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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!pirates!emory!athena.cs.uga.edu!mcovingt
- From: mcovingt@athena.cs.uga.edu (Michael A. Covington)
- Newsgroups: sci.med
- Subject: Re: Mefloquine and Homeopathy?
- Summary: No, not quite
- Keywords: Adverse rxns to drug =? symptoms of disease
- Message-ID: <1992Jul24.160848.6603@athena.cs.uga.edu>
- Date: 24 Jul 92 16:08:48 GMT
- References: <Jul.24.10.20.50.1992.8512@yoko.rutgers.edu>
- Distribution: na
- Organization: University of Georgia, Athens
- Lines: 32
-
- In article <Jul.24.10.20.50.1992.8512@yoko.rutgers.edu> dcohen@yoko.rutgers.edu (Dawn Myfanwy Cohen) writes:
-
- >I just saw the pharmacist's insert for mefloquine. Among other
- >disclaimers and warnings, it said that adverse reactions to the
- >drug may not be distinguishable from symptoms of malaria which
- >it is intended to treat.
- >
- >Sounds like it fits in with homeopathic philosophy, to me.
-
- No, it's not. It would be homeopathic if it were _chosen_ as a malaria
- treatment because of the similarity of drug effects to malaria symptoms.
- Presumably, it wasn't; it was chosen because of its ability to kill the
- organism that causes malaria.
-
- Homeopathy and allopathy are _obsolete_, mid-19th-century heuristics for
- choosing drugs. Homeopathy says choose something whose effects are similar
- to the patient's symptoms; allopathy says choose something whose effects
- are opposite to the patient's symptoms. Both of these drug-choosing
- strategies date from a time when very little was known about physiology
- and infecting organisms had not yet been discovered.
-
- Most modern medical practice is remotely descended from allopathy.
- Occasionally you will find things in modern medical practice that
- resemble homeopathy (vaccination might be an example). But that doesn't
- mean they were chosen because of homeopathic theory (or early allopathic
- theory). They were chosen on the basis of much later scientific
- developments.
- --
- ==========================================================================
- Michael A. Covington, Ph.D. | mcovingt@uga.cc.uga.edu | ham radio N4TMI
- Artificial Intelligence Programs | U of Georgia | Athens, GA 30602 U.S.A.
- ==========================================================================
-