| Text presented by Dr. B Heude to the European Parliament in Strasbourg
on the 5th July 2000 by request of the European Committee
for Homeopathy.
1)
What is the role of veterinary homeopathy?
Its efficacy in companion animal medicine.
There is an increasing demand for veterinary homeopaths. Although
homeopathic medicine is called ‘non-conventional’, its results are
well above the placebo effect. Would there be a regular demand for
homeopathy if its successes did not match our clients’ demands?
Certainly not, if it were only for pure economic reasons.
It is important to recognise that homeopathy is often used as a last
recourse when conventional medicine has nothing further to offer.
In such cases, often the ‘miracle’ expected by our clients can manifest
itself. Homeopathy and conventional medicines are well and
truly complementary.
It is clear that we cannot treat everything. But in many cases of devastating
pathology we can obtain results. This is manifest in both acute
and chronic conditions such as diabetes, hepatitis, renal failure,
viral disease in cats, etc.
In my speciality, with a single dose, in some cases repeated once or
twice over the following months, I can prove a faster result in
a great number of phobias, anxiety and depression troubles in our
pets than through the use of psychotropic medicines, the use of
which I am very familiar with.
Is there a placebo effect in veterinary medicine? The question
has been studied by many veterinary specialists: it has never been
observed in companion animals and even less in farm animals.
Dogs can only develop a ritual in relation to the administration
of daily medicine. With homeopathic medicine, even a ritual
cannot establish itself due to the infrequent administration of
homeopathic medicines.
Proof of efficacy and an offer of hope for humans.
In our times of over-consumption of psychotropic medicines by people,
the example of rapid and efficient cure of companion animals offers
a point of reflection for owners. Often they ask us the address
of a good homeopath for humans. It is later a joy for us to
learn that clients have managed to wean themselves off the anxiolytic
or other medicines they had been taking for years … often without
experiencing their desired results.
In light of this, we homeopathic veterinarians can hope to contribute
to the reduction of the over consumption of many medicines by people,
another reason for us to persist in the practice of our medicine.
Its efficacy in farm animals.
My colleagues, active in farm animal medicine, experience the same
constant results using homeopathy. In this environment there
is even less room for critics to argue that homeopathy is equal
to placebo. More so, the economic factor is even more important
since, at the end of the year, the farmer needs to have made a profit
from his undertaking. Why should he persist in using a medical technique
that offers no efficacy or economic benefit?
Which are the diseases we can treat in the farm? Many viral and
bacterial diseases can be treated efficiently such as respiratory
infections in poultry farms, neonatal diarrhoea in calves, winter
flu syndrome of cattle, infertility, etc. All of these afflictions
cause major losses to the farmer. Conventional treatments
are usually only palliative whereas homeopathy will offer better
results without any toxicity.
In a competitive environment, the use of homeopathy is the preferred
choice of many farmers. Before examining its benefits I would
like to make an evaluation of today’s farming:
Evaluation of intensive farming condition:
The specialised press repeatedly highlights the catastrophes in modern
animal production: dioxin in poultry food, BSE in cattle, antibiotic-resistances,
all sorts of residues in meat, milk and eggs, tuberculosis in cattle,
foot and mouth disease, etc.
The European commission is aware of these problems and makes many efforts
to eradicate them.
Another aspect of industrial farming is the living conditions of the
animals. Some animals live in prisons: laying hens in batteries,
sows attached throughout their lives and use of psychotropic medicines
to reduce cannibalism in groups of young piglets. In other
cases cattle barely survive 3 years of milk production.
What is the nutritional value of the products of such an industry?
What is their effect on our health? What will be the consequence
of the introduction of GMO’s in animal and human food? Should
we not apply the principle of precaution?
The economic pressures on farm production are such that they justify
all sorts of deviations from common sense. Is it possible
to act differently? Of course it is.
The answers are not simple. One should not refute progress but
one should be cautious. Homeopaths are well aware that living creatures
cannot bear all these ‘economic pressures’ without suffering the
consequences.
What can a veterinary homeopath add to this?
*His
competences and his natural vision on keeping animals.
With the economic development of the 60’s, the West omitted the all-important
question of the welfare of farm animals, as if it were possible
to treat them in any way that suited the economy. Many reservations
arise from current assessments of farm animal practice and professionals
are taking a step back.
The incorporation of engine oil and slurry from water purification
into bird feed is characteristic of the drive to productivity.
The feeding of meat powder to cattle to increase milk protein resulted
in the appearance of BSE. Some had forgotten that cows are
herbivores and that antibiotics do not cure all.
The race for productivity and desperate efforts to increase cost savings
have created the appearance of new viruses and prions, not to mention
bacterial problems like salmonella which are dangerous to man.
Homeopathy has a more natural vision of farming than most of our conventional
colleagues. The veterinary homeopath joins the team of those
who are seeking a biological and reasoned way of farming.
The earth and animals will not tolerate malpractice with impunity.
Natural cycles need to be respected, animal production needs to
recognise and respect the elementary needs of the species concerned.
Animals have no rights available but we have to respect their needs
and normal living conditions.
If we forget these vital conditions, they fall ill. Their meat,
milk and eggs will be of poor organoleptic and hygienic quality,
even though these qualities are poorly quantifiable by modern means.
…for the good of the animals.
Europe should make this one of its priorities; to promote good
practice throughout the breeding cycle up to time of slaughter.
Certain plans in the USA are worrying. It is important that
to protect the environment and to protect the animals they are not
copied in Europe. To give one example: there was a project
to create the largest pig breeding unit in the world: ten units
of 10,000 sows on one site necessitating the construction of a rail
track and the deviation of a part of the Colorado canal for the
provision of water. One veterinary surgeon would supervise
the sanitary and zootechnic aspects of the business and 20 persons
per unit would be employed. How can the well- being of animals
be respected in such conditions?
In Europe, the keeping of hens in batteries will become illegal in
2012. This was decided in 1999. Although this was good
news, homeopathic vets would have preferred it was implemented earlier.
In the meantime, hens live in cages measuring 550 cm2
increased from 450cm2 (75 square inches). What
a luxury; every hen has available to it a cage measuring 20 cm by
25 cm (8 ins by 10 ins) awaiting 2012. Veterinary homeopaths
were not consulted of course.
All measures to improve animal welfare bear cost. The cost of
eggs will increase by 15%. The consumers, according to research
by the ministry of agriculture in France, are ready to take on this
cost. I am sure all the consumers in Europe will follow.
In any case, that part of the family budget allocated to food has
reduced continuously over the last decades while the search for
healthy and quality foods has increased.
Whether working in town or in the countryside, the veterinary homeopath
has always recognised the relation between living conditions and
disease. Through refined analysis of the small details and
variations in the patient’s living conditions, the homeopathic vet
chooses the remedy to cure the patient. The curious, bizarre
and unusual symptoms are the ones that guide one towards the right
prescription. Conventional medicine will decide its treatments
based on the common or characteristic symptoms. Two different ways
of looking at disease and two completely different types of medicines
used, another sign of the complementarities of the two types of
medicines.
The homeopathic veterinary surgeon, a privileged observer, should have
a place in the commissions of study of animal well-being.
This observer should not be in competition with the conventional
colleagues but should be the source of a broadening of the comprehension
and respect towards our animals.
... for the protection of the environment and the biodiversity.
Veterinary homeopaths fight to obtain living conditions for animals
that are as close as possible to their nature. This will allow
them to enjoy a better balance of health and suffer less disease.
It is not impossible to imagine a lessening of the intensive farming
practices in Europe where many millions of hectares of land are
kept from being used for farm production when at the same time the
results from over production do not find suitable outlets.
Take an example related to environment protection and biodiversity.
Veterinary pharmacies market huge amounts of worm treatments that
are more and more efficacious. They became so effective that they
also killed off the insects that colonise their defecations, these
being necessary for the recycling of the matter contained in them.
By killing internal parasites, useful insects were also eliminated.
What are the alternatives to create a type of farming that respects
biodiversity? Those veterinarians who respect the environment
propose a rotation of livestock between fields in order to break
the parasite cycle. This reduces the amount of parasites present
and allows animals to develop efficient immunity to prevent their
proliferation. The need for worm treatments then becomes anecdotal.
The consumer and biodiversity benefit from such systems and there
is a reduced cost for farmers.
My colleagues who work in farms choose to use the least possible conventional
medicines and obtain equivalent economic success. Their determination
to reduce the use of substances that remain potentially dangerous
for the consumer and nature is one of their prime motivations.
…. For the health of the consumer.
Food security and medicine residues.
The quality of animal feed is determining the animal’s health and also
that of the consumer. Scandals like dioxin incorporated in poultry
feed have forced the European commission to outlaw the use of water
purification slurry and industrial and urban waste to prepare animal
feed. This was a big step forward towards better practice
in farming.
Other point of contention is the presence of pharmaceutical molecules,
even at very low doses, that remain in animal productions.
Their effects are unknown. The principle of precaution forces
the legislator to continuously increase the list of substances that
are not allowed to be used in farming or has to determine waiting
times between last use in animals and transformation of their products
into food. This is a good thing. But are the waiting
times long enough and are the laws always respected? Why not
promote the use of homeopathic medicine which is free from toxicity
and does not present the problem of residues?
The restriction of the use of certain medicines for the treatments
and prevention of disease in production animals poses problems when
conventional medicine is lacking in alternatives. The use
of Metronidazole to control certain intestinal diseases in poultry
was stopped. This left the farmers without treatment for some
conditions and the drug was imported illegally from other countries.
In these cases, the veterinary homeopath has at his disposal safe and
effective alternative treatments. Sometimes insufficient possibilities
are available to develop the homeopathic alternatives due to the
absence of the large financial help for homeopathic research from
corporate pharmacies such as are made available for the development
of conventional medicines.
The problem of resistance to antibiotics.
The immoderate use of antibiotics in human and animal medicine has
caused serious problems of antibiotic resistances. This has
become a major issue which often touches the most ill patients (MRSA).
There is evidence of transmission of antibiotic resistance from animals
to people. A veterinary thesis has produced many references.(1)
It has become urgent to reduce the use of antibiotics in those cases
that are justified. Dosage, duration of treatment and withdrawal
periods should be respected. This is not always the case when
it comes to the use of drugs on farms.
The veterinary homeopath will rarely use antibiotics. With the
exception of large epidemics, the infectious agent is rarely the
cause of disease. The infectious agent will appear when there
is a gap in the animals natural defences (immunity), usually caused
by outside influences like bad breeding, bad housing, bad feeding
and other practices that do not respect normality in nature.
Many modern farming techniques are such that the use of antibiotics
appears inevitable, both in timely treatments and administration
throughout production cycles. Should we not search for better
options?
The Council of Europe adopted in December 1999 a “future action in
relation to the appearance of resistance to anti-bacterial agents.”
This plan consists of:
-
Rigorous controls of the sale, distribution
and use as of anti-bacterial agents as well as the elimination of
financial incentives and promotion of their use in an inappropriate
way.
-
The establishment and promotion of guidance
of good practice for the use of anti- microbial agents in humans
and animals.
-
The implementation of plans to reduce the
occurrence of infections in people and animals through vaccines,
education and improved hygiene.
The Council wishes to explore the creation of a communal legislation
controlling the surveillance of:
-
the consumption of all anti-microbial agents
(in people, animals and plants).
-
transmission of diseases caused by micro-organisms
resistant to antibiotics.
-
the resistance to anti-bacterial agents
in animals and food substances.
Decisions need to be made regarding the use of anti-bacterials as growth
promoters in animals and plants.
All these decisions that are going to be taken in the future are very
interesting indeed. It is imperative that this happens soon
due to the continuous distribution of antibiotics in all intensive
breeding programs like poultry and salmon that cannot thrive without
them.
Nonetheless, homeopathy has proven its efficacy.
A study into the protection of disease in pigs has shown that weak
doses of antibiotics are inefficient in the prevention of respiratory
disease. At high doses there was no statistical difference
compared to the use of a homeopathic treatment. How is it
then that we can still justify the use of antibiotics in industrial
farms? (2)
I would like to repeat that there exist alternatives proposed by homeopathy
under the form of the promotion of less intensive industries and
in a number of situation treatments that rely less on the use of
antibiotics. Europe can afford it due to its level of development
and the demand from the consumer, not to forget the obligations
we have to warrant the conditions for cures for all.
· Their
help towards the development of organic farming.
In organic herds of milking goats, the results of treating udder problems
with homeopathy are excellent. Without the use of antibiotics
the results are not only faster, with a reduced loss of milk, but
they are also of better quality with less loss of udder tissue and
therefore a reduction in the cull of milking goats for loss of udders.
No chance for the appearance of resistance to antimicrobials, no
residues in the milk and cheese, resulting in an optimal protection
of the consumer.
The interest in organic farming is increasing. In 1999, organic
milk collection in France increased from 54 million litres to 96
million litres. The demand from the consumer is ever increasing.
This demand is even greater in Germany.
These statistics indicate the greater consciousness of the consumer
about the quality of food. There is an increasing market for
prime quality foods, with a perfect safety record and good taste
value. Many surveys show the preoccupation of the public with
local sourcing of food and organic production. The veterinary
homeopath appreciates these tendencies but is he supported by the
European authorities to support the farmers?
They could play a role in advising farmers on the natural needs of
animals and at the same time, through their prescriptions free of
chemical compounds, participate in the production of healthy food
and protection of the consumers.
Sadly there are not enough veterinary homeopaths to answer the increasing
demands from organic farmers. Financial support and other
measures in favour of the use of homeopathy would be very welcome.
2) What can the European Parliament do in favour of veterinary homeopathy?
The thoughts on this subject have arisen from my interest in my profession,
even in the areas outside my speciality and through my contact with
fellow homeopaths in the countryside who are passionate about their
work and dedicated to their vocation.
A working group open to these professionals and to the leaders of homeopathic
schools is required to educate you about our medicine, much
criticised by many and unknown by the greater public.
· Recognising homeopathic medicine for animals as a reality.
Recognise veterinary homeopathy, a natural medicine which is efficacious
and economical.
Homeopathy should find its role in medicine for all animals, whether
farm animals or companion animals. Its efficacy has been proven
and it creates no problems of residues in animal productions.
Its cost is very competitive because homeopathic medicines are cheap.
They are so cheap that homeopathic pharmacies do not make enough
profit to promote homeopathy efficiently.
Homeopathy is perceived differently in different European countries.
In some countries homeopathy barely survives due to continued attacks.
It is saddening to find it being so marginal when it has proven
efficacy and advantages.
A European recognition will favour its expansion, currently blocked
by some poorly informed medical authorities or pressure groups with
economic motivations.
Create evaluation structures.
Proof of efficiency of homeopathy in veterinary medicine is not required
when its efficacy has been proven in human medicine. But it
is important to continue to compare the economic consequences from
homeopathy and conventional medicine. Protocols should be
established by a multi-disciplinary group of homeopaths, statisticians,
farmers and other professionals of animal production. Help
from the European Union is indispensable because, as explained before,
sufficient funds are not available to homeopathic pharmacies to
support such research.
The need for veterinary homeopaths to be present in the European Commissions
for farming.
We have examined all the advantages of homeopathy on the subject of
human health, animal welfare and environment. Nevertheless,
homeopaths are never consulted. Their opinion would be of
value. They are independent and not under the pressure of
any financial groups. They offer a different vision of the
current economic conditions.
Create incentives for the use of homeopathy on farms.
Our medicine is only rarely mentioned in the agricultural press;
homeopaths are partly responsible for this. There is rarely
a mention of homeopathy in European texts. This is regrettable.
Would it not be judicious through financial incentives to promote a
type of medicine of low cost, more natural and less toxic that could
counterbalance European subsidies? Human health has a cost.
All the more reason to act to improve the quality of food, without
mentioning the advantages to the environment and the biodiversity,
at a time when a variety of menaces present themselves? The
GMO’s and the disappearance of rare breeds, carriers of interesting
genetic patrimony, are good examples.
These preoccupations are at the heart of most veterinarians.
Homeopaths are even more sensitive to these issues due to their
specialist training and holistic approach in which the individual
is an entity which needs to live in harmony with its surroundings.
· Harmonise
homeopathy teaching.
The European Parliament understood perfectly the necessity to harmonise
degrees to allow the free movement of homeopaths in the community
through the certification of their qualifications. I would
like to add that we should harmonise and not centralise. This
would damage the dynamism and reduce the fertile initiatives of
the various homeopathy schools.
Respect national sensitivities.
European directives are easily perceived as invasions of national liberties.
For homeopathy, where teaching is dispensed in a number of independent
units, it is certain that the way to harmonisation needs to be guided
by subtlety and dialogue, in the wake of differences between nationalities.
Keep conventional training as a basis for study.
The basis for all should be conventional medicine. It is difficult
to imagine the intervention in farms by people who are not veterinarians.
This is an assurance that is indispensable for the farmer and the
public.
Homeopathic training should intervene only at the end of the conventional
training when all knowledge of diagnosis, prognosis and conventional
treatment are acquired. Thus benefiting from the knowledge
of two medicines, the homeopathic veterinarian can avail himself
of a choice between the two techniques. It is not a matter
of refuting the
use of conventional medicine when it is indicated. This double
competence of the homeopathic veterinary surgeon is a strength to
be used to benefit economic, environmental and human health decisions.
Keep the principle of the specificity of the homeopathic schools.
Some veterinary schools offer an initiation into homeopathy.
This is not sufficient for students to start using homeopathy after
graduation.
This initiation should be followed by an important complementary education
in homeopathy. This education is delivered by a number of
independent schools whose reputation depends on the quality of their
tutoring. The transmission of knowledge in these schools does
not fully resemble the conventional mechanisms of medical training.
Courses are held by practitioners who devote their time and experience
to train veterinarians in a supportive manner. There are many
advantages to this system but there are also inconveniences; there
is a limit to the number of student places and there are not enough
publications produced and or distributed due to lack of time and
finance.
Establish a common platform for homeopathic studies.
There is a need for collaboration between the different partners of
homeopathy teaching in Europe. It is not about harmonisation
but building a common platform and allowing the space for additional
teaching.
The establishment of a minimum curriculum is a necessity for the European
Union.
An effort was first made in 1992, apparently without result, with
the help of the IAVH (International Association for Veterinary Homeopathy).
The IAVH proposed a minimum standard for the specialisation of veterinary
homeopathy. This proposition needs to be re-examined with
the help of teachers from the official veterinary schools, independent
homeopathy schools and homeopathic pharmacies.
The harmonisation of veterinary homeopathy teaching is essential to
guarantee the users a minimum level of competence, whatever the
country of origin of the practitioner.
Recognise the existing schools.
Their level of teaching is often excellent but they are not subjected
to any quality controls. They need to be recognised without being
incorporated into the conventional teaching structures. The
purpose is to maintain the original character of the homeopathic
theory and practice. It has shown its value through transmission
of knowledge by practitioners, recognised for their competence and
merit. We should establish a system of control though cooperation
between conventional teaching and the representatives of homeopathic
groups.
3) Conclusion.
* For veterinary homeopathy to be able to rise from its marginal position
and render the services of which it is capable , it needs to be
recognised as a medical technique by the European authorities.
This recognition needs to lead to the harmonisation of teaching,
to guarantee the quality of its practice and the satisfaction of
the consumers.
* Veterinary homeopathy is also in need of support and promotion at
all levels of the animal trade to allow it to find its deserved
place where it will help in advancement towards good animal welfare,
protection of the environment and consumer health which are important
missions for Europe.
(1) Stéphanie
Delporte, ‘Le problème de l’antibioresistance’ Thesis, Maisons Alfort,
1999
(2) Henning, Albrecht
and Achim, Schutte, Homeopathy versus antibiotics in metaphylaxis
of infectious disease: a clinical study in pig fattening and its
significance to consumers. Alternative Therapies, September
1999, Vol. 5, No. 5.
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