Nowhere is there to be found more conclusive evidence
of the superior efficacy of
homeopathic treatment than in the diseases of children.
The years of infancy and childhood, marked as they are by great
cell and structural activity,
are distinctly favourable to the influence of potentized drugs.
So great is the difference in the
susceptibility between child and adult life that we hardly need
despair of curing any disease in the
former, while in the latter those whose foundations lie deeply rooted
in the miasms are very
intractable and often irremovable.
It must above all be remembered that a cure implies the establishment
of a perfectly
harmonious inter action of all physical as well as mental activities
of the organism. Such being
the case, the presence of even a latent miasm or dyscrasia stands
in the way of perfect health.
Hahnemann has taught us to depend principally upon the sensations
as a guide in the
selection of the remedy and yet how scant is their number in infantile
diseases while in those of
childhood they are often picturesquely expressive.
After all the matter harks back to, and is dependent upon, the
powers of observation and it
should not be necessary to point out that the most acute observer
is as a rule the most efficient
healer of the sick. It is so because he sees things written large
in the countenance and actions
which to others are trivial or meaningless. To this class belongs
the observation that Bali
carbonicum exhibits puffiness above the upper eyelid while Phosphorus
shows the same thing
below the lower lid. Bryonia, Cadmiun sulfat and Veratrum viride
lead all remedies when the
patient objects to being raised up. The exudations of Graphites
are sticky, while those of
Mezereum ooze from beneath thick, leathery crusts. I might enumerate
many such distinctive
symptoms, but that does not alter the fact that in the affections
of infants the objective is
uppermost while in those of adults the subjective generally predominates.
Such being the case; how very close should be the scrutiny of
the patient and how great the
knowledge of materia medica. In order to obtain the latter a highly
retentive memory is not
absolutely necessary, in fact I hold it rather a detriment, but
you should have the keys to our
symptomatology ready at hand for without them you are severely handicapped.
It must not be forgotten that every disease picture is composite
in its nature and that in no
way can it be found out beforehand whether its salient features
will lie within the affected sphere,
in the modalities, in the mental state or in any other particular
part thereof; therefore access to the
generalities as well as the minutiae of our symptomatology is a
prime necessity. The former gives
the general ground colour from which the determining features emerge
and is just as necessary as
the characteristics.
This basic colour is mostly composed of the symptoms which are
more or less common to all
of the provers, but the peculiarities appear in highly sensitive
persons and in the few extraordinary
manifestations of the others. That the two should harmonise is self-evident.
As a matter of fact,
most prescriptions are pretty accurately fitted to parts of the
picture only, and while this may
sometimes be unavoidable, it is a dangerous practice often leading
to the lopping off of symptoms
and a general distortion of the image. When the remedy is homeopathic
to the whole case a gentle
and permanent cure follows, or if the disease springs from one of
the deeply rooted miasms, a
terrific aggravation often ensues and the greatest care and courage
on the part of the patient as
well as the physician is absolutely necessary to carry it to a successful
termination. The true
healer must know how and when to wait.
It is very necessary to know that the similar remedy calls forth
the reactive power of the
organism in proportion to its similitude, hence it follows that
we should await the response to a
single dose as long as circumstances will permit. In chronic cases
this may run into weeks or even
several months. Within the past year I have seen a single dose of
Clematis begin to act at the end
of two months, a dose of Phosphorus at ten weeks and one of Kali
bichromicum after eleven days.
When a visible reaction sets in after a long period of time, it
is usually very forcible and
thoroughly eradicates the prevailing miasm. Here the physician,
by staying his hand until the,
sometimes, violent reaction exhausts itself, shows himself a true
master of the healing art. Any
other course is bungling from which the patient will be rescued
with difficulty. The three
fundamental miasms of Hahnemann have been much derided, but it is
a great satisfaction to know
that such things mostly come from inexperienced or undeveloped minds.
As year after year adds
its share of knowledge conclusions change, and the things disdained
in youth gradually become
the frowning realities of mature years. So it has been and comes
to be, that we look upon psora,
syphilis and sycosis as the poisonous fountain heads from which
flow all our ills.
The herpetic or psoric diathesis with its multitudinous affections
springing from suppressed
eruptions offers a field large enough to engage the greatest mind
in unravelling its detail, while
the gonorrhoeal infection lays a train whose lighting up spreads
death and disaster among the
unsuspecting. Lastly comes syphilis, the mother of struma, in whose
fertile soil the bacillus
tuberculosis flourishes so well.
These are some of the self evident facts to be met every day and
they help us to comprehend
the nature of the forces with which we have to deal, but they do
little toward pointing out the
similimum.
In order to select the most suitable remedy it is necessary to
know how to take the case, how
to use a repertory and how to compare remedies; subjects, each large
enough for several papers
but which unfortunately have received scant attention in our halls
of learning. Much time has
been wasted in trying to force a stupendously large materia medica
into the heads of students, but
little time has been given to showing how each may use it for himself.
It would be just as sensible
to teach the English language from the dictionary and ignore every
rule of procedure as to
endeavour to teach materia medica in the disjointed way that has
heretofore been the practice. We
need less cramming of facts and more method.
Reverting to the fact, particularly in infantile and chronic diseases,
the state of the nutrition
very largely governs the outcome, it may be pointed out that under
homeopathic treatment we
possess very significant prognostic data in the mental behaviour
as well as the cravings of the
patient.
A peculiar craving or mental attitude is often the golden key
which opens up the true
inwardness of the disease and at the same time points to the specific
remedy. And what will our
medicines not do under such circumstances? Their power is surely
only limited by the amount of
convertible energy stored in the economy and the use to which it
may be put. If we believe its
turning into feebly and long unused channels to be attended with
danger because of the ravages of
disease, then and then only, dare we palliate and are justified
in doing so in the best way, which
always consists in giving preference to the similar remedy rather
than the similimum. In making
this discrimination there is room for the deepest knowledge of diagnosis
and pathology; subjects
whose value in relation to Homeopathy have been too little understood
and too crudely applied.
The constitutional or antipsoric remedies are our main dependence
and their relation to
metabolic as well as morbific changes can not be successfully combatted.
Within their
pathogeneses lie many pearls of great price whose presence has scarcely
been suspected by the
busy, everyday practitioner; of these he must avail himself if he
hopes to do the best work. A
word about the nosodes. Syphilinum has served me most excellently
in what might be termed a
syphiloid condition; a state of inherited or transmitted syphilis
in which no frank lesion is to be
met, the pathognomic symptoms are all noted for their absence but
odds and ends which crop out
here and there make one suspect that a near relative has infected
the victim by inheritance or
transmission from a poorly cured case. Sometimes these patients
have the typical aggravation
from sunset to sunrise, but much oftener an intimate knowledge of
the family history will reveal
the one who has led a gay life and left the fruits thereof for the
fattening of the doctors
pocketbook. Whenever I know this and the symptoms are with difficulty
fitted to any one remedy
Syphilinum does wonders towards cleaning up the whole matter and
paving the way for the next
drug. The physician can never know too much about his patient, but
he may very easily know too
little.
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