Alzheimer’s & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association. The chair of the committee was Hugh Hendrie, the Scottish-born professor of psychiatry from the University of Indiana, and the committee members were many of the most eminent people in the fields of aging and Alzheimer’s disease.

What is encouraging about this new report is that many of the factors associated with cognitive decline as we get older are eminently remediable: we have within our reach a set of potential interventions that could significantly reduce our personal risk of developing cognitive problems later in life. These are the things that we need to work on if we want to reduce our risk of developing cognitive decline later in life:

  1. Hypertension: There is excellent evidence that inadequately treated hypertension correlates strongly with cognitive decline.
  2. Physical activity: There is good evidence that elders who exercise regularly are less likely to experience cognitive decline. This is over and above the general improvement in quality of life that accompanies regular exercise. The earlier in life that we start, the easier it is to continue.
  3. Increased mental activity throughout life, including learning new things and going through higher education may benefit the health of the brain.
  4. Moderate alcohol use and the use of vitamin supplements also seem to be brain protectors, though the report does not specify which supplements.
  5. Social disengagement and depressed mood are both associated with poorer cognitive functioning, so it is important to be alert to signs of depression, and to maintain a social network. I discuss this in more detail in my book Healing Meaning and Purpose.

There are doubtless some genetic and environmental factors about which we can do little. But the idea that we now have a list of things that we can do to protect our brains is very exciting.

This report also signals another important change. In recent years we have seen the growth of Positive Psychology, the study of how to improve ourselves rather than the constant focus on psychopathology. This report calls for the research community to study health maintenance of the brain with the same energy that it has brought to bear on the study of diseases of the brain. To which I would add, that we must not just focus on how to maintain the health of the brain, but how we can enhance it’s function so that we can all reach and exceed our full potential.

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Acupuncture Without Needles

There are, in the United States, over 7 million people who are partially or completely disabled by back pain and another 40-50 million people who suffer from chronic recurrent headaches. Frustrated with my inability to help all my patients with conventional treatments, I have been using acupuncture since 1981. But about ten years ago I started using more acupressure, particularly since I could teach a lot of people to continue treating themselves.

Last month we saw evidence from a study using magnetoencephelography (MEG) scanning equipment that acupuncture reduces the activity of regions of the limbic system of the brain. MEG is a relatively new technology that measures the very faint magnetic fields that emanate from the head because of brain activity, instead of measuring electrical activity itself, which is a fairly blunt instrument. This reduced activity only occurred with deep needling, and when the patient experienced what is known as de qi. In Chinese medicine it is normally considered that the needle has not been correctly positioned until the patient and the practitioner both get the sensation of de qi. By contrast, superficial needling just caused activation of sensory areas of the cortex. Many doctors trained in needling techniques ignore the de qi experience, which is, I think, a mistake. When you are able to elicit it, the efficacy of acupuncture increases enormously.

Keep in mind what I have said before: just because acupuncture is associated with neurological changes, does not mean that they are responsible for the effects of acupuncture.

In this week’s British Medical Journal is an article from Taiwan, showing the effectiveness of acupressure in 129 patients with chronic low back pain. Like every study ever done, it is possible to pick some holes in this one, but overall it appears to be sound.

Now I am interested to see a press release about a form of needle-less therapy. I have written before about Thought Field Therapy (TFT), and the subject of the press release is a development of it called Emotional Freedom Technique, or EFT. While TFT uses tapping at specific points, together with humming, counting and eye movements, EFT is much simpler. It combines gentle fingertip tapping on key acupuncture points with focused thought. It is claimed to effectively reduce – and often permanently eliminating – chronic pain. According to its practitioners, EFT is more than 80-percent effective in treating headaches, back pain, cancer pain, arthritis, and pain from other conditions.

There is the rub: I could find no published research when I did a Medline search. That being said, I have reported elsewhere that I went to California to debunk TFT and became a convert after being treated by its inventor, Roger Callahan. There is a small amount of research on TFT that appears to confirm its effectiveness in some conditions, and I have certainly found it to be very helpful for many people.

Whether the claims of EFT will be born out remains to be seen. I have seen the techniques work, and I have to give credit where it is due. In exchange for your email address Gary Craig, who developed EFT, allows you to download a EFT manual from his website. You may also purchase DVDs from his site to learn more about this treatment modality. As always, I do not suggest using EFT or any other method in place of tried and tested treatments, but it may be a good adjunctive treatment for mild conditions.

In future message and in my newsletter I shall share some of the precise techniques that I have found useful, as well as ones that did not work out for me.

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Sheryl, Lance and Kylie

I was very sorry indeed to hear that the amazingly gifted singer Sheryl Crow, who is only 43 years old, is facing a challenge with cancer. She is, of course, by no means the first. Cancer is not something that just hits the older people in the population. Two recent examples: Lance Armstrong who even now, after years of treatment and triumph is only 34, and Kylie Minogue, who is 37. Those two are apparently doing very well indeed, and have used their celebrity to publicize the importance of health screening and of looking at all the options in treatment.

Because of the kind of work that I do, I know of many other well-known people who have dealt with similar problems, and are doing extremely well, but who have chosen to maintain their privacy. Most forms of cancer are no longer the death sentence that they once were.

For more than two decades, I have been heavily identified with holistic medicine, which has gone through more names than the artist formerly known as Prince: alternative, complementary, integrative and integrated. So people are often surprised that I am also an expert in conventional medicine. “After all,” I am asked, “If integrated medicine is so great, then why bother with conventional medicine at all?” The answer is that the best way to treat anyone is by an integrated approach that treats the five principle dimensions of a person: physical, psychological, social, subtle and spiritual.

I regularly receive mailings from people and organizations claiming that they can cure all types of cancer using all sorts of unusual approaches, from nutrition to detoxifications and methods for getting rid of parasites. I have never recommended these approaches because the evidence is so flimsy, and we have data to show that there are indeed treatments that can improve survival and quality of life. But what I am very keen on is using conventional treatment as well as these less orthodox approaches, which are precisely tailored to the individual.

The United States Department of Health and Human Services has Task Forces that make screening recommendations, and I thought that it would be a good idea to make a note of some of their recommendations:

  • Breast Cancer: Mammography every 1-2 years over age 40. Interestingly, the Task Forces don’t recommend routine breast self-examination, although many European countries do.
  • Cervical Cancer: Screening every three years after age 21 or after becoming sexual active.
  • Colon Cancer: “Regular” screening for everyone over age 50
  • Prostate Cancer: They do not recommend routine PSA screening, but certainly clinical examination.

All of these recommendations get ramped up if an individual has a family history of a specific cancer and breast and colon cancer screening should start earlier in African Americans.

So I wish the very best to Sheryl, Lance and Kylie. And if you have been following my posts about spirituality and healing, it is, I think, highly likely that if enough of us think kindly of them, it will help them heal.

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Meditation and the Brain

In the last few years, there have been a number of studies of the brain in people who are practicing different forms of meditation. Andy Newberg at the University of Pennsylvania has looked at cerebral blood flow of meditators, and there has been a long-standing collaboration between Richard Davidson at the University of Wisconsin and the Dalai Lama, who has provided the University with a steady flow of experienced meditators for an array of different types of electrical measurements of their brains. One of the most consistent findings in experienced meditators is that some of these electrical rhythms become synchronized. This was first reported over 20 years ago, but some of those early experiments had some technical problems associated with them. But the new findings seem to be very robust. Meditators also produce an unusual type of high frequency electrical activity known as gamma waves, that oscillate at 40 cycles per second.
This work has some important implications:

1. There are many types of meditation: many are a form of intense concentration, others are a witnessing or watching of thoughts, yet others are a form of profound devotion. So it is no surprise that different forms will produce different effects in the brain.

2. The fact that the brain can be trained to produce certain types of electrical activity is in line with multiple lines of evidence demonstrating that the brain is not the static structure that we used to think it to be: it can learn and develop. We already knew that with motor functions and some cognitive abilities, but now we can extend those findings into the emotions: feelings of love and empathy can be developed, expanded and deepened. The old metaphor that the brain can be exercised like a muscle may not be a metaphor after all, but a biological fact.

3. The fact that there are neurological correlates of meditation or of any emotional or psychological state does not mean that we can reduce the experience to the firing of some neurons or the synchronization of regions of the brain. Some of this research has been misinterpreted to mean that meditative states or mystical insights are no more than the calming of neural activity. It is vital that we also acknowledge the subjective experiences and reports of individuals and recognize that they are as valid descriptors as changes in the brain.

4. Meditation has been shown to have a great many physiological and psychological effects, from lowering blood pressure, to improving the performance of sleep-deprived individuals, reducing age-related cortical thinning and ultimately leading to demonstrable psychological and spiritual development. So the neurological and psychological findings provide a partial explanation for those observations.

The fact that some researchers are cooperating with the Dalai Lama has not sat well with some critics, but I think that it is important for us to remember that we are living in a time when it is essential for us to synthesize different approaches and to find common ground. So I applaud these studies and will continue to report them.

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Some Suggestions for Dealing with Insomnia

I have received an interesting question from a 50-year-old professional woman, who has had sleep problems that are especially severe during times of stress. As she says:
“I seem not to have the shut down switch in my brain.” She is worried about taking medications, and wonders if there is anything else that she can do to help herself.
____________________________

It is always unwise to make specific recommendations about someone without seeing them face-to-face, and the evaluation of a problem like this will normally take several hours. But the points that she raises have a great deal of relevance for so many people that I thought that a few comments would be helpful and equip everyone reading this with some information to discuss with their healthcare providers.

As usual, I think that it is a good idea to look at the question from the multiple dimensions of physical, psychological, social, subtle and spiritual. They are all inter-related, so dividing them up is simply a convenient way to help us think through the problem.

Before we do anything, we have to try and find out why someone has problems with sleep, and that may need investigations up to and including a sleep study.

The first thing is that my correspondent is female and likely either menopausal or perimenopausal. That is important, because as most women know, hormones have potent effects on sleep. It is not just that uncomfortable hot flashes can wake a person; it is also a direct effect of estrogen and probably of some of the releasing hormones in the hypothalamus. Hormone replacement therapy alone, does help some women but by no means all. Even at the physical level we see the general principle that there is rarely one cause for one problem. Typical menopausal sleep disturbances include a difficulty in falling asleep, and around 20% of menopausal women report that they sleep less than six hours a night. There is also some degradation in what we call sleep efficacy and an increase in deep slow wave sleep. Estrogen has effects on nasal mucosa, and when estrogen levels fall obstructive sleep apnea is more likely to occur. A major physical and psychological issue is that insomnia may become a learned habit that can persist even in the face of the best treatments.

This leads me to the second dimension, and that is psychological. The writer of the letter mentioned that she couldn’t turn off her thoughts. You would be amazed at how frequently I have been asked to consult on someone with a sleep problem and the individual has never been asked the question, “What is it that stops you falling asleep?” I have seen countless people prescribed sleeping tablets, when the real problem was anxiety or some other nasty problem that needed to be tackled first. In a moment I am going to make some suggestions that will try and help with both sleep and the ruminations and anxieties that may be contributing to its disturbance. Similarly, I have known a great many people whose sleep problems were the result of relationship difficulties or of something as simple as one person being a night owl and the other an early morning riser.

I always start with some simple sleep hygiene:

    1. Stress management
    2. Exercise a couple of hours before retiring
    3. Keeping mentally stimulated until it is time for bed
    4. Don’t go to bed until you are tired
    5. No caffeine, alcohol or nicotine after 6pm. (Preferably, of course, no nicotine ever!!) {Remember that many over the counter painkillers contain caffeine, as does chocolate}
    6. There are some specific dietary recommendations for helping with sleep, and I shall write about those on a future occasion
    7. Try to keep the bedroom atmosphere relaxing, and establish a sleep ritual
    8. If you cannot sleep, get up and do something relaxing: struggling to go to sleep is virtually impossible.
    9. Always get up at the same time in the morning, to try and re-set your brain, and as soon as you get up, be exposed to as much bright light as possible.
Now let me give you a few tricks that work on the five dimensions.
  1. Start by lying on your left side for 5-10 minutes and then roll onto your right side. This appears to work by exploiting the so-called nasal cycle, which I shall write more about on a future occasion.
  2. Still on the subject of the nose, one of the reasons that aromatherapy can be helpful, is because smell is unique amongst our senses, in that it is the only one that is not filtered by the thalamus. The regions of the brain that respond to smells are also directly related to some of the memory centers. The result is that smells can evoke memories extremely rapidly. You will probably have had the experience of smelling a perfume or cologne and instantly remembering someone who wore it in the past. This close linkage of smell and memory has enormous survival advantages: the smell of a predator can cause us to respond extremely rapidly. We can also use this knowledge to our advantage. Lavender has been used as a sleep aid for centuries. You can try putting a few drops of lavender oil on a cloth on your night-stand. Or you can use an electric diffuser or aromatherapy lamp. When I was growing up, we grew lavender and would put sprigs of it in the bed linens. It certainly seemed to help.
  3. Some people have found that melatonin can be very helpful, and it is readily available. Discuss it with your health care provider.
  4. Here is an old trick from traditional Chinese medicine. If you cannot sleep, soak a washcloth in cold water, lie down and put it on your abdomen for about ten minutes. I was taught that this works by pulling excess energy out of your head and neck down into the abdomen. There’s not a shred of scientific evidence that the technique works, but it does surprisingly often.
  5. If people who are good at visualization, some have reported great success by creating a picture of a warm, calm and relaxing place. And not just a picture, but also a five senses experience. It has to be personal, and perhaps even a place to go back to on a regular basis. When I first learned to do hypnotherapy I was put into a light trance by one of my teachers. To this day, more than 25 years later I can still vividly recall the experience of being told that I was drowsing on a grassy knoll on a warm summer’s day on the Downs of Southern England, and actually feeling that I was there. I can still evoke the memory at will and I’ve made it more detailed over time. If you are a visualizer, try that.
  6. Another technique that I learned from an early teacher, is to review the day backwards. Remembering what you did immediately before going to bed, and before that and so on. A simpler and often effective technique is just to start slowly counting backwards from 100.
  7. Herbs: There are three that are widely used, and for which there is some research base. There is good evidence that the herb Valerian can induce drowsiness, and it is widely used – even by doctors – in France and Germany. An important point about valerian is that it is poorly absorbed and chemically and thermally unstable. So it needs to be kept cool, and used fairly soon after it is prepared. As with all herbs, Valerian has side effects and can interact with prescription medications and alcohol, so it really is essential to discuss its use with your health care provider. The same goes for the other two widely used herbs: Hops and Passionflower.
  8. There is some evidence, though it’s not that strong, that taking a combined calcium/magnesium supplement (500mg calcium and 250-500mg magnesium) an hour before bed helps some people.
  9. I recommend massaging your facial muscles before lying down to sleep. Not only does this reduce muscle tension, but also the face is covered in acupuncture points, and so that may be another reason why it can help.
  10. Do not read or watch television in bed, but listen to a little calming music before retiring.

I do hope that will help you in your discussions with your health care provider. And I am always interested in hearing other suggestions, particularly if there is some research to back them up.

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Homeopathy R.I.P.?

Homeopathic medicine has now been in use for over two centuries since its basic ideas were rehabilitated by the German physician Samuel Hahnemann. And its essential concepts have always seemed strange to anyone with any scientific training. The central idea is that people have a life force that, if disturbed, can lead to illness. The second idea is the "doctrine of similars, " or of "like curing like." If you peel an onion, then your eyes and nose may start to run. So one treatment for a person with runny eyes and nose might be onion. The third peculiarity of homeopathy is the use of super-dilute remedies that are prepared in a very precise way. There is a nice summary article of some of the basic ideas.

There is an important principle in scientific research which sometimes gets forgotten: there are many different types of study and one of the most fundamental of errors is to mix up pragmatic (does it work?) and mechanistic (how does it work?) experiments. Pragmatic studies usually follow on from clinical observations, and even if something is shown to work, it can take years to work out the mechanisms. Aspirin would be a good example: it was used in various forms for over a century before it was discovered how it worked.

In August of this year the Lancet published an article on homeopathy that has been taken to signal the end of homeopathy. In fact in an accompanying editorial, there was a call for homeopathy to be abandoned, altogether. However, in the three months since then, a number of us have been through the Lancet study very carefully, and have found some snags in it. So far the Lancet has chosen not to publish responses to the article, and the authors themselves have, as of now, refused to disclose exactly which studies they analyzed. This is highly unusual, and should give pause to gleeful skeptics who have taken this one study to be the death knell of this form of treatment. Worse yet, the folk who have dismissed homeopathy based upon media reports of the study, without examining the original.

As examples of some of the astonishing problems identified in the Lancet publication: there was no clear statement of aim. This is normally required before you even begin a piece of research. The investigators first look at every homeopathic study that they could find and then decided which studies to include. This is again a very unusual way of doing things. And then there are a lot of questions about the statistical analysis. We all know that you can use statistics to prove almost anything that you want to, and the debate about the appropriateness of the methods used is going to go on for a very long time. 

The next time that somebody tells you that homeopathy is now a dead duck, tell them that the study is still being discussed. And as I have said on previous occasions, we do not make progress on the basis of one single paper. Even Watson and Crick’s model of the structure of DNA had to be confirmed before it was accepted, and going back further, some of the brilliant insights of Albert Einstein were not confirmed for almost fourteen years. But this study has already led to the Swiss Government deciding to reduce reimbursement for homeopathic treatment.

I have also seen some violent criticism of a six-year study involving around 6,500 patients who attended the Bristol Homeopathic Hospital in England.  This was a simple naturalistic study that asked a simple question: of all the people who visited the hospital, how many felt better afterwards? This is the kind of audit that is being done all the time to see how people have got on with a hospital or a treatment. It does not "prove" or "disprove" homeopathy, it just asks people how they feel. And most said that they had benefited. To criticize it for not being randomized or placebo controlled is a bit like going to an Italian restaurant and complaining that they don’t serve Chinese food!

Homeopathy is no "cure all," but I will not abandon it unless we get some far more impressive data than that from the Lancet paper, for not only have I seen it work in patients and in animals with monotonous regularity, but because behind the scenes, we have been seeing more and more research coming not from patient studies, but from physics and cell biology laboratories, that seems to be giving the specialty a firm theoretical footing.

I shall continue to report both the positive and the negative studies as they are published, and offering guidance about how we can use different forms of treatment in combination.

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