| Suggestion as to Method of Study and
Use of the Following Analysis.
Take first the twenty-two rubrics and memorize the group of remedies
found under each one, paying attention first
to the generals. After you have become familiar with your list of
remedies then learn the particular
circumstance of the remedy under each rubric. This will give you
ground work of these remedies that will be of use
to you in the daily work of prescribing for your acute cases. After
you have become familiar with the above
symptoms you may broaden your knowledge of each remedy by reference
to the materia medica. It has been my
experience (as well as that of my students) that a few minutes’
study each day will soon give you a comprehensive
knowledge of the remedies that will be in shape to use at the bedside.
Take, for example, a cold patient, one who is shivering with the
cold, and, although covered by blankets, cannot get
warm. We find this patient having burning pains; he may be thirsty
or not, there may be oedema of mucous
membrane with stinging pains. There may be scanty urine or any number
of symptoms referring to a particular
organ or to disease condition, which might lead you to think of
Apis, but the fact that your patient was cold would
rule that remedy out and turn your thoughts to a remedy found under
the first rubric, Cold and aggravation
from cold. Here you would find that one of the twenty-six remedies
given would be the one which would be
homoeopathic to the patient in hand.
Take another example of a patient with throbbing pains. The first
though
of the majority of our men when they hear throbbing pains mentioned
is
Belladonna, but fourteen remedies in our list of forty have
throbbing pains, and Aconite, Calcarea carb., Phosphorus,
Pulsatilla and Sepia all have this characteristic pain in a
higher degree than overworked Belladonna. We will know at least
from
this analysis that one of our fourteen remedies will be indicated,
but
must individualize more closely to find the one remedy. If the patient
who exhibits the throbbing pains is worse after midnight think of
those
remedies that have an aggravation after midnight, and we will at
once
see among these ten we have Bry., Calc. c., Phos., Sulph. and
Sil. Here we have five, any one of which may be the remedy to help
your patient’s throbbing pains. We learn that the
patient is chilly, that the pains are worse from warmth, but that
she desires very cold drinks. This at once lets us
know that Phosphorus alone of the above remedies will be the one
which the patient requires.
Many other examples could be cited as to the use of the preceding
scheme, but to those who will look to this work for assistance it
would
not be necessary, and the student who begins to get a usable knowledge
of our materia medica from this analysis will find that his learning
of
the remedies by this method will enable him to discriminate,
individualize and differentiate his remedy and patient quickly,
accurately and with an ease which will astonish him.
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