NZ Skeptics Invite Homeopaths to Join Campaign
NZ Skeptics Invite Homeopaths to Join Campaign
The
New Zealand Skeptics are inviting homeopaths to join their
call
for pharmacies to stop selling homeopathic products,
as both groups
are opposed to the practice, albeit for
different reasons.
The New Zealand Council of Homeopaths
and others in the trade have
stated that their customers
require lengthy personalised sessions to
"match the
energy of the potency of the remedy with the
person".
According to homeopath Mary Glaisyer, this
involves matching symptoms
with the huge range of
materials on which homeopaths base their ultra-
diluted
preparations. For example, causticum, more mundanely known
as
potassium hydroxide, is said to manifest its
homeopathic action in
"paralytic affections" and "seems
to choose preferable [sic] dark-
complexioned and
rigid-fibered persons".
Pharmacists who sell homeopathic
products in the same way they sell
deodorants and
perfumed soaps are clearly not meeting basic
homeopathic
practice. When a number of pharmacies in
Christchurch
were checked by purchasers of these
products, no pharmacy staff asked
about symptoms; one
simply asked "do you want vitamins with that?".
The New
Zealand Skeptics have been calling for pharmacies to
stop
selling homeopathic products as they contend there
are consumer
rights issues involving informed consent and
misleading labelling.
"Homeopathy involves diluting a
material until there isn´t anything
left of it at all -
the NZ Council of Homeopaths have admitted that.
But we
know 94% of homeopathic customers aren´t aware of this.
They
think their expensive bottle of drops actually
contains the
ingredients listed on the label- not water
which once upon a time had
some of that in it," says
Skeptics Chair Vicki Hyde. "Stocking it
next to genuine
medical products gives homeopathic products
credibility
which they don´t deserve."
Many people equate homeopathic
products with herbal products, hence
the belief that the
products contain real substance. In addition,
the
products are commonly used for conditions which get
better with time
regardless of treatment, as well as
exploiting the well-known placebo
effect.
Hyde was
disturbed to hear one pharmacist say that he didn´t care
if
the industry was exploiting the placebo effect to
claim results, he
stocked the products because people
would buy them.
"We don´t think it´s a good idea for
health practitioners to mislead
people. They should tell
them that they are selling water for $10 a
teaspoon. And
we think the New Zealand Council of Homeopaths
should
take an ethical stand by calling on their product
manufacturers to
stop supplying pharmacies."
Community
pharmacists in Canada have recently been banned by
their
professional regulators from selling non-licensed
herbal medicines
and homeopathic remedies on the grounds
of public safety. The
National Association of Pharmacy
Regulatory Authorities has stated
that "pharmacists are
obliged to hold the health and safety of the
public or
patient as their first and foremost consideration"
and
cites the need to ensure safety, efficacy and quality
in products
offered by pharmacists.
The call for the NZ
Skeptics and homeopaths to join forces is not the
first
time such action has been considered. In 2002, when an
Auckland
pharmacy starting selling products labelled
homeopathic
"meningococcal vaccine" and homeopathic
"hepatitis B vaccine", Hyde
and then-president of the NZ
Homeopathic Society, the late Bruce
Barwell, discussed a
joint release condemning this highly dangerous
move. Hyde
was concerned that relying on water as a vaccine
would
lead to unnecessary deaths - she already had notes
from a Coroner´s
Court where a baby being treated with
homeopathic ear drops died of
meningitis.
"It´s bad
enough when the product labelling misleads people
into
thinking they are buying something more than water -
it´s far worse
when they misuse a word like vaccine in
such a life-threatening
area."
The homeopaths were
concerned then, as now, that their 200-year-old
practices
were being misrepresented by non-homeopaths keen to
benefit
from the multi-million-dollar industry.
"If the
New Zealand Council of Homeopaths joins the New
Zealand
Skeptics in encouraging pharmacists to be ethical
enough to stop
stocking these products, then we both will
have done something
towards improving the health of New
Zealanders."
Hyde has already had people contact her
asking for a list of ethical
pharmacists that they can
support with their business. She says the
NZ Skeptics are
happy to hear from any pharmacy willing to take a
stand
on this issue, and will start to create a database
for
concerned members of the public.
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
NZ Skeptics Homeopathy Campaign:
http://skeptics.org.nz/SK:HOMEOPATHY
NZ
Skeptics Homeopathy flyer:
http://skeptics.org.nz/download/flyhomeop.pdf
1023:
Homeopathy, there´s nothing in it (UK-based campaign)
http://www.1023.org.uk/
ENDS