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The most excellent
Leonie Joubert (a journalist and acclaimed author) has a good recent
Mail & Guardian column about homeopathy that rather nicely complements
Angela's recent post here on
Intrepid Aardvark. Writes Joubert:
I've taken my share of homeopathic remedies over the years and have given the same assertion that most users do: "I tried it when I had x-y-z and I got better." Well, maybe the placebo effect was strong, or I was going to get better anyway (after all, illnesses either run their course or kill you). Personal anecdote isn't evidence of efficacy.
What's the harm in a bit of placebo effect, dressed up as a legitimate remedy? Britain's Royal Pharmaceutical Society agrees there's place for "harmless faith-based remedies". But when a cancer patient abandons chemo or a kid's eardrum ruptures because the infection didn't get treated with more than sugar pills, that's another matter. And my medical aid payments are subsidising another's sham treatment. That irks.
Also check out
Leonie's blog. Oh, and I just finished reading her book,
Scorched -- it's very good indeed, I heartily recommend it.
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