What alternative health

practitioners might not tell you

 

ebm-first.com

Note that some links will break as pages are moved, websites are abandoned, etc.

If this happens, please try searching for the page in the Wayback Machine at www.archive.org.

Read the original article

"The Lancet today (Wednesday August 31, 2005) calls on the Department of Health and the National Institute of Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) to urgently consider developing guidelines on the use of homeopathic remedies. The request comes after the publication of a research paper in the journal (Lancet 2005; 366:726-32), which showed that homeopathic remedies are no better than a placebo. Richard Horton, Editor of The Lancet, in a letter to Professor Sir Michael Rawlins, Chairman of NICE, writes that without guidance on the use on homeopathic remedies there will continue to be inappropriate practice throughout the NHS. Dr Horton states: "The formulation of guidance based on an appraisal of homeopathy's effects would help to promote the best possible improvement in patient care for the given NHS resources available. NICE guidance would add substantially to the debate about whether and to what extent homeopathy should be available on the NHS. There is now a sufficient evidence base on which to decide such guidance. Moreover, there is strong reason to believe that, in the absence of such guidance, there will continue to be inappropriate practice throughout the NHS . . . Given the controversy and inevitable uncertainty surrounding homeopathic medicine, this subject is a matter of urgent public concern." The Lancet press office T) +44 (0)207 424 4949/4249." [Press Releases available on request via this link]