Wow, you all are mixing your modalities something crazy. Using moderate heat to treat burns has nothing to do with medicinal herbs. Homeopathy does not advocate the drinking of tea to treat diseases. Classical homeopathy uses little sugar pellets with potentized doses of plants (like the arnica, rhus and ruta I'm taking). Heilkunst uses sugar pellets along with dietary changes, metabolic typing and some other tests (at times.) And the article published in the British Medical Journal about iatrogenic death had nothing to do with homeopathy. (Reading comprehension, anyone?) The mortality rate is not taken by doctors. If you read the comments in the article you'll see this was not a one-time phenomenon. A conservative estimate of those killed both by error and "non error" drugs, surgery and nosocomial infections is ~ 250 K, and the higher estimate is 750K. Feel free to do your own research on the numbers of iatrogenic deaths. I'd rather spend my time doing research for people who are trying to actively improve their own health rather than trying to stroke their own egos.
Homeopathy isn't about tea...and like I said I've seen many people who had gone to doctors for years and gotten traditional medical care, and yet they were cured by Heilkunst (or by tai chi instructors, as Maxx mentioned--I'm sure some people would half as many laughs over that as y'all are having over homeopathy)--if soemthing WORKS I could care less what people think. It's amazing to me how many people think modern medicine works, and yet they have a million and one health issues they think they cant' do anything about. I guess some people would prefer to be right than to be truly healthy. That's fine, we all make our choices.
As far as homeopathy worsening people's injuries--well, chemistry and modern medicine says that it's all placebo anyway, so how could it make things worse?
Tom Bisio, who has been practicing taiji for what--25 years? and runs a clinic dealing with sports injuries and rehab for injured athletes--says that ice causes stagnation. I could care less what people use, but I find it interesting people think they know "the truth" about what is "proven" and "called for" and then when they get arthritis and chronic pain in the areas they iced, they think it's because of the original injury.
Using ice, or heat and ice, or whatever, is a mechanical approach, and then people get temporary relief and don't realize they are just suppressing a problem that will crop up later in a different form. Then they to go another specialist who treats it as something new, when really it is just a different effect of mismanaging the first issue. Treating something properly, though it may involve discomfort, has better results than suppressing the pain by the "end justifies the means" approach.
Saying "I would never use heat ona burn" or "if I had cancer I would go to a doctor" is not a solid argument. It would be easily refuted by me saying "I would use heat on a burn" or "If I had cancer, I would go to the Center for Heilkunst." I wouldn't even have to say, "I have successfully used heat to treat a burn" or "I know people who had cancer and were cured with homeopathy when allopathic medicine did nothing." even though those things are true.
I've had bad experiences with homeopathy (also "placebo" supposedly, since I must have imagined those weird rashes and magically appearing bruises, it was too small a dose to be effective--even though I didn't know what the remedies did back then) and didn't "believe" in it for a while, and when I did some work with a Heilkunst practitioner to source out the root cause of some problems I was having, what she said really flew in the face of a lot of what I thought I know about herbalism. I had to ask myself, would I rather "be right" or would I rather get better. The shit works. In fact, I was just hanging out with a massage therapist who works on rehabilitation (with a chiropractor) and told me he uses homeopathy in his practice--because it works. I could care less about why people think it might not work if I see results. There's a term in CF (not that anybody in CF except for maybe me and a naturopath use homeopathy) called the "black box." Basically you do something and see what the results are and let science figure out what happens in the "black box." I could care less what happens in the black box as long as I see results. I see results. Amazing results in my case, actually. (My chiropractor: "Wow, that's a HUGE improvement in just a week-you've been really consistent with icing, huh?" This for an injury that--as documented here--I've had with little improvement for over a month until I got the right homeopathic remedies. )
Homeopathy isn't about tea...and like I said I've seen many people who had gone to doctors for years and gotten traditional medical care, and yet they were cured by Heilkunst (or by tai chi instructors, as Maxx mentioned--I'm sure some people would half as many laughs over that as y'all are having over homeopathy)--if soemthing WORKS I could care less what people think. It's amazing to me how many people think modern medicine works, and yet they have a million and one health issues they think they cant' do anything about. I guess some people would prefer to be right than to be truly healthy. That's fine, we all make our choices.
As far as homeopathy worsening people's injuries--well, chemistry and modern medicine says that it's all placebo anyway, so how could it make things worse?

Tom Bisio, who has been practicing taiji for what--25 years? and runs a clinic dealing with sports injuries and rehab for injured athletes--says that ice causes stagnation. I could care less what people use, but I find it interesting people think they know "the truth" about what is "proven" and "called for" and then when they get arthritis and chronic pain in the areas they iced, they think it's because of the original injury.
Using ice, or heat and ice, or whatever, is a mechanical approach, and then people get temporary relief and don't realize they are just suppressing a problem that will crop up later in a different form. Then they to go another specialist who treats it as something new, when really it is just a different effect of mismanaging the first issue. Treating something properly, though it may involve discomfort, has better results than suppressing the pain by the "end justifies the means" approach.
Saying "I would never use heat ona burn" or "if I had cancer I would go to a doctor" is not a solid argument. It would be easily refuted by me saying "I would use heat on a burn" or "If I had cancer, I would go to the Center for Heilkunst." I wouldn't even have to say, "I have successfully used heat to treat a burn" or "I know people who had cancer and were cured with homeopathy when allopathic medicine did nothing." even though those things are true.
I've had bad experiences with homeopathy (also "placebo" supposedly, since I must have imagined those weird rashes and magically appearing bruises, it was too small a dose to be effective--even though I didn't know what the remedies did back then) and didn't "believe" in it for a while, and when I did some work with a Heilkunst practitioner to source out the root cause of some problems I was having, what she said really flew in the face of a lot of what I thought I know about herbalism. I had to ask myself, would I rather "be right" or would I rather get better. The shit works. In fact, I was just hanging out with a massage therapist who works on rehabilitation (with a chiropractor) and told me he uses homeopathy in his practice--because it works. I could care less about why people think it might not work if I see results. There's a term in CF (not that anybody in CF except for maybe me and a naturopath use homeopathy) called the "black box." Basically you do something and see what the results are and let science figure out what happens in the "black box." I could care less what happens in the black box as long as I see results. I see results. Amazing results in my case, actually. (My chiropractor: "Wow, that's a HUGE improvement in just a week-you've been really consistent with icing, huh?" This for an injury that--as documented here--I've had with little improvement for over a month until I got the right homeopathic remedies. )
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