Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 60 total)
  • Homeopathy could be Blacklisted
  • iolo
    Free Member

    The NHS is looking for savings.
    It looks like homeopathy is to be one of the cuts.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-34744858

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    It’ll work better with less funding 🙂

    angeldust
    Free Member

    Good

    gwaelod
    Free Member

    About time too. Amazing it was ever made available on NHS

    robgclarkson
    Free Member

    ghostlymachine
    Free Member

    And with no funding it can probably cure the dead.

    5thElefant
    Free Member

    It’ll work better with less funding

    😀

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    And with no funding it can probably cure the dead.

    Ahhhh that could be a problem then -up til now the NHS has been funding homeopathy as a way of trying to neutralise homeopathy’s effects and quash the zombie-lazarus megalomanical ambitions of homeopathic practitioners.

    Now, in the name of austerity the government cuts the funds and ‘inadvertently’ open the gates of hell. It all starts to make sense – the Tory’s problem has always been that its core voters are ageing. Maybe by using government cuts to reanimate corpses they they’re hoping to awaken a hordes of ancient super conservative voters to guarantee future electoral success.

    the-muffin-man
    Full Member

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    Interesting.

    I always thought that the justification for homeopathy on the NHS was that it’s an ethical placebo that ultimately saves them money as it’s a relatively cheap way to get rid of malingerers.

    hugo
    Free Member

    Can’t believe it wasn’t already blacklisted!

    footflaps
    Full Member

    Whoever authorised it’s use in the first place should be behind bars for defrauding the tax payer of millions.

    MrWoppit
    Free Member

    It’ll work better with less funding

    Genius.

    ahwiles
    Free Member

    as Graham says, homeopathy saves the NHS a fortune.

    If we close down the homeopathic ‘hospital’, the patients and their symptoms won’t go away, they’ll just ask for more expensive treatments.

    however, keeping it open extends homeopathy some degree of credibility. and that annoys me.

    shermer75
    Free Member

    Interesting.
    I always thought that the justification for homeopathy on the NHS was that it’s an ethical placebo that ultimately saves them money as it’s a relatively cheap way to get rid of malingerers.

    My thoughts too.

    fasthaggis
    Full Member

    It’ll work better with lessdiluted funding and some sugar

    DrP
    Full Member

    But it’s the ‘ethos’ that surrounds homeopathy.

    To tell someone with non-life threatening symptoms that “i’m giving you a sugar pill that i suspect will make you feel better”, and they feel better, then that ‘feels’ OK.
    But for that ‘idea’ to extend to the treatment of life-threatening conditions, or thinking homeopathy acts as a vaccination or travel medicine..that’s when the danger begins.

    Ban it.

    DrP

    outofbreath
    Free Member

    “I believe that homeo-meds works for some ppl and that it compliments ‘convential’ meds. they both come from organic matter”

    😀

    Northwind
    Full Member

    GrahamS – Member

    I always thought that the justification for homeopathy on the NHS was that it’s an ethical placebo that ultimately saves them money as it’s a relatively cheap way to get rid of malingerers.

    Yeah, this. I really don’t like the idea but apparently the NHS spends £4-6m million on homeopathy a year, a little drop in a big bucket, which obviously makes it more powerful 😉 And apparently that “treats” 30000 patients per year in the hospitals alone, plus man y more through GPs which cost-per-patient is pretty tiny. And mostly for things that often don’t respond well to actual medicine- cancer medication side effects are a commonly cited one, chronic fatigue syndrome, things like this. The fact that it’s total horseshit isn’t necessarily very important, if it makes people feel better.

    OTOH it gives it a level of legitimacy/respectability. The really essential thing is that it not be an alternative to real treatment.

    I always say this; I’m a chronic pain sufferer (it’s not that bad; chronic but not generally severe) but I’m aware that it’s partly habituated/psychosomatic. (there’s been times when painkillers I forgot to take have still made me feel better!) Probably a homeopathic “treatment” for that is no less effective than painkillers, but without the side effects, risk of addiction, etc. But then the ethics are incredibly messy- people need to believe in it for it to work. (but being told by a doctor “this doesn’t work” doesn’t necessarily mean you believe it)

    gobuchul
    Free Member

    [video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HMGIbOGu8q0[/video]

    konabunny
    Free Member

    Wouldn’t it be okay if they just work on the chemical memory of funding?

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    WHat NW says and Dr P
    ]
    Its hard the benign stuff is just glorified placebo for the gulible

    The problem is we do legitimise it and then folk will try it when they are really ill

    Not sure where i sit on this probably fund it whilst explicitly stating the NHS thinks it does not work and we do it only to save money and treat the gullible. IMHO this wont stop them turning up as they are gullible and wont believer the hype form the pharmaceutical industry that controls all research 😉

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    To play devils advocate…. The Integrative Care services the NHS run exist for patients with chronic conditions. They’re not going to get better so whether Homeopathy or any other pish is clinically effective is kind of irrelevant. But where people aren’t going to get better you need to take the best steps you can to help them feel better.

    In terms of placebo, different placebos are more and less effective than each other – big pills have a greater placebo effect than small pills, injections have a greater placebo effect still. Double blinds are more effective than if the doctor knows they are administering a placebo. The placebo effect is the patient’s confidence that tangible steps are being made that help them to endure whatever it is the need to endure

    Pain is a very subjective thing to experience – the pain I endure to get a bike up hill, knowing that I can freewheel down the other side is different to the pain my cousin endures to get everywhere in his wheelchair. But he can change that experience of pain if he directs it towards winning medals on the track.Its only a change of mindset, nothing has been repaired but its now something he’s in control.

    The value the complimentary care sector has added is that it works for the people it works for, and if those people feel better for it then thats no fraud. They’ll never get better.

    There are lots of services within the medical field that are about feeling better rather than just being functionally better. Maxilofacial reconstruction for instance.

    teef
    Free Member

    I once heard a radio interview with some Chinese doctors in which they were asked why there were still Chinese medicine hospitals in Beijing and they said that’s where they sent the hypochondriacs who had nothing wrong with them. It saved the doctors dealing with them and kept the patients happy – homeopathy is our version of Chinese medicine for the worried well.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    A doctor sees a patient who has nothing wrong with them but the patient insists on ‘treatment.’ Does it have to be NHS-funded? Is there a practical difference between “here’s a homeopathic treatment” and “I suggest you go and buy a homeopathic treatment”?

    maccruiskeen
    Full Member

    A doctor sees a patient who has nothing wrong with them but the patient insists on ‘treatment.’

    The patients referred to homeopathic treatment on the NHS don’t have ‘nothing wrong’ with them – they have something wrong with them thats not going to go away in hurry and need to find the best ways they can to endure that.

    martinhutch
    Full Member

    The problem with homeopathy is that it’s so transparently snakeoily, relying on a branch of physics which has yet to be discovered, that it really sticks in the craw to endorse it even as a placebo. The homeopathy industry relies on the fact that the NHS is prepared to spend money on it as evidence of efficacy. It’s the most powerful evidence they have to present to a credulous public. We should neither be spending millions of public money, nor encouraging patients (often of limited means) to spend their own.

    What we need is every surgery to have a ‘placebo room’, where an out of work actor in a white coat says some encouraging platitudes, gives out a packet of sugar pills (cost = 1p) and sends them on their way.

    Stoatsbrother
    Free Member

    There should be no room for NHS funding of treatments which are pure placebo – and effectively a lie in which the patient and therapist collude. Also tons of evidence of the harm when people don’t seek help appropiately because of homeopathy.

    If people want to spend their own money on this – fine – sheep were made to be shorn. 😉

    sweepy
    Free Member

    I don’t understand why placebo medication is unethical, unless it’s homeopathic when it suddenly becomes ethical.
    I’m sure I could provide placebo medication to the NHS or anyone else much cheaper, just give me a room and a tap.

    Northwind
    Full Member

    martinhutch – Member

    The problem with homeopathy is that it’s so transparently snakeoily, relying on a branch of physics which has yet to be discovered, that it really sticks in the craw to endorse it even as a placebo.

    That’s a fair point actually… I suppose all the benefits of homeopathic “treatment” could also be realised with different non-homeopathic nonmedicine. Sugar pills or ineffectual herbs or whatever. So there you’re trading off a bit of helpful credulousness/backstory, vs the benefits of not being seen to endorse woo-merchants.

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    I don’t understand why placebo medication is unethical, unless it’s homeopathic when it suddenly becomes ethical.

    It’s entirely ethical, if it does some good.

    See also ‘pain reliving gel’. There’s no evidence to suggest that Ibuprofen can be absorbed through the skin, all you’re doing is giving the area an expensive massage.

    But the man on the nurofen gel advert looks convincing and it cost you £8, so it must be good.

    Kahurangi
    Full Member

    Aside from the whole nonsense vs. efficiency of Homeopathy woo (which has been more than adequately explained above), surely they are looking for cost savings in the wrong places?

    If you want to save significant amounts of money, just piss off your workforce to the point that noone wants to become a doctor any more and your existing workforce piss off to the colonies.

    Wage bill slashed, job done!

    (sorry for the thread derailment 🙁 )

    Northwind
    Full Member

    sweepy – Member

    I don’t understand why placebo medication is unethical, unless it’s homeopathic when it suddenly becomes ethical.

    TBH I think it’s exactly the opposite here; people object specifically to homeopathy, who’d be comfortable with giving alternative placebos.

    sweepy
    Free Member

    It’s entirely ethical, if it does some good.

    I might be wrong (wouldn’t be the first time) but my understanding is that placebo treatments cant be given as they are unethical, yet we fund homeopathy which has not been proven to have any effect beyond placebo.
    It sounds like placebos are only ethical as long as you lie about them.

    ghostlymachine
    Free Member

    Thats the storyline to Shaun of the dead PtII, it’s got to be.

    iolo
    Free Member

    ...Why Do Placebos Work In Some Kids With Migraine…
    Over the years, we’ve come to learn that many people get better when they are given a placebo, a pill that only contains sugar or some other inactive ingredient. Like studies of medicines in general, most placebo studies have been conducted in adults. Now, researchers have tried to summarize what’s known about responses to placebos in children and adolescents who have migraine. To do this, they analyzed 13 studies in children with migraine that compared their responses to an active drug and a placebo.
    Overall, the researchers found that two hours after getting an active drug or placebo, 46% of children who got placebos reported pain relief and
    21% reported that their pain disappeared. Interestingly, children in North America were more likely to have a better response to placebo compared to children in Europe, The authors call for more research into why placebos seem to offer some benefit to children with migraine, (Eernandes R et al: Journal of Pediatrics, April, 2008, pp. 527-533)
    COMMENT: There’s been a lot of debate about placebos, but recent studies support that there is indeed an effect of placebos in certain conditions— and particularly those that might respond to the power of suggestion. Though no one fully under- stands how suggestion works, brain imaging and other studies hint that our brains can respond to the expectation that something will eliminate a symptom such as pain. In fact, a very recent study measured pain responses to two “drugs”—subjects were told that one cost $2,50 per pill and the other cost 10 cents per pill. Study subjects reported more pain relief with the more expensive drug, even though it turned out that both drugs were identical placebo pills. The explanation for this benefit is that people attach expectations to certain treat- ments, and if they expect a more expensive pill to work better than a cheaper one, it may actually do
    that—at least when it comes to symptoms like pain,
    (Waber R et al: Journal of the American Medical Association, March 5, 2008, pp. 1016-1017).

    Placebos do seem to work though. Yet nobody really understands why.

    Stoatsbrother
    Free Member

    We are now in 2015, not 1955. It is now considered unethical for Drs to lie to patients by ommission or commission. We really try not to use medication or treatments which have not been shown to work. So to fund or use an entire discipline which is fake is not on.

    Placebos working in genuine medical conditions (usually in 20 – 30% of people) as well as having side-effects (the same rate of side-effects in placebo treatment as in Statin treatment in big trials) isn’t news. But the idea that Drs can paternalistically decide which patients they are going to lie to went with Dr Finlay’s casebook…

    The level of evidence of effectiveness required for things bought over the counter, be they medications, supplements from Holland & Barrett, or wrinkle banishing creams from cosmetics companies is laughably low. But I am not asked to prescribe those.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    The patients referred to homeopathic treatment on the NHS don’t have ‘nothing wrong’ with them – they have something wrong with them thats not going to go away in hurry and need to find the best ways they can to endure that.

    in which case, selling fake cures seems remarkably insidious and cruel, no? You’re selling false hope; surely they’d be better off with a pain management clinic, support groups, physio and so on and so forth.

    Hell, isn’t this why we still have religion? I’d rather someone was lied to about what’s going to happen to them after they’d died than lied to about what’s going to happen whilst they’re still alive.

    gray
    Full Member

    Placebos do indeed ‘work’. Even in rats, apparently. I too think it’s absolutely ridiculous for the NHS to spend money on homeopathy, regardless of whether those making the decisions actually believe in the nonsense or instead believe that it’s just a handy way to give placebos without actually lying.

    If we say that it’s OK to prescribe things that are not proven more effective than placebo, then that opens up crazy corollaries. Imagine if a big pharma company was found to have been successfully selling (and profiting from) a ‘drug’ that actually did nothing more than placebo. Imagine the (appropriate) outcry and claims of evil. Them saying “yes, OK, we kind of cheated, but look – people felt better!” would not help or make it OK.

    It would be ideal to have some way to let people feel the potential benefits offered by their own responses to placebo, but it is hard to do that ethically. The only thing I can think of is to say to patients “We can offer you a placebo. It has no active ingredient, but it has been proven to make people feel better, so it might help you.” then, presumably, for a proportion (call them gullible or just human) of the population they would actually feel better. A proportion would, of course, understand enough of the situation (and believe the science) that this would not help them. But for them, homeopathy would not have worked either – the only thing that would is outright lying to them, which is not a viable option.

    hugo
    Free Member

    A doctor sees a patient who has nothing wrong with them but the patient insists on ‘treatment.

    Funnily enough this person does have something wrong with them. It’s illness anxiety disorder!

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