User Tools

Site Tools


en:ahr:dunham-c-administration-of-high-potencies-158-10396

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revision Previous revision
en:ahr:dunham-c-administration-of-high-potencies-158-10396 [2014/02/05 11:35]
62.65.168.3
en:ahr:dunham-c-administration-of-high-potencies-158-10396 [2014/02/05 11:39] (current)
62.65.168.3
Line 61: Line 61:
 {{anchor:​s84}}We can assure our correspondent that it is safe and advantageous to strictly follow the Hahnemannian rule about the repetition of the dose in acute no less than in chronic diseases. {{anchor:​s85}}But let us anticipate a possible confusion in his mind. {{anchor:​s86}}Some writers, Dr. Drysdale we are surprised to see among them, seem to think that Hahnemann, when he said, "wait till the first dose shall have exhausted its action,"​ meant to say "do not repeat the dose until that period shall have elapsed which I have indicated in the Materia Medica, as the duration of action of each drug.{{anchor:​s87}}"​ This period for some drugs is several days, for others several weeks or even months. {{anchor:​s88}}We do not so understand him. {{anchor:​s89}}The duration of action of a remedy on the healthy subject (prover) furnishes no criterion of the duration or its action on the sick. {{anchor:​s90}}Again,​ the duration of its action on one sick person furnishes no criterion of the duration of its action on another sick person. {{anchor:​s91}}Surely the vital processes are much more rapid in acute pneumonia than they are in tuberculosis. {{anchor:​s92}}Is it not probably that the duration of action of a dose of medicine would be shorter in the former than in the latter? {{anchor:​s84}}We can assure our correspondent that it is safe and advantageous to strictly follow the Hahnemannian rule about the repetition of the dose in acute no less than in chronic diseases. {{anchor:​s85}}But let us anticipate a possible confusion in his mind. {{anchor:​s86}}Some writers, Dr. Drysdale we are surprised to see among them, seem to think that Hahnemann, when he said, "wait till the first dose shall have exhausted its action,"​ meant to say "do not repeat the dose until that period shall have elapsed which I have indicated in the Materia Medica, as the duration of action of each drug.{{anchor:​s87}}"​ This period for some drugs is several days, for others several weeks or even months. {{anchor:​s88}}We do not so understand him. {{anchor:​s89}}The duration of action of a remedy on the healthy subject (prover) furnishes no criterion of the duration or its action on the sick. {{anchor:​s90}}Again,​ the duration of its action on one sick person furnishes no criterion of the duration of its action on another sick person. {{anchor:​s91}}Surely the vital processes are much more rapid in acute pneumonia than they are in tuberculosis. {{anchor:​s92}}Is it not probably that the duration of action of a dose of medicine would be shorter in the former than in the latter?
  
-{{anchor:​s93}}We suppose Hahnemann meant as follows: "If amelioration follows a dose of medicine, do not repent ​the dose until the amelioration ceases to progress, <span grade2>​then</​span>,​ if the symptoms be the same as before, though mitigated in severity, repeat the dose. {{anchor:​s94}}If the symptoms be different, study the case anew and make another selection of remedy. {{anchor:​s95}}It is in the sense that we have understood and that we apply Hahnemann'​s rule. {{anchor:​s96}}Not pretending that we do not often, through errors of judgment, infringe it, we are sure that whenever we do so, misfortune follows, and that in proportion to our faithfulness,​ so is our success.+{{anchor:​s93}}We suppose Hahnemann meant as follows: "If amelioration follows a dose of medicine, do not repeat ​the dose until the amelioration ceases to progress, <span grade2>​then</​span>,​ if the symptoms be the same as before, though mitigated in severity, repeat the dose. {{anchor:​s94}}If the symptoms be different, study the case anew and make another selection of remedy. {{anchor:​s95}}It is in the sense that we have understood and that we apply Hahnemann'​s rule. {{anchor:​s96}}Not pretending that we do not often, through errors of judgment, infringe it, we are sure that whenever we do so, misfortune follows, and that in proportion to our faithfulness,​ so is our success.
  
 {{anchor:​s97}}In respect of the repetition of doses, as well as of the form of the prescription,​ we have no difficulty with our patients. {{anchor:​s98}}Patients are like soldiers, they believe in a man who believes in himself. {{anchor:​s99}}We say this in all humility, for, in a matter of science, belief in oneself is faith in the laws one has undertaken to carry out in practice. {{anchor:​s100}}And if the physician shows confidence in his methods, his patients will yield themselves implicitly to his guidance. {{anchor:​s101}}The prejudice in favor of large and many doses is a relic of past ages, when the practitioner was paid, not for his skill and personal services, but for the <span grade2>​medicines</​span>​ he furnished, a barbarous usage which, along with slavery, we received from our British progenitors. {{anchor:​s102}}Unlike them, we have discarded the former but not the latter. {{anchor:​s97}}In respect of the repetition of doses, as well as of the form of the prescription,​ we have no difficulty with our patients. {{anchor:​s98}}Patients are like soldiers, they believe in a man who believes in himself. {{anchor:​s99}}We say this in all humility, for, in a matter of science, belief in oneself is faith in the laws one has undertaken to carry out in practice. {{anchor:​s100}}And if the physician shows confidence in his methods, his patients will yield themselves implicitly to his guidance. {{anchor:​s101}}The prejudice in favor of large and many doses is a relic of past ages, when the practitioner was paid, not for his skill and personal services, but for the <span grade2>​medicines</​span>​ he furnished, a barbarous usage which, along with slavery, we received from our British progenitors. {{anchor:​s102}}Unlike them, we have discarded the former but not the latter.
en/ahr/dunham-c-administration-of-high-potencies-158-10396.txt · Last modified: 2014/02/05 11:39 by 62.65.168.3