I thought that the silver list would be interested in this.

Subj:    [healthfraud] British Medical Journal: Homoeopathic dilutions may be 
better than placebo
Date:   8/18/00 10:52:20 AM EST
From:   [email protected] (Howard Fienberg)
Reply-to:   [email protected]
To: [email protected]

I would appreciate feedback (constructive, analytic)  from the list, so that
I can write an appropriate article for distribution.

http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/321/7259/471 (may require registration)

Randomised controlled trial of homoeopathy
versus placebo in perennial allergic rhinitis
with overview of four trial series

Objective: To test the hypothesis that homoeopathy is a placebo by examining
its effect in
patients with allergic rhinitis and so contest the evidence from three
previous trials in this series.
Design: Randomised, double blind, placebo controlled, parallel group,
multicentre study.
Setting: Four general practices and a hospital ear, nose, and throat
outpatient department.
Participants: 51 patients with perennial allergic rhinitis.
Intervention: Random assignment to an oral 30c homoeopathic preparation of
principal inhalant allergen or to placebo.
Main outcome measures: Changes from baseline in nasal inspiratory peak flow
and symptom visual analogue scale score
over third and fourth weeks after randomisation.
Results: Fifty patients completed the study. The homoeopathy group had a
significant objective improvement in nasal airflow
compared with the placebo group (mean difference 19.8 l/min, 95% confidence
interval 10.4 to 29.1, P=0.0001). Both groups
reported improvement in symptoms, with patients taking homoeopathy reporting
more improvement in all but one of the centres,
which had more patients with aggravations. On average no significant
difference between the groups was seen on visual
analogue scale scores. Initial aggravations of rhinitis symptoms were more
common with homoeopathy than placebo (7 (30%) v
2 (7%), P=0.04). Addition of these results to those of three previous trials
(n=253) showed a mean symptom reduction on
visual analogue scores of 28% (10.9 mm) for homoeopathy compared with 3%
(1.1 mm) for placebo (95% confidence interval
4.2 to 15.4, P=0.0007).
Conclusion: The objective results reinforce earlier evidence that
homoeopathic dilutions differ from placebo.


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