moos from the farm
Our milk comes in glass bottles, delivered by a proper old-fashioned milkman. We’ve moved house three times in the last twelve years and stayed with the same dairy the whole time.
The milk we buy is organic, skimmed (mostly) with a couple of bottles of semi-skimmed for the kids. We also get a bottle of orange juice and a big carton of Yeo Valley yoghurt every Saturday.
I am very cost-conscious about our food budget. We have been having supermarket deliveries since selling our car, and because I quickly realised that spending £1.99 on delivery was nothing compared to what I would spend on impulse buys once I was wheeling a giant trolley around a shop. It is much cheaper to get a weekly delivery.
All our fruit and veg come from the local market. Good quality, very fresh, hardly any packaging. Cheap.
Back to the milk. Why organic? It does cost more. Well, call me old-fashioned, but I like to think that the milk, yoghurt and cheese that I buy comes from cows that are traditionally farmed on small-scale farms and with a minimum of medical (antibiotic) treatment.
I was delighted when I heard that Yeo Valley use homeopathic remedies to treat their cows, as part of their overall preventative health strategy! Wow!
It may come as a surprise that farmers use homeopathy – but they do. I don’t know any farmers personally, but I guess that they are pretty down-to-earth. If homeopathic treatment for their animals is cost-effective, and it works, what’s not to like? And the animals – well, I guess they don’t know any different, but that is simply more evidence against the ‘placebo’ argument.
Which reminds me of the time when I treated our cat with homeopathic remedies. But that is another story…
can homeopathy prevent illness? new evidence from Cuba

Do you know someone who has had flu this winter? Did you have flu recently? It’s no fun. This is why the papers love writing about it, it is something we can all identify with.
In Cuba, there is something worse than flu. The endemic seasonal disease there is something called Leptospirosis. It is spread by contaminated water, and exposure to rodent urine. Similar to flu in some ways, early symptoms are high fever, severe headache and muscle pain, nausea and vomiting. Sometimes there is a rash. Psychological changes are often seen, with patients feeling depressed, confused, aggressive and sometimes psychotic – with schizophrenia and hallucinations, personality changes and violence. It sounds really horrible. Apparently it takes weeks to fully recover from a mild attack, but more severe cases can lead to organ failure or even death.
Leptospirosis is highly contagious and appears every year from September to December; it is especially bad during the hurricane season. In both 2007 and 2008 Cuba was hit by severe hurricanes which led to huge numbers of the population being affected.
In 2007 the Cuban Government, through the Finlay Institute which manufactures most vaccines used in Cuba, decided to ‘homeopathically immunise’ the bulk of the population in the Eastern region as it was the area worst affected. Records showed that dramatically fewer cases were seen, although Leptospirosis continued to affect the rest of the country.
As this intervention was found to be successful, it was refined and then repeated in 2008. It might be worth mentioning here that although good records were kept, this was not a ‘drug trial’ – it was simply one element of a cost-effective public health campaign aiming to reduce the impact of a highly contagious local illness that was a massive drain on health services and the economy.
The data shows that once again the strategy was an unqualified success. Building on this experience the Cuban government decided to undertake a massive homeopathic immunisation of the total population against Swine Flu in 2009/10 involving over 9.8 million people. The results of this intervention will be later this year once data has been assembled and analysed.
However, already it seems that the Cuban initiative in safe, effective, and low-cost infectious disease prevention, makes the Cubans world leaders in this area of immunisation. Hopefully this will be followed with great interest by both practitioners and public health scientists around the world.
If you lived in Cuba, would you want you or your family to take the ‘homeopathic immunisation’ against Leptospirosis? I know I would.
Read more at:
summer means insect bites
Most summers, since I can remember, I have been troubled with insect bites. As a child, my family used to travel across Europe with a touring caravan. Camping in southern Europe involved mosquitoes. Big time.
Sleeping in the same space as the rest of my family, it was me the mosquitoes sought out for their nightly feasts. Being told I had sweet blood was little compensation for the itchy swellings erupting all over my limbs. Eventually my GP prescribed an anti-histamine cream that seemed like a small miracle.
Some years later I was bitten on the leg by something that must have had teeth because it left a hole! Maybe a horse fly? They have serrated jaws to help them penetrate horse skin. Nice. Whatever it was, they also left behind some nasty bacteria because it became inflamed and tracked down the veins in my leg. This was one of the times I ended up with antibiotics. Sorted. Thank goodness.
The following year, it happened again. This time I was into my homeopathy training and rang the homeopathic helpline and spoke to David Needleman. I was told that Hypericum was good for a horse fly bite. When I started taking it, the bite literally began to discharge a steady trickle of fluid. Lovely. I walked around with a tissue on my arm for the rest of the day. It soon began to heal. I was delighted.
This year I have been bitten by something different. I think they are called flea beetles. They live in grass at my allotment and jump up and bite my legs when I am gardening. I’m really not sure why. Bad enough to be bitten, as they draw blood, but even worse, I seem to be allergic to them as huge patches of both legs started to swell up within a few hours. (I thought about taking a photo to upload, but vanity won over in the end!)
The remedy that has helped me? Apis 200c. Made from bee venom. Not a nice idea, especially if you are vegetarian, but a very useful remedy indeed. It is indicated for skin that is red, hot, swollen and better for cold applications. It is not the most appropriate remedy for every bite, but is excellent where there is an allergic component to it.
My bites have healed, mostly, just small scabs left behind. I’m just glad to have these remedies to hand. But I think I may need to look at insect repellent next time I go gardening.
remedies for india
My beloved husband is off to India tomorrow, so I have made up a special remedy kit, as per the recommendations of his homeopath. Hopefully he won’t need it.
I remember another homeopath giving me some remedies when I travelled to India back in 1997. Unfortunately they got mixed up with my lavender oil and were completely unusable. When I succumbed to traveller’s diarrhoea I ended up seeing a Tibetan doctor (physician to the Dalai Lama, I found out later) who diagnosed and treated me with little herbal pellets wrapped up in scraps of silk and tied with colourful thread. I got better.
Anyway, today I have put together a collection of remedies for diarrhoea, insect bites and the effects of jet lag. I regularly hand out packets of jet lag and insomnia remedies when my patients, colleagues and friends head off into the sunset. I haven’t done long-haul for years, so I rely on feedback from others with regards to their effectiveness. I am told that they help.
I have prepared two remedies for Malaria prophylaxis. This is a very controversial subject, as Malaria prevention is something to be taken seriously. On this trip, the risk of Malaria is only slight, as it is not the rainy season. We also have a long list of things to reduce the likelihood of being bitten, though I am sure that there is nothing an Indian mosquito would like to dine on better than a nice juicy Englishman.
There has been some research that confirms the effectiveness of homeopathy in preventing Malaria. One study conducted over 18 months (2003-2005) in Kenya involved 33 volunteers (and their families) taking homeopathic Malaria Nosode 30c on a weekly basis. Although this was only a small-scale study, the statistics are impressive.
During the 18 months preceding the trial, 21/33 had developed symptoms of malaria, from 1-3 times, 7/33 had no incidence of malaria, 3/33 had never suffered malaria in their lifetime and 2/33 had no information on their status.
Throughout the eighteen-month trial, only one person thought that he had contracted malaria (though this was not verified by a blood test and the worker recovered very quickly). None of the participants experienced any side-effects.
A comprehensive overview of herbal and homeopathic prevention and treatment of Malaria is given in ‘Silent and Deadly: the Prophylaxis and Treatment of Malaria’ by Theresa Partington in the Journal of the Alliance of Registered Homeopaths, Spring 2006.
Food for thought.
why we don’t do flu jabs
We just received a letter inviting our youngest child for vaccination against swine flu. Neither of our children have been immunised, and we’re not starting now. The standard NHS approach to childhood immunisation is not based around parents making an informed choice about which, if any, vaccines to choose. If one does not follow the prescribed route, one is questioned closely at best, and patronised or bullied at worst. Therefore, it is pretty much all or nothing.
In my homeopathic practice I am often consulted by parents concerned about vaccines. Some wish to vaccinate, but want remedies to help reduce any possible adverse effects. Some are looking for alternatives to vaccination. Others bring their child to see me because they suspect that their child has reacted badly to a vaccine and they are looking for something that may help.
In my private life, I don’t usually talk (or write) about this topic, unless someone directly asks me for my opinion. Most people don’t ask.
Last year someone did ask. Tower Hamlets NHS Trust are carrying out some research to find out why some parents choose not to vaccinate their children. Someone who knows me suggested that I might like to take part. The researcher interviewed me for two hours. There was a lot to talk about. She said that I was clearly someone who had thought about the issue very widely. I hoped this was a compliment. When she asked whether I had any message that I would like her to convey to the Trust, I asked her to say that in my view, the decision not to vaccinate is not taken lightly by parents, and for GPs and Health Visitors to show greater respect for parental choice.
I am not entirely against immunisation. However, in my opinion the current childhood vaccination schedule is simply ‘too much too young’. There are too many diseases in the multiple vaccines. Babies are vaccinated from a very young age, before their own immune system is fully developed. Contra-indications and side-effects are not taken seriously by many healthcare practitioners, and anxious parents are simply told not to worry and that the vaccines are safe. Ultimately, we do not yet know the long-term effects of the current immunisation programme. I also feel uneasy knowing that the development, testing and marketing of vaccines is carried out by profit-making multinational companies.
In the news this week: The Council of Europe have recently alleged that the pharmaceutical companies pressurised WHO to declare Swine Flu a pandemic, in order to seek more profits. The New Statesman reports that the council is likely to probe pharmaceutical companies, based on some evidence. http://www.newstatesman.com/healthcare-and-pharmaceuticals/2010/01/swine-flu-council-europe
I am eager to hear how this pans out.
homeopathy in the pub
Out with another homeopath friend in my favourite local pub ‘The Camel’ the other evening, we found ourselves chatting to some people at the next table. It all started with face cream, I have no idea why, but eventually there came the question, ‘So what do you do for a living?’ My friend and I looked at each other and replied, ‘We’re homeopaths.’
I expected any kind of response except the one that followed – ‘That’s Hahnemann, isn’t it?’ one of them asked.
The guy went on to explain that his dad had been treated by a homeopath called George Foster in Walthamstow. I had heard of him, he was legendary in the local area. He retired in 2006, aged 88, having treated over 26,000 people. (Apparently he still works one day a week in Leigh-on-Sea.)
Astonishingly, the guy in the pub also knew the name of the remedy that had helped his dad’s arthritis. It was Rhus Tox 6c. His line of work was window cleaning, and he missed several days work a month during the winter, until he saw George Foster. Nothing had helped to relieve his complaint except the Rhus Tox.
I was not surprised that the remedy was Rhus Tox, but I was amazed to hear this story in the pub on a Friday evening.




