What are homeopathic medicines?

The following article was written by the National Center for Homeopathy.

Homeopathic medicines are drug products made by homeopathic pharmacies in accordance with the processes described in the Homeopathic Pharmacopoeia of the United States— the official manufacturing manual recognized by the FDA.  The substances may be made from plants such as aconite, dandelion, plantain; from minerals such as iron phosphate, arsenic oxide, sodium chloride; from animals such as the venom of a number of poisonous snakes, or the ink of the cuttlefish; or even from chemical drugs such as penicillin or streptomycin.  These substances are diluted carefully until little of the original remains.

     A plant substance, for example, is mixed in alcohol to obtain a tincture.  One drop of the tincture is mixed in 99 drops of alcohol (to achieve a ratio of 1:100) and the mixture is strongly shaken.  This shaking process is known as succussion.  The final bottle is labeled as “1C.”  One drop of this 1C is then mixed with 100 drops of alcohol and the processis repeated to make a 2C.  By the time the 3C is reached, the dilution is 1 part in 1 million!  Small globules made from sugar are then saturated with the liquid diultion.  These globules constitute the homeopathic medicine.

     Although such infinitesimal quantities are considered by some to be no more than placebos, the clinical experience of homeopathy shows that the infinitesimal dose is effective: it works upon unconscious people and infants, and it even works on animals.

     It is important to remember, however, that a medicine is homeopathic only if it is taken based upon the similar nature of the medicine to the illness.  A medicine labeled as “homeopathic” will work only if it is homeopathic to the symptoms present.

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