Homeopathic hospital Washington D.C.

Historical Data For The Use of Homeopathy in Epidemics

April 1, 2020
Dr. André Saine

Homeopathic Hospital Washington D.C.

On March March 28, 2013 - Homeopathic expert Dr. Andre Saine and skeptic Dr. Steven Novella squared off at the University of Connecticut School of Medicine to debate whether homeopathy was a viable medical modality.  Dr. Saine authored this piece in response to a post debate question posed by Dr. Novella.

What do you consider to be the best clinical evidence supporting the efficacy of homeopathy for any indication?

Copyright ©:  2015

Abstract: Homeopathy offers the safest and best outcomes ever demonstrated by any system of medicine for patients with pneumonia and therefore would receive the highest possible recommendation of any intervention for these patients (1A/strong recommendation with high-quality evidence).

Summary of the Evidence[1]:

Before presenting the best clinical evidence for homeopathy, it is necessary to address three implications of your question.

First, your question implies that homeopathy treats “indications” as those are understood in conventional medicine, where a particular drug having a particular effect will be typically prescribed to treat a well-defined patho-physiological disease (WPD). In homeopathy, however, the focus is on the whole person.

Second, the question implies that we have the same understanding of what constitutes homeopathy, which should be made absolutely clear before any further discussion on the subject. Homeopathy is the art and science of medicinal treatment that was developed by Samuel Hahnemann. Homeopathic medicines are given singly, in non-toxic doses, and are individualized on the basis of the greatest degree of similarity between the pathogenesis of a remedy and the totality of the patient’s symptoms.   

Third, the expression “the best clinical evidence” implies that the clinical evidence for homeopathy has been evaluated through a grading system. Since such an evaluation has not yet been done, I will take a few steps in that direction.

As I mentioned in the debate, likely the most compelling evidence for the effectiveness of homeopathy is found in its extensive records of its use in epidemics. In 2003, I began reviewing the literature on this subject, and I have so far uncovered over 10,000 references, the first 2,500 of which have been incorporated into a comprehensive text that is now over two thousand pages in length.

All the epidemics in which homeopathy has been used since 1799 have been included in this extensive review of the literature.

The main finding of this research is that the results obtained by homeopathy during epidemics consistently reveal an extremely low mortality rate. That observation holds true regardless of the physician, the time, the place or the type of epidemic disease, including diseases that are known to have a very high mortality rate, such as cholera, smallpox, diphtheria, typhoid fever, yellow fever, and pneumonia.

Since society values the saving of life more highly than any other outcome, most of these reports give accounts of rates of recovery versus mortality; therefore they deserve the close attention of academia, governments, and health authorities, and should be followed by strong recommendations.[2]

The hierarchies of evidence in evidence-based medicine (EBM) have not been developed for the purpose of integrating such massive amounts of evidence, because the allopathic literature from before WWII is relatively poor in valuable therapeutic interventions. Aside from a few trials, such as Lind’s with citrus fruit to treat scurvy in sailors (1747), and Louis’s with bleeding and expectancy in pneumonia patients (1828), there are not many therapeutic trials that are worth recounting, or whose therapeutic interventions would have any clinical significance today. That, however, is not at all the case with homeopathy, whose literature overflows with all types of very meaningful case studies, trials, and outcome reports which are as pertinent today as when they were first published. Results obtained by homeopathy do not often lose any of their value with the passing of time; on the contrary, like all facts, they are as relevant as if they had occurred today, particularly since the homeopathic methodology has not essentially changed since its early development.

Statistics in homeopathy don’t need to be extensively elaborated in the majority of studies, because the differences in the outcomes during epidemics tend to be obvious, serving as a reminder of Sir Ernest Rutherford’s remark, “If your experiment needs statistics, you ought to have done a better experiment.” Odds ratios and relative risks with two-by-two tables are often sufficient to reveal fully the size of the effect in these outcome studies. I will limit my response to the outcomes of homeopathy versus allopathy in patients with pneumonia before and since the introduction of antibiotics.

Homeopathic hospital Washington D.C.

Mortality from Pneumonia in the Pre-antibiotic Era Allopathic Treatment

First, let’s look at the average mortality from pneumonia under pre-antibiotic allopathy (PAA), which was quite uniform throughout the nineteen century. In fact, in 1912 William Osler wrote: “Pneumonia is one of the most fatal of all acute diseases, killing more than diphtheria, and outranking even consumption as a cause of death. The statistics at my clinic at the John Hopkins Hospital from 1889 to 1905 have been analyzed by Chatard. There were 658 cases with 200 deaths, a mortality of 30.4 percent. Excluding 35 cases of terminal pneumonia the percentage is 26.4. … Greenwood and Candy in a study of the pneumonia statistics at the London Hospital from 1854-1903, a total of 5,097 cases, conclude that the fatality of the disease has not appreciably changed during this period. In comparing the collected figures of these authors with those from other institutions, there is an extraordinary uniformity in the mortality rate.”[3]

In the following two tables, the first one for PAA and the second one for homeopathy, I have assembled outcomes for pneumonia cases from mixed populations of ambulatory and hospitalized care in both Europe and the United States that can be found in the literature during the same years. Outcomes for patients with pneumonia during the 1918-1920 influenza pandemic will be discussed separately.[4]

First, we find that among 146,237 patients under PAA there were 35,698 reported deaths for an average mortality rate of 24.4%.[5],[6],[7],[8],[9],[10],[11],[12],[13],[14]

Allopathic Treatment  CasesDeathsMortality (%)
Dr. Brouillard, Paris5    152    1811.8
Dr. Louis, Paris5    107    3229.9
Dr. Grissolle’s collection5    304    4314.2
Vienna Hospital5 1,660  35021.1
Drs. Balfour and Thompson5    125    3528.0
Glasgow General Hospital5    122    3831.2
Parisian Hospitals5    300  10033.3
New York Hospital5      87    3236.8
Dr. Dietl, Vienna5    106    2220.8
Prague Hospital5    259    6826.3
St. Louis City Hospital5      23    1252.2
Dr. Leroux’s collection5    364     8523.4
Drs. Taylor and Walsh5      78     1215.4
Dr. Peacock5      48       36.3
Philadelphia General Hospital5    991    53353.8
Boston City Hospital5    949    34135.9
Chomel, Paris6      24      1354.1
Andral, Paris, 18306      65      3756.9
St. Petersburg, 1834710,123 3,35833.2
Mussy, Paris, 18356       86     3844.2
Broussais, Paris, 18356     218    13762.9
Becquerel, Paris, 18386       46      4090.0
St. Petersburg, 1839716,015 5,30333.1
London, 18456  1,133    40435.7
Pinel, Paris6       23      1147.8
Cochin Hospital6       63      1625.4
Cayol6       24        625.0
St. Joseph Hospital, Lisbon6       52      2154.2
Geneva Military Hospital6       27      1140.7
London Hospital, 1784-19038,14  5,692 1,15720.3
Charité Hospital, New Orleans, 1830-18799  3,969 1,50938.0
Basel Hospital, 1839-18718     922    21323.1
Seraphim Hospital, Stockholm, 1840-18558  2,710    37513.8
Pennsylvania Hospital, 1845-18879     704    20529.1
Vienna General Hospital, 1847-18578  5,990  1,44124.1
Edinburgh Infirmary, 1848-18569  1,72633319.3
Dr. Routh’s collection, 18525     3886617.0
Montreal General Hospital, 1853-18879  1,01220620.4
Dickson’s Tables, 18671080,43716,91521.0
Stockholm Military Hospital8     670497.3
Middlesex Hospital, 1869-188811  1,01019219.0
Boston City Hospital, 1875-18875  1,44342129.1
Collective Investigation, London, British Medical Assoc. 18848  1,06019118.2
St. George’s Hospital, 1884-188811       861820.4
Guy’s Hospital, 1884-188811       621016.1
St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, 1884-188811     1372820.4
Westminster Hospital, 1884-188811     2475221.1
Osler, John Hopkins Hospital, 1889-190512     65820030.4
St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, 1897-19068   1,11117315.6
Bellevue Hospital, NYC, 1920-192513   2,62982531.4
  Total  146,237  35,698  24.4 (average)
Table 1: Mortality from Pneumonia in the Pre-antibiotic Era Allopathic Treatment

Mortality from Pneumonia of Patients under Homeopathic Treatment

Let’s now look at the outcome under homeopathy for pneumonia patients, also in a mixed population of ambulatory and hospitalized care during the same period and in the same parts of the world. Rather than cherry picking, I have included all the case and cohort series of five or more cases that I have found so far in the literature, which are therefore representative of different levels of expertise in homeopathy. We find that out of 25,216 cases there were 866 deaths, a mortality rate of 3.4%, or one-seventh the rate under PAA.[15],[16],[17],[18],[19],[20]

Homeopathic TreatmentCasesDeathsMortality (percent)
Infantry Hospital, St. Petersburg, 182915   71    0    0
Rosenberg Collection, 184315  390  14  3.6
Dr. Bosch15  100    3  3.0
Mercy Hospital, Vienna, 1835-1842, 1849-185415  954  47  1.1
Mercy Hospital, Vienna, 1843-184815    88    1  1.1
Nechanitz Hospital, 1846-184815    19    1  5.3
Mercy Hospital, Kremsier, 1846-184815    49    816.3
Turin Military Hospital, 185115    89    0    0
Bruges Dispensary, 186115    19    0    0
Five Points House Industry Hospital, NYC, 1861-188715   222    7  3.2
Military Hospital, Kansas City, 1861-186315   194    3  1.6
Roubaix Hospital, 1863-186415    49    2  4.1
Cavalry Depot Hospital, St. Louis, 186515    25    1  4.0
St. Rochus and Besthesda Hospitals, Budapest, 187015  711  63  8.9
Gyongyos Hospital, Hungary16    20    0    0
Guns Hospital, Hungary16    32    0    0
Leipzig Hospital16    34    2  5.9
Military Hospital, Vienna16    79    0    0
Munich Hospital16      5    0    0
Bond Street Dispensary, 1865-1871, NYC15  815  12  2.5
Poughkeepsie Dispensary, 1865-186715    15    0    0
Dr. Routh’s collection, 185217   738  45  6.1
Gumpendorf Hospital171,415  48  3.4
Leopoldstadt Hospital, Vienna17   149    9  6.0
Linz Hospital17     99    1  1.0
Ste-Marguerite Hospital, Paris17     41    3  7.3
London Homoeopathic Hospital17     63    3  4.8
Professor Henderson, Edinburgh17     11    0    0
Dr. Watkins, London, 189815     14    0    0
Dr. Bodman, Bristol, 1900-191017     50    0    0
Dr. Hood’s collection (50 physicians), 190617 6,605251  3.8
Dr. Del Mas, 191418     30    0     0
Hahnemann Hospital, 1908-192120    190  14  7.4
Survey: Am. Inst. Hom., 19281911,526 323  2.8
Drs. A. and D. Pulford, Ohio, 192915     250     4  1.6
Royal London Hom. Hospital, 1948-195315       55     1  1.8
Total25,216 866  3.4 (average)
Table 2: Mortality of Patients with Pneumonia under Homeopathic Treatment

Treatment Outcomes in Pneumonia Cases during the 1918-1920 Influenza Pandemic

The next table shows a comparison of the results reported in five surveys of homeopathic physicians during the fall and winter of 1918-1919[21] with one of the large statistical reports for the U.S. armed forces, namely the one with the lowest mortality rate (5.8%), which represents the mortality rate from the combined effects of influenza and pneumonia (CIP)[22] under PAA for the entire U.S. armed forces during the fall of 1918.[23]

  TreatmentNumber of PatientsNumber of Recove-riesSurvi-val Rate in %Number of DeathsCase Mortality Rate in %
Homeopathy Fall and winter, 1918-191966,09265,67799.34450.7
PAA Entire U.S. armed forces, fall,  1918688,869649,13894.239,7315.8
Table 3: Comparison Between Homeopathy and PAA in CIP Patients during the 1918-1919 Influenza Pandemic

Comparative Mortality in Pregnant Women

It is widely recognized that during the 1918–1919 influenza pandemic (NIP) the mortality rate was highest in pregnant women. Since that population wasn’t present in the army, it serves as a completely different demographic group for evaluating and comparing the outcomes of the two schools of medicine.

The following table compares the mortality among pregnant women during the NIP found in four allopathic reports with that in the five homeopathic reports,[24] 

TreatmentNumber of pregnant women with CIPNumber of pregnant women recovered from CIPPercentage of pregnant women who developed pneumoniaNumber of deathsMortality rate from CIP
Allopathy1,5611,09351% (717 out of 1,410)46830%  
Homeopathy2,8482,8275.7% (161 out of 2,832)  210.7%  
Table 4: Comparison of Mortality Among Pregnant Women

Outcomes for Pneumonia Patients under Present-Day Conventional Care

In the twenty-first century pneumonia is still a major disease, which has been growing continually worse in the last few decades. Let us now examine the outcome for pneumonia patients under contemporary conventional care (CCC), which benefits from advances in nursing care such as hydration, nutrition, and oxygenation. Those are positive confounding factors not present in the last two sets of statistics (for PAA and homeopathy). On the other hand, the increasing incidence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria is a negative confounding factor that somewhat balances the equation.

Pneumonia is today divided into two main categories, namely community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) and health-care-acquired pneumonia (HCAP), and the statistics for each are as a rule kept separate.

Despite the availability of antibiotics, pneumonia remains today a major cause of morbidity and mortality even in developed countries. In the United States, for example, it is the leading cause of death due to infectious diseases. The 2003 “Pneumonia Fact Sheet” from the American Lung Association reported: “In 1996 (the latest data available), there were an estimated 4.8 million cases of pneumonia resulting in 54.6 million restricted-activity days and 31.5 million bed days.”[25] Every year 1.2 million Americans are hospitalized with pneumonia. In 2005, pneumonia and influenza together represented a cost to the U.S. economy of $40.2 billion.[26] In 2002 CAP cost the European economy $30 billion.[27]

The age-adjusted annual mortality for pneumonia/influenza has been rising steadily over the last few decades in the U.S. In 1979, it was 11.2 per 100,000 persons per year, in 1998, it was 13.2, in 2011, it was 15.7, and pneumonia consistently accounts for the overwhelming majority of deaths between the two (pneumonia vs. influenza).[28],[29]

Worldwide, an estimated 1.2 million children under the age of five die every year from pneumonia—more than from AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis combined.[30] Although mortality from pneumonia in children is low in developed countries, the World Health Organization estimates that in developing countries one in three children dies from an acute respiratory tract infection.[31]

In developed countries, CAP remains a major cause of mortality at 13.7%, while HCAP carries a higher mortality of between 50% and 70%. In Fine et al.’s meta-analysis, mortality was lowest in studies of a mixed population of ambulatory and hospitalized patients (5.1%); intermediate in only hospitalized (13.6%), elderly (17.6%), and bacteremic (19.6%) patients; and highest in nursing home (30.8%) and ICU (36.5%).[32]

When pneumonia develops in patients already hospitalized for other conditions, the mortality rates are higher, ranging from 50% and 70%.[33],[34] Mortality goes up to 35% in cases of pneumonia associated with E. coli and Klebsiella species and to 61% in cases associated with Pseudomonas aeruginosa;itranges between 5% and 9% with viruses other than influenza B and adenovirus. There is also no generally effective treatment in conventional medicine for most types of viral pneumonia, such as severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), whose case fatality averages 14.5%.[35]

In 11,229 patients, or one-third of those surveyed in Fine et al.’s meta-analysis, mortality rose to 12.8% when the associated microbes were unknown.[36],[37]

In 2005, there were more than 60,000 deaths due to pneumonia in persons aged ≥ 15 years in the United States alone. From 1998 to 2005 the hospitalization rate for all infectious diseases increased from 1,525 per 100,000 persons to 1,667. Admission to an intensive care unit was required in 10% to 20% of patients hospitalized with pneumonia. Mortality was highest for CAP patients who were hospitalized; the 30-day mortality rate was as high as 23%. Despite the availability of and widespread adherence to recommended allopathic treatment guidelines, CAP continues to present a significant burden in adults. Furthermore, given the aging population in North America and the ubiquitous increase in microbial resistance to drugs, allopathic clinicians can expect to encounter increasing difficulty in treating a growing number of adult patients with CAP.[38]

Let’s now look at a comparison of the outcomes in mixed populations of ambulatory and hospitalized pneumonia patients for the three different therapeutic intervention groups, namely homeopathy, PAA, and CCC. Since morbidity and mortality today are much higher in HCAP than in CAP, I will limit the mortality comparison of CCC with PAA and homeopathy to only CAP. In the last available meta-analysis on the outcome of CAP, Fine et al. reported that out of 33,148 patients there were 4,541 deaths, for a mortality of 13.7%.[39]

  TreatmentNumber of PatientsNumber of RecoveriesSurvival RateNumber of DeathsMortality Rate (%)
Homeopathy  25,216  24,36096.6    866  3.4
PAA146,237110,53975.835,69824.4
CCC (limited to CAP)  33,148  28,60786.3  4,54113.7
Table 5: Comparative Mortality from Pneumonia under Homeopathy, PAA and CCC

`Interpretation of Results Obtained by the Two Schools of Medicine

The startling difference in the results reported in patients with pneumonia by the two schools of medicine might be explained in three ways if we limit our discussion for the time being to PAA:

  1. Homeopathy did neither harm nor good, and PAA killed people; therefore the outcome was better with homeopathy.

  2. Homeopathy saved lives, and PAA did neither harm nor good; therefore the outcome was even better for homeopathy.

  3. Homeopathy saved lives, and PAA killed people; therefore the outcome for homeopathy was still better.

Whether PAA killed pneumonia patients, if it did, at what rate, and what percentage of patients was saved by homeopathy remain questions for investigation. The best way to answer those questions would probably be to examine the records of expectancy in the treatment of pneumonia patients.

All trials[40] on expectancy and pneumonia that could be found in the literature show an average mortality rate of 13% and suggest that, on average, expectancy saved or PAA killed about 114 out of every 1,000 patients with pneumonia. Homeopathy, on the other hand, saved at the very least an extra 96 lives out of 1,000 patients beyond expectancy; that could explain the 21 percentage-point difference between the mortality with homeopathy and with PAA, which was on average 3.4% and 24.4% respectively.

However, since mortality under CCC in patients with CAP is 13.7%, and since the average mortality rate in Dietl’s only official report and that of the three physicians who tried his expectant approach was 21.1%[41] (see table below) it may be closer to reality to infer that about 33 out of every 1,000 patients with pneumonia were saved by expectancy or killed by PAA. This would therefore imply that homeopathy saves about 177 out of every 1,000 pneumonia patients.

 Expectancy
Researcher and yearNo. of casesNo. of deathsMortality (%)
Dietl (1854)  Official report of the hospital   92  1920.7
Schmidt (1851-1854)  53  1120.8
Bordes (1855)  77  1722.1
Wunderlich (1856)157  33   21
Total379  8021.1 (average)
Table 6: Mortality from Pneumonia under Expectancy

Those statistics above show that:

  1. The odds of surviving CAP are 28 to 1 with homeopathy, were 3 to 1 with PAA, and are today 6 to 1 with CCC.

  2. The relative risk of dying from CAP was 7.1 (95% CI 6.7 to 7.6), or 7 times as great with PAA as with homeopathy (P < 0.0001).

  3. The relative risk of dying from CAP is today 4.03 (95% CI 3.75 to 4.32), or 4 times as great with CCC as with homeopathy (P < 0.0001).

  4. The odds ratio of surviving pneumonia with homeopathy was 9.1 (95% CI 8.48 to 9.73), as compared with PAA (P < 0.0001), and would today be 4.5 (95% CI 4.2 to 4.9), as compared with CCC (P < 0.0001). 

  5. The odds of surviving CIP during the NIP were 148 to 1 with homeopathy versus 16 to 1 with PAA.

  6. The relative risk of dying of CIP during the NIP was 8.3 (95% CI 7.6 to 9.1), or 8 times as great with PAA as with homeopathy (P < 0.0001).

  7. The odds ratio of surviving CIP with homeopathy during the NIP was 9.0 (95% CI 8.2 to 9.9) as compared to PAA (P < 0.0001). 

  8. The odds for pregnant women of developing pneumonia during the NIP were 1 to 17 under homeopathy, and even odds or 1 to 1 under allopathy.

  9. The odds for pregnant women of surviving CIP during the NIP were 135 to 1 under homeopathy versus 2 to 1 under allopathy.

  10. The relative risk for pregnant women of dying from CIP during the NIP was 41 (95% CI 26 to 63), or 41 times as great under allopathy as under homeopathy (P < 0.0001).

  11. The odds ratio for pregnant women of surviving CIP during the NIP was 58 (95% CI 37 to 90) under homeopathy as compared to allopathy (P < 0.0001).

When all the confounding factors examined,[42] including expectancy, are taken into account, the results obtained by genuine homeopathy in the treatment of pneumonia patients demonstrate that:

  1. The treatment effect of homeopathy is positive.

  2. The magnitude of the treatment effect of homeopathy is remarkable.

  3. Homeopathy greatly shortens the duration of the disease and the recovery time without leaving patients weakened by the treatment.[43]

  4. The higher the potencies used, the better the results on all six criteria that were measured, namely, (1) the seat of infiltration, (2) the duration of infiltration (reckoned from when it was first observed to when it began to be resolved), (3) the time at which resolution of the infiltration began, (4) the time at which resolution was complete, (5) the time at which all physical signs disappeared, and (6) the duration of convalescence.

  5. Homeopathy clearly saves lives: 21 lives were saved out of every 100 cases of pneumonia in the PAA era, and 10 lives out of every 100 cases would be saved today.

  6. Homeopathy offers the safest and best outcomes ever demonstrated by any system of medicine for patients with pneumonia.

Rating the Quality of the Evidence and Strength of Recommendations Based on Evidence-based Medicine Criteria

The Canadian Evidence-Based Care Group wrote in 1994, “Occasionally the benefits of an intervention are so clear, and the harms and costs so small, that there is little or no need for rigorous evaluation.”[44]

Even though the evidence examined so far for the effectiveness of homeopathic treatment of patients with CIP is clear, let us now evaluate it from the perspective of evidence-based medicine (EBM). The main purpose of such an evaluation would be to rate the evidence and strength of a recommendation for an intervention with a particular population of patients.

Four questions should be asked in this rating process:

The first question is, “Does homeopathy work as an intervention or not?”

Reliable evidence from rigorously conducted RCTs has conclusively demonstrated that homeopathy works.[45]

Even without the evidence provided by RCTs, all experience and data support the evidence that homeopathy forms a consistent and robust intervention with a scientific basis and sound principles. That experience and data are found in numerous in vitro experiments, an enormous collection of clinical reports and case studies, expert opinions, cohort retrospective studies, and prospective observational and epidemiological studies.

Two recent effectiveness studies considering all available systematic reviews have demonstrated that homeopathy is safe and cost-effective and has consistent and strong therapeutic effects and real-world, long-term effectiveness.[46],[47]

The fact that every aspect of homeopathy, from its development to its final application to patients with all types of conditions, is consistent with the purest methods of the experimental and natural sciences and that the clinical outcomes have been consistently outstanding are sufficient evidence to demonstrate the soundness and effectiveness of homeopathy.

The robust epidemiological and observational evidence clearly establishes cause and effect between the homeopathic treatment and the recovery of health and saving of lives.

The question of causality becomes even more convincing when the fundamental sciences support the plausibility of the high dilutions commonly used in homeopathy. Moreover, extensive in vitro research with cultured cells, microorganisms, enzymes, yeasts, and plants entirely supports the biological plausibility of the law of similars and of highly potentized remedies. Finally, clinical research in animals confirms all the experience that has been reported in humans.

In fact, all evidence and experience indicate that the law of similars is a real and irreducible phenomenon.

Scientists who have studied the question seriously have acknowledged that the record of homeopathy is unique in the history of medicine, for no other intervention presents such a huge amount of high-quality evidence for the prevention of disease and recovery of health in patients with all types of acute and chronic conditions.

The second question of this rating process is, “How effective is homeopathy in the treatment of patients with CIP?”

Often observational studies yield only low-quality evidence, but there are unusual circumstances in which guideline panels will classify such evidence as of moderate or even high quality.[48]

Because the results obtained with genuine homeopathy are consistent, reliable, predictable, and highly favorable in patients with CIP, regardless of the confounding factors examined and regardless of the time, place, or physician, we may be very confident about these results, which indicate a high quality of evidence.[49]

It has been known since at least the mid-1800s that homeopathy saved lives whereas PAA killed patients with CIP, and all experience shows that significantly fewer people die of CIP under homeopathy than under PAA or CCC. Therefore these facts yield an extremely large and consistent estimate of the magnitude of the treatment effect.

Some critics may question the value of the epidemiological and observational evidence presented in this essay. However, Dr. Daniel J. Hoppe et al. of McMaster University have argued, in a paper called “Hierarchy of Evidence: Where Observational Studies Fit In and Why We Need Them,” that when treatment effect in observational studies is very pronounced, when it shows effectiveness adequately, and when no confounding factors could account for such a large effect, the study design is no longer so critical.[50]

Because of the shear mass, homogeneity, and consistency of the results and the large effect obtained by homeopathy, particularly in critical cases, the evidence becomes very strong. Dr. Gordon H. Guyatt et al. write, “When methodologically strong observational studies yield large or very large and consistent estimates of the magnitude of a treatment effect, we may be confident about the results.”[51]

The evidence of the effectiveness of homeopathy in CIP patients is therefore of such high quality and shows such an extremely large treatment effect that further research would be very unlikely to change the confidence in the estimate of the effect of the homeopathic treatment in these patients.[52]

The third question in this rating process is, “On the basis of its effectiveness, what should the strength of a recommendation for homeopathic treatment be in the case of patients with CIP?”

Any question about the best clinical evidence for the effectiveness of homeopathy leads to a rating of the strength of the recommendation attached to it, and that depends on two factors: (1) the tradeoff between the benefits and the risks and burdens; and (2) the quality of the evidence for its treatment effect. In the highest category, the tradeoff is clear and leads to a strong recommendation.[53]

Since there is no harm or risk from genuine homeopathic treatment, the balance of benefits and harm can be classified only as a net benefit; and since most reports cited in this paper show much higher recovery rates and much lower mortality rates with homeopathy than with PAA and CCC, the magnitude of the benefits of homeopathic treatment is certain. Therefore, there should be no hesitation in making the strongest possible recommendation that homeopathic treatment be adopted for patients with CIP.[54]

However another point should be considered here, namely, “Are the net benefits worth the costs?” Since the cost of homeopathy is low from a technical and medicinal point of view, it should receive the highest recommendation of any intervention (1A/strong recommendation with high-quality evidence). Furthermore, each homeopathic intervention is preventive,[55] and the incidence of CIP in patients who had already been treated homeopathically would be less than in the rest of the population. Indeed, by enhancing the healing process in every individual who is being treated with genuine homeopathy, the patient’s general health is optimized, the organism is better able to regulate itself, and a greater immunity to various diseases is thereby obtained. Moreover as soon as homeopathic treatment is begun in CIP patients, any further development to the advanced stages or complications of CIP is usually prevented.

The prevention of adverse outcomes further justifies the highest recommendation for the homeopathic treatment of patients with pneumonia.[56]

Such a strong recommendation for patients with CIP should, as a rule, also apply to patients with other infectious diseases, because homeopathy does not attack microorganisms, such as viruses or bacteria, but instead strengthens the organism’s capacity to defend and regulate itself. For that reason, homeopathy should be offered to patients suffering from inflammatory diseases and, to a lesser degree and with certain exceptions, to patients with a variety of other medical conditions, just as one would recommend a healthful diet and lifestyle.[57]

Moreover, from a purely scientific perspective, what criteria would prevent homeopathy to be adopted universally as a mainstream method of treatment, as reports and trials contained in the voluminous homeopathic literature, which consists of some 30,000 volumes, show a consistent and most favorable balance of risks and benefits, a high quality of care, and a high significance and magnitude of the outcomes in patients with both acute and chronic conditions?

It goes without saying that the best prophylactic and therapeutic methods should be at the service of everyone, and since homeopathy has amply demonstrated that it is the intervention of choice, it should be universally available, not only to any population threatened with infectious and epidemic diseases, but also to the rest of the population.

One of the unique features of homeopathy is that it treats patients and not diseases. Therefore, whenever there is a new infectious or epidemic disease, homeopathy does not have to create new remedies but simply uses from its store of more than 650 established remedies the ones that are most indicated in the newly emerging disease.

The strong recommendation for homeopathy, mentioned above, would have the following implications:

  1. Patients with CIP and other infectious and inflammatory diseases (CIPOIID) who are clearly informed of the basis for such a strong recommendation would want to be treated with homeopathy.

  2. Clinicians should offer genuine homeopathic treatment to patients with CIPOIID.

  3. Policy makers should ensure that homeopathy is adopted as a standard treatment for this population of patients.[58]

When setting priorities, governments and public health officials must also consider factors beyond the strength of a recommendation, which would include the following:

  1. The high prevalence of CIPOIID and its high morbidity and mortality. Worldwide about 13 million people die every year from infectious diseases. More than 2 billion people are infected with the TB bacillus. An estimated 247 million are infected with malaria every year, and in recent years, the number has increased significantly.[59] The Autoimmune Related Diseases Association estimates that 50 million Americans, or about one in six, suffer from an autoimmune disease and that the prevalence is rising.[60]

  2. Considerations of equity for disadvantaged populations: As homeopathy is very inexpensive both for short- and long-term treatment, disadvantaged populations can greatly benefit from it. Homeopaths have a rich tradition of setting up free dispensaries to serve such populations.

  3. Long-term health benefits of homeopathic treatment: People who receive homeopathic treatment throughout their lives experience a major improvement in their health and the overall quality of their lives.[61]

The fourth and final question for rating the evidence is, “Aside from patients with CIP, what would the prognosis be in patients having any of the numerous WPDs if they were to be treated with genuine homeopathy?”

Since homeopathy doesn’t address WPDs directly but rather treats patients experiencing acute or chronic states of dysregulation, it would be easier to identify the patients who would benefit least from homeopathy, such as those suffering from problems with purely mechanical causes (e.g., surgical cases, cases of poisoning where an emetic or an antidote would be indicated, or cases of heavy metal poisoning where the use of a chelating agent would be indicated, etc.). However, even purely surgical cases do better when homeopathic treatment is administered before, during, and after surgery.

Essentially, homeopathy can be used for any person or animal with an acute or chronic condition. After surveying the vast homeopathic literature, we can say with confidence that by directly strengthening the organism’s capacity to defend and regulate itself, homeopathic treatment is curative in patients with physical, emotional, and mental conditions, both acute and chronic, that are curable in nature.

Homeopathy can also be used successfully for palliation in incurable conditions. Even patients with irreversible tissue changes or fixed genetic diseases with 100% penetrance of their genetic expression[62] still benefit from homeopathic treatment.

Appendix: Abbreviations

CAP

community-acquired pneumonia

CCC

contemporary conventional care

CIP

combined influenza and pneumonia

CIPOIID

combined influenza and pneumonia and other infections and inflammatory diseases

HCAP

health-care-acqured pneumonia

NIP

influenza pandemic of 1918

PAA

pre-antibiotic allopathy

WPD

well-defined patho-physiological disease


[1] The present summary is an abbreviation of the extended version of my response to the above question, which can be found at: http://www.homeopathy.ca/debates_2013-03-22.shtml

[2] Gordon H. Guyatt, et al. Rating quality of evidence and strength of recommendations: GRADE: an emerging consensus on rating quality of evidence and strength of recommendations. British Medical Journal 2008; 336 (7650): 924-926.

[3] William Osler. The Principles and Practice of Medicine. 8th ed. (New York and London: D. Appleton and Company, 1912), 96.

[4] There is one exception to this separation of  pneumonia cases from the ones that occurred during the 1918-1920 influenza pandemic, and that is the case cohort reported by G. Harlan Wells covering the period 1906 to 1921 at the Hahnemann Hospital in Philadelphia, which did include an unspecified number of cases of pneumonia with influenza. Rather than enhance the success achieved by homeopathy, it diminishes it, for, as has been mentioned,  many cases admitted during the pandemic were in a moribund state.

[5] Willis A. Dewey. Editorials. Pneumonia and its treatment. Medical Century 1912; 19: 250-253.

[6] Henri de Bonneval. Considérations sur l’homoeopathie. (Bordeaux: Imprimerie Adrien Bousin, 1881), 19-22.

[7] Krüger-Hansen. Ueber das Heilverfahren bei Pneumonien. Medicinischer Argos 1842; 4: 341-361.

[8] J. Greenwood, R. H. Candy. The fatality of fractures of the lower extremity and of lobar pneumonia. A study of hospital mortality rates, 1751-1901. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society 1911; 74: 363-405.

[9] William Osler. The mortality of pneumonia. University Medical Magazine 1888; 1: 77-82.

[10] Samuel Henry Dickson. Essay on pneumonia. In Studies in Pathology and Therapeutics. New York: William Hood & Co., 1867.

[11] O. Sturges, S. Coupland. The Natural History and Relations of Pneumonia. 2nd ed. London: Smith, Elder & Co., 1890.

[12] William Osler. The Principles and Practice of Medicine. 8th ed. New York and London: D. Appleton and Company, 1912.

[13] Russell L Cecil, Horace S. Baldwin, Nils P. Larsen. Lobar pneumonia: A clinical and bacteriological study of two thousands typed cases. Archives of Internal Medicine 1927; 40: 253-280.

[14] The statistics of the London Hospital exclude cases  of broncho-pneumonia,  which tends to have a higher mortality rate, particularly in young children. Osler said, “Primary acute broncho-pneumonia, like lobar form, attacks children in good health, usually under two years. … The death rate in children under five has been variously estimated at from 30 to 50 per cent.” (William Osler. The Principles and Practice of Medicine. (New York: D. Appleton and Company), 1912, 102, 106.)

[15] André Saine. The weight of evidence: The extraordinary success of homeopathy in times of epidemics. Unpublished manuscript. see http://www.homeopathy.ca/publications_det02.shtml

[16] Henri de Bonneval. Considérations sur l’homœopathie. (Bordeaux: Imprimerie Adrien Bousin, 1881), 19-22.

[17] Willis A. Dewey. Editorials. Pneumonia and its treatment. Medical Century 1912; 19: 250-253.

[18] R. del Mas. Thirty cases of pneumonia. Homoeopathician 1914; 4: 53-54.

[19] E. Rodney Fiske. A survey of the statistics of the homeopathic treatment of lobar pneumonia. Journal of the American Institute of Homeopathy 1928; 21: 886-993

[20] G. Harlan Wells. A study of the comparative value of the homeopathic treatment and other methods of treatment in lobar pneumonia. Journal of the American Institute of Homeopathy 1922-1923; 15: 541-550.

[21] These five surveys were presented in Part II of the extended version of this response, which can found at: http://www.homeopathy.ca/debates_2013-03-22.shtml

[22] Today, the USCDC  combines mortality from influenza and from pneumonia since the great majority of deaths from influenza are related to pneumonia.

[23] Statistical reports of the case mortality rate from CIP for the U.S. armed forces during the fall of 1918 were presented in Part II of the extended version of this response and can be read at: http://www.homeopathy.ca/debates_2013-03-22.shtml

[24] Ibid.

[25] Pneumonia Fact Sheet. American Lung Association. October 2003.

[26] Centers for Disease Control. MMWR  Prevention and Control of Influenza: Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), 2007; 56 (July): 1-54.

[27] T. Welte, A. Torres, D. Nathwani. Clinical and economic burden of community-acquired pneumonia among adults in Europe. Thorax 2012; 67 (1): 71-79.

[28] Sherry L. Murphy. Deaths: Final data for 1998. National Vital Statistics Reports 2000; 48 (11): 25.

[29] Donna L. Hoyert, Jiaquan Xu. Deaths: preliminary data for 2011. National Vital Statistics Reports 2012; 61 (6): 28.

[30] Pneumonia. WHO April 2013: Fact sheet N°331.

[31] M. Gareene, C. Ronsmans, H. Campbell. The magnitude of mortality from acute respiratory infections in children under 5 years in developing countries. World Health Statistics Quarterly 1992; 45 (2-3): 180-191.

[32] M. J. Fine, et al. Prognosis and outcomes of patients with community-acquired pneumonia. A meta-analysis. JAMA 1996; 275: 134-141.

[33] http://www.nym.org/healthinfo/docs/064/doc64severity.html

[34]http://www.ucdmc.ucdavis.edu/ucdhs/health/az/64pneuomnia/doc64severity.html

[35] WHO. Update 49: SARS case fatality ratio, incubation period. May 7, 2003. Available at: http://www.who.int/csr/sarsarchive/2003_05_07a/en/

[36] M. J. Fine, et al. Prognosis and outcomes of patients with community-acquired pneumonia. A meta-analysis. JAMA 1996; 275: 134-141.

[37] Pneumonia Fact Sheet. American Lung Association. December 2012 (http://www.lung.org/lung-disease/influenza/in-depth-resources/pneumonia-fact-sheet.html)

[38] T. M. File, T. J. Marrie. Burden of community-acquired pneumonia in North American adults. Postgraduate Medicine 2010; 122: 130-41.

[39] M. J. Fine, et al. Prognosis and outcomes of patients with community-acquired pneumonia. A meta-analysis. JAMA 1996; 275: 134-141.

[40] All the trials on expectancy and pneumonia that were found in the literature were presented and discussed in Part IV of the extended version of this response, which can be read at: http://www.homeopathy.ca/debates_2013-03-22.shtml

[41] Jules Le Beuf. Étude critique sur l’expectation. Paris: Adrien Delahaye, 1870, 22.

[42] Discussions on the confounding factors were presented in Part I and Part II of the extended version of this response, which can be read at: http://www.homeopathy.ca/debates_2013-03-22.shtml

[43] The discussion on the time of recovery in patients with pneumonia was presented in Part IV of the extended version of this response, which can be read at: http://www.homeopathy.ca/debates_2013-03-22.shtml

[44] A. D. Oxman, J. W. Feightner (for the Evidence Based Care Resource Group), Evidence-based care. 2. Setting guidelines: how should we manage this problem? Canadian Medical Association Journal 1994; 150: 1417-23.

[45] Descriptions of rigorously conducted RCTs and discussion can be found in Part I of the extended version of this response at: http://www.homeopathy.ca/debates_2013-03-22.shtml

[46] Michael E. Dean. The Trials of Homeopathy: Origins, Structure, and Development. Essen: KVC Verlag, 2004.

[47] Gudrun Bornhöft, Peter F. Matthiessen. Homeopathy in Healthcare—Effectiveness, Appropriateness, Safety, Costs: An HTA Report on Homeopathy As Part of the Swiss Complementary Medicine Evaluation Programme. Springer, 2011.

[48] Holger J. Schunemann, Roman Jaeschke, Deborah J. Cook, William F. Bria, Ali A. El-Solh, Armin Ernst, Bonnie F. Fahy et al. An official ATS statement: grading the quality of evidence and strength of recommendations in ATS guidelines and recommendations. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine 2006; 174 (5): 605-614.

[49] Gordon H. Guyatt, et al. Rating quality of evidence and strength of recommendations: GRADE: an emerging consensus on rating quality of evidence and strength of recommendations. British Medical Journal 2008; 336 (7650): 924-926.

[50] Daniel J. Hoppe, et al. Hierarchy of evidence: where observational studies fit in and why we need them. Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery 2009; 91 (Supplement 3): 2-9.

[51] Gordon H. Guyatt, et al. Rating quality of evidence and strength of recommendations: What is “quality of evidence” and why is it important to clinicians? British Medical Journal 2008; 336 (7651): 995-998.

[52] Gordon H. Guyatt, et al. Rating quality of evidence and strength of recommendations: GRADE: an emerging consensus on rating quality of evidence and strength of recommendations. British Medical Journal 2008; 336 (7650): 924-926.

[53] Ibid.

[54] Ibid.

[55] Discussions on homeoprophylaxis were presented in Part I, Part II and Part IV of the extended version of this response and can be read at: http://www.homeopathy.ca/debates_2013-03-22.shtml

[56] Gordon H. Guyatt, David Gutterman, Michael H. Baumann, Doreen Addrizzo-Harris, Elaine M. Hylek, Barbara Phillips, Gary Raskob, Sandra Zelman Lewis, Holger Schunemann. Grading strength of recommendations and quality of evidence in clinical guidelines: report from an American College of Chest Physicians task force. Chest Journal 2006; 129 (1): 174-181.

[57] Gordon H. Guyatt et al. Rating quality of evidence and strength of recommendations: GRADE: an emerging consensus on rating quality of evidence and strength of recommendations. British Medical Journal 2008; 336 (7650): 924-926.

[58] Gordon H. Guyatt, et al. Rating quality of evidence and strength of recommendations: Going from evidence to recommendations. British Medical Journal 2008; 336 (7652): 1049-1051.

[59] http://www.smartglobalhealth.org/issues/entry/infectious-diseases

[60] http://www.aarda.org/autoimmune-information/autoimmune-statistics/

[61] William H. Holcombe. Why are not all physicians homoeopathists? United States Medical and Surgical Journal 1874; 9: 129-147.

[62] I. Miko. Phenotype variability: penetrance and expressivity. Nature Education 2008; 1 (1): 137.

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Homeopathy homeopathy in epidemics epidemics Andre Saine