Archive for September, 2007

NHS trust stops homeopathy funds

Saturday, September 29th, 2007

The onslaught against homeopathy in some circles continues, with the news that health bosses at West Kent primary care trust (PCT) have recommended that NHS funding for their patients treated at the Tunbridge Wells homeopathic hospital be withdrawn. The hospital, one of five NHS homeopathic hospitals in the UK, currently treats around 1,000 patients a year, at a cost to the PCT of £160,000.

Spending £160 of NHS money per patient per year might sound a lot, but in healthcare spending terms, my view is that it’s likely to be good value, especially given the results patients reported from the treatment at a sister NHS homeopathic hospital. In 2005, the BBC reported that a study at the Bristol Homeopathic Hospital showed that over 70% of patients with chronic diseases reported positive changes after treatment.

More than 6,500 patients (with complaints as diverse as eczema, menopause and arthritis) took part in the six-year study. The biggest improvements were reported in children - in 89% of the cases of under 16s with asthma improvement was reported. Of the group 75% felt ‘better’ or ‘much better’, as did 68% of eczema patients under 16. This study has been criticised by sceptics of homeopathy, who argued that there was no control group, and that the results depended on patients themselves reporting how they felt after treatment.

Bear in mind, too, that (from my experience of private practice) most of the patients reporting improvements in the Bristol study will be people who have already exhausted conventional treatment options, and who have turned to homeopathy because they haven’t found conventional treatments helpful, or because they’ve found the side-effects unacceptable.

As I highlighted in my blog for Brighton’s Argus newspaper, a 2006 report by the Board of Science of the British Medical Association estimated that 250,000 people a year in the UK are admitted to hospital suffering harmful effects after taking medical drugs, at a cost to the NHS of about £466,000,000 (yes, that’s £466million) per year. Contrast this with the £160,000 cost of providing West Kent with homeopathic treatment options, take into account the excellent results reported by homeopathic patients in Bristol, and it’s easy to wonder why it’s homeopathy in the dock rather than medical drugs.

The problem for the West Kent PCT is that homeopathy doesn’t fit the accepted medical paradigm. But, as so many patients clearly feel that homeopathy helps their symptoms, it seems crazy to try to argue that the improvements they report are wrong.

Another blog from Sarah

Friday, September 7th, 2007

As well as posting regular blogs here, I post a weekly blog for Brighton’s Argus newspaper. Why not take a look?

Charity gives green light to green walks

Friday, September 7th, 2007

family_jumping.jpgThe Journal of Holistic Healthcare recently reported that UK mental health charity Mind is calling for ecotherapy to be recognised as a clinically-valid treatment for mental health problems, including anxiety, stress, low self-esteem and depression.

Ecotherapy, something I often prescribe to patients alongside homeopathic remedies, involves getting outdoors and getting as active as you can, but in a green or nature environment. Whether you choose regular walks in a park, kite-flying or gardening, green exercise is proven to have huge benefits for mental/emotional health.

This type of exercise is frequently prescribed in the Dutch and Norwegian orthodox healthcare system, but the UK lags behind in recognising the profound and tangible benefits of ecotherapy.

Mind’s report, Ecotherapy: the green agenda for mental health, reports the findings of the UK’s first ever study looking at how green exercise specifically affects people with mental health problems. A walk in a country park was compared with a walk in an indoor shopping centre, and the results showed that:

  • 71% of participants reported decreased levels of depression after the green walk
  • 22% felt their depression increased after walking through an indoor shopping centre, and only 45% experienced a decrease in depression
  • 71% said they felt less tense after the green walk
  • 50% said their feelings of tension had increased after the shopping centre walk
  • 90% had increased self-esteem after the country walk
  • 44% said their self-esteem decreased after window-shopping in the shopping centre.

William Bloom’s system of core energy management (applied psychoneuroimmunology) recognises the healing value of nature, and this idea certainly isn’t new.

In the days when I was paralysed and stuck upstairs in my bed week after week, a kindly friend visited me, bringing window boxes, soil and plants, and she sat on my bedroom floor, with old newspapers spread out beneath her, planting the window boxes up for me, so that I’d have something beautiful and green to gaze on in during my bleakest days. I’ve never forgotten her kindness and have no doubt that her efforts helped me to pull through.

It’s therefore great to see incontrovertible proof that walks in the countryside, or even contact with greenery and nature, can support healing, and it’s a timely reminder to those of us in urban environments to seek out green spaces to enjoy. So the next time you feel mental distress, by all means call your homeopath for a remedy but remember to get out into nature, too!

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