APPENDIX 6
Special visit to the Glasgow Homeopathic
Hospital by two members of the Sub-Committee on 24 August 2000
Members present: | Lord Perry of Walton
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| Lord Walton of Detchant |
The Homeopathic Hospital is in the grounds of the Gartnavel General
Hospital in the west of Glasgow. The building, which is extremely
attractive, is owned by the NHS but the capital costs needed to
erect the building were all obtained from private sources. There
is an in-patient unit of 14 beds, with extensive out-patient facilities,
and access to all of the more sophisticated radiological and other
investigative activities of the General Hospital nearby. Some
400 patients are admitted to the unit annually. All out-patients
are seen by reference from general practitioners or medical consultants
in Glasgow. One great advantage is that the doctors are not, as
a rule, required to see more than one, or at the most two, new
patients in a single out-patient session, so that there is ample
time for full and detailed consultation; this enables them to
practise "whole patient" or so-called holistic medicine.
Medical students are regularly attached to the Homeopathic Hospital
on an elective basis.
Homeopathic remedies of all types are widely employed but whenever
appropriate, and particularly in serious disease, conventional
medical treatment is provided. In essence, therefore, the unit
practises integrated medicine.
A detailed discussion took place about the research of the unit
with Dr David Reilly and with the Unit Manager and two of Dr Reilly's
colleagues, one a consultant, like him, in general internal medicine,
and the other an associate specialist. Dr Reilly pointed out that
they have great difficulty in raising funds for research, though
they have obtained some from private sources and some through
NHS mechanisms.
Discussions ranged widely over the role of homeopathic medicine
and the mechanism of action of homeopathic remedies. Dr Reilly
agreed that many biochemists find the concept of homeopathic treatment
puzzling and difficult to accept, but pointed out that in his
opinion the biophysicists had much less difficulty in understanding
the validity of the mechanism by which homeopathic remedies may
act.
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