Efficacy of Group Study in Studying Materia medica
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Author : Dr. Krishnendu Maity, BHMS, MD (Home. Repertory)
Article Updated: Nov 30, 2009 |
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OVERVIEW : -
- Group is "A number of similar drugs or remedies taken or considered together related in some definite way".
- Group analysis is a "language of the remedies is a particular group".
- This is a good substitute for clinical homœopathic prescription.
HISTORY : -
- Dr. James Tyler Kent was the first to coin this concept.
- Dr. E. A. Farrington made an attempt to study the remedies by classifying them in various groups in his classical book 'Clinical Materia Medica'.
- This work was further continued by stalwarts like Dr. M. L. Dhawale, Dr. Rajan Shankaran etc.
UTILITIES : -
- One sided diseases pose a problem in selecting the most similimum. Group analysis helps in such cases.
- In cases of mental diseases, where mind & behaviour are mainly affected - group analysis helps to reach correct medicine.
- It helps to know the rationality & practicality of medicines.
- Group study creates awareness in the homœopathic fraternity regarding materia medica & its utility.
OBJECTIVES : -
- To simplify the cumbersome data of materia medica.
- To reach to the constitutional medicine in general.
- To develop the scientific relationships & correlation of radicals & data of materia medica.
- To derive unknown facts of remedy & to apply them in practice.
- To formulate some concepts & verify them through experimentation.
- To incorporate the work by researchers & verify them in clinical practice.
- To derive conceptual data out of the logical thinking & to make a portrait of remedy in absence of drug proving.
- To extra-polate remedy relationship of a particular group of the remedy.
ADVANTAGES : -
- It can be elaborated & lead to a great height in exploring new dimensions in study & understanding materia medica.
- Many drugs' 'CORE' can be studied simultaneously & can save time for individual study.
- It has helped to evolve a new dimension to grasp psycho-somatic concept of disease.
LIMITATIONS : -
- Study of materia medica invariably requires process of generalization. In group study we have to neglect or sacrifice individual attributes.
- It requires analytical skills of higher degree - which is absent in neophytes.
- We should not rely fully on group study as its contents exclude the individual features of the remedy.
CONCLUSION : -
- It is tool or 'wise' instrument of study materia medica.
- It is not the only way of prescribing.
- For good result we must be an expert in this aspect.
- We must be able to differentiate the cases.
- We should know the utilities and limitations of group study.
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