I agree allopaths have a desire to suppress symptoms - but I disagree about your diagnosis assumptions.
Symptoms are not a diagnosis. A diagnosis is a disease name with a known mechanism that does very specific body damage. IT may or may not cvause sympotoms. The symptoms may help towards a diagnosis, but are not part of any diagnosis.
A diagnosis is VERY relevant to get.
The problem I see too much is that vets at least, have forgotten how to read lab data and blood tests and consequently no longer are making a proper diagnosis. But a diagnosis IS needed.
Case in point:
Cat is taken to the vet becasue its abdomen is bloated. Vet determines it is full of fluid.
That is useless information as it does not say what fluid or where from. It needs a diagnosis.
It could be about ten different kinds of fluid/causes.
HOW is anyone - allopath or homeopath - supposed to help the cat without kniowing what the fluid is, and where it comes from and why it is there?
Example: Maybe the fluid is chyle. (the white milky looking fluid in the thoracic duct system, that emulsifies the fats in food, taking them from the gut up the thoracic fuct to the bloodstream at soulder level.)
If it is chyle, WHY is it there? Did te uct get broken in a hit-by-car? Is there a leak due to pressure on the duct, if so from what, tumor? or i there a lympho iside the duct blocking it? Or is there a chemical waste spill where the cat lives causing toxic breakage of chyle vessels where they are small and weaker?
(My last case was the last example, toxic waste dump nearby.)
Without that proper diagnosis and SOURCE of the leak, I woudl have had no way to know how to help the cat.
Knowing chyle is leaking also requires that the nutrients lost in the chyle be replaced.
Without knowing the diagnosis, the cat would have died overnight
(The vet in the case, knew there was abdominal fluid and diagnosed FIP as a reflex. FIP fluid is not chyle, it is blood serum. BIG difference. The vet was sloppy. FIP is common, chyle leaks are not. That is no excuse to make assumptions. And nor should we make assumptios when GOOD diagnosis will lead us to proper results.)
EACH of the different kinds of fluid in the abdomen needs proper diagnosis and understanding of cause for any homeopath to have any hope of helping.
It's not like chyle nutrients will help a case of congestive heart failure, or of encysted kidneys putting urine into the abdomen, or of liver failure issue or of blood serum leaked by viral attack of blood vessles, etc.
Diagnosis is totally esential to every case.
"FIRST DO NO WRONG" also requires - first know the diagnosis. You MUST know what needs fixing.
A cat with a sore eye - is it entropion, retinitis, hypopion, glaucoma, conjunctivitis, ....etc
These are VERY different prolems.
If you do not know what you are doing due to lack of diagnosis, then the chances are the cat will lose the eye - and that is just incompetence. A homeopath needs to use ALL the information they can assemble for a case, not wander around in the dark or with blinkers on about the reality of the issues, as a result of misplaced principles to not do anything an allopath does. Allopaths are not the enemy. Their belief in drugs is, but not the rest.
Diagnosis is critically important in homeopathy.... It is essential to know WHAT is not working and why or at least in what way it is not working.
THEN you can start to make sense of rermedy selection and AFTER that, you can narrow down by symptoms, to an individual match.
Diagnosis is MORE important in homeopathy than in allopathy.
For example in my own case, my new dr recently said I shoulf skip a procedure I had requested to diagnose the cause of the pain, as the treatment (he is thinking by allopathy) would be the same either way.
BUT _ The treatment by homeopathy would NOT be the same. SO I need the MORE detailed diagnosis of cause than allopathy needs.
Blood tests are very helpful. If you do not know how to read and interpret them propely then I suggest - LEARN!!!
And I do NOT mean just looking at whether the lab says a test is "high" or "low".
I mean understand the interactions between components and what causes which to go up or down, by how much, under what circumstances, and how it relates to what else that you need to know about among the tested items and know how to ask for tests you need if they are not already included. If the wrong tests are done, you will miss the problem, and paddle up the wrong creek.
It is irresponsible to do that, is it not?
With the internet a powerful research tool, it is also reasonable to look up all the latest research on a suject in PubMed. It helps you understand pathology at the newest ikowledge level. THat also helps you uinderstand what questions to ask about symptoms.
For exmple...cat is hack-coughing.
Options are herpes, calici, bordetella bronchieptica (BB), hairball, plane flu (aka airplane flu after air travel).
Are you going to treat a hairball the same as BB becsude you can not tell them apart? I hope not?
Lookup each in PubMed. BB will tell you it is related to whooping cough but involves the bacteria destroying the alpha lipoic acid needed in the lungs. Hence the lungs are alkali-burned.
No remedy will supply the missing ALA, it needs a supplement. More checking at PubMed wil show cats are super sensitive to ALA and can handle a max dose of 20 mg/day even in illness.
SInce BB kills 100% of cats under 6 months and 50% over six months, it would be wise to ensure you know the diagnosis AND the research.
The life saving information takes a few minutes to get on the internet....from ALLOPATHIC research.
It is there to help you the homeopath, not just to help allopaths.
Even the drug related research in BB is worh knowing. It shows only Azithromycin can get to the BB bacteria, not other antibiotics. A case that comes to you already off the rails, (it can kill overnight suddenly, after three months of coughing - people also get it so this is NOT cat only info) MAY need a single dose to knock down the danger of overgrowth of BB overnight. Remedies work to heal the body - but the bacterial overload may kill first. This is one place an antibiotic dose may be a life saver. A judgement call, but you need to know how to judge and what antibiotic. The vets do NOT keep up with research. A wrong one will only make the cat/person/sheep/etc worse. The research is there - free - and searchable like google.
Allopaths have a LOT to offer. DO not throw the baby out with the bathwater here:-)
Be discriminating in what information you use - and from where.
Do what is best for the client... whatever that takes.
Namaste,
Irene
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Irene de Villiers, B.Sc AASCA MCSSA D.I.Hom/D.Vet.Hom.
P.O. Box 4703 Spokane WA 99220.
www.Furryboots.info
(Info on Feline health, genetics, nutrition & homeopathy)
"Man who say it cannot be done should not interrupt one doing it."