|
The homoeopathic
system of medicine has developed at the end of
eighteenth century by a German medical doctor,
Samuel Hahnemann.
During the time of Hahnemann, many brutal ways
were used to treat the patients such as leeching,
cupping, blood letting and many others. These
ways of treatment were so cruel that they could
kill the patient as well.
Hahnemann was disgusted and disappointed with
these methods of treatment that he gave up his
medical profession and started devoting his time
to writing and translation works. However he continued
to deeply interested in medical theory & in
1790, he hit upon the homoeopathic principle that
like could be cured by like. When translating,
'A treatise on the Materia medica' by the Edinburg
physician, William Cullen, he read that the dry
Cinchona was effective in the treatment of malaria
because it was bitter & astringent & had
a toning effect on the stomach. Hahnemann was
not satisfied by this statement for, if it were
true, then all bitter, astringent substances should
likewise be effective in the treatment of malaria,
& they were not.
Therefore Hahnemann decided to test the bark on
himself, meeting his expectations, the symptoms
on the fever occurred like could cure like. This
was a part of Hippocrates teaching & sprang
from the notion that symptoms could be an indication
that the body was struggling to overthrow a disease,
so it could be helped if the symptoms were encouraged.
Thus was formulated the principle of 'Similia
similibus curentur' Hahnemann named this new found
therapy 'Homoeo' (similar) 'pathy' (suffering).
Subsequently, Hahnemann tested many other drugs
to study the symptoms that they produced. He bravely
experimented by testing the effects on himself
and found many willing volunteers for the same.
These experiments were known as proving and the
first set of proving was conducted over about
six years. As the mass of information required
by these proving was assimilated, clear patterns
could seen and eventually it was possible to test
the substances as curative on patients with remarkable
success. Although his patients were experiencing
profound cures which solidly verified his theories,
Hahnemann was marked as an outcast because of
his method of single and minimum dosage was threatening
the financial foundation of the powerful apothecaries.
But Hahnemann continued with his experiments despite
the opposition and criticism from the old school
of medicine. He started experimenting with a new
method whereby after each dilution he would the
substance rigorously. This he called 'succession'
thus developing an energetic aspect of homoeopathy.
It is unknown how Hahnemann reasoned this (still
scientifically unexplainable) method of 'potentisation'.
In 1820, at the investigation of apothecaries,
the government granted an injunction against Hahnemann
dispensing his own medicines.
In 1821, Hahnemann took refuge in Cothen where
he acted as a court physician to the duke of Anhalt
Cothen, a former patient. From this on his many
pupils and followers were also subjected to persecution
as the medical orthodoxy closed ranks.
In 1835, he went to live in Paris where he had
an illustrious practice with rich and poor alike
receiving treatment daily in his rooms in the
rue de Milan.
In 1810, Hahnemann published the 1st. of the 6
editions of 'The organism of medicine' which clearly
defined his homoeopathic philosophy. In that year,
after the battle of Leipzig an epidemic of ilypus
had spread amongst the defeated cops of Napoleon.
Hahnemann successfully treated 180 men out of
which only one died. This successful treatment
further spread the reputation of Homoeopathy 7
Hahnemann.
By 1821, Hahnemann had proved 60 remedies and
published his materia medica in six volumes. In
1831 cholera epidemic swept the central Europe
and Hahnemann successfully treated cholera patients.
He also published papers on the homoeopathic treatment
of the disease and instigated the first wide spread
usage of Homoeopathy.
The Father of Homoeopathy
Samuel Christian Friedrich Hahnemann was born
in Meissen, Saxony on 10th. April 1755, the son
of porcelain painter. His early education was
at home where his father taught him never to learn
passively but to question everything.
By the age of 12, he was already teaching Greek
to other pupils, and at 20 he had mastered eight
languages and began to study medicine first at
Leipzig and then at Vienna and Erlangen where
he qualified in 1779.
In 1782, at the age of 27, Hahnemann married Johanna
Henrietta, the daughter of an apothecary. Hahnemann
became medical doctor in 1791 and quickly established
a reputation as a kind and conscientious physician,
who despite his own lack of wealth, often refused
to accept fees for his work. Once in practice,
Hahnemann became disillusioned with the medical
practices of the day. Eventually he ceases to
practice and pursued studies in chemistry and
earned a living from his linguistic skills.
In 1790, he discovered the principle of 'likes
cure likes' and then devoted himself intensively
to testing out homoeopathic remedies and after
6 six years, published an article on this principle
in a leading medical journal. He later published
'treatise on organon of rational medicine and
materia medica'.
He accused the hostility of apothecaries and physicians
and at their instigation, in 1820, Government
granted an injunction against Hahnemann dispensing
his own medicines.
He took refuge in Cothen and acted as the court
physician to the Duke of Anhalt Cothen in 1821,
where he found many pupils and followers. He published
his work on chronic diseases in 1828.
His wife died in 1830 and he married for the second
time to French woman, Marie Melanie d Hervily
and went to live in Paris. There he had an illustrious
practice with rich and poor alike receiving treatment
daily in his rooms in the Rue de Milan. He died
in 1843 at the age of 88.
|