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{{Short description|Term for science-based, modern medicine}}
{{Wiktionary|allopathic}}
]'', by Alexander Beideman (1857)]]
'''Allopathic medicine''' and '''allopathy''' is a system of medical practice which aims to combat disease by the use of remedies which produce effects different from those produced by the special disease treated.<ref name="webster">{{cite web | title = Allopathy | url = http://machaut.uchicago.edu/?action=search&word=allopathy&resource=Webster's&quicksearch=on | publisher=Webster Dictionary | year = 1913 |accessdate=2010-08-30}}</ref> When used properly, it refers to the conventional medical practices in use during one specific era of history. Allopathy is a historical term that is widely used "''as a referent to harsh medical practices of ... era which included bleeding, purging, vomiting and the administration of highly toxic drugs.''"<ref name="jarvis">{{cite web |url=http://www.ncahf.org/articles/a-b/allopathy.html | title = Misuse of the Term "Allopathy" | author = William T. Jarvis, Ph.D; |accessdate=2010-08-30| year = 2000}}</ref> It was practiced in America from the period of the American Revolutionary War till about 1876, which marks the start of preventive medicine. Allopathic medicine is commonly but erroneously referred to as "the broad category of medical practice called Western medicine, biomedicine, ], or modern medicine",<ref name=WHO>{{cite web |url=http://whqlibdoc.who.int/hq/2001/WHO_EDM_TRM_2001.2.pdf |title=Legal Status of Traditional Medicine and Complementary/Alternative Medicine: A Worldwide Review |accessdate=2007-09-12 |year=2001 |format=PDF |work=World Health Organization |publisher=] }}</ref> with varying degrees of acceptance by medical professionals in different locales. However, modern conventional medicine historically developed out of allopathy, also described as regular medicine, the practice of conventional medicine during the 19th century.<ref name="naturalhealthperspective">{{cite web | title = A History of Allopathy | url = http://naturalhealthperspective.com/tutorials/allopathy.html |accessdate=2010-08-30}}</ref>


'''Allopathic medicine''', or '''allopathy''', is an archaic and derogatory label originally used by 19th-century ] to describe ], the precursor of ] ].<ref name=Weatherall-1996>{{Cite journal |last=Weatherall |first=Mark W. |date=1996-08-01 |title=Making Medicine Scientific: Empiricism, Rationality, and Quackery in mid-Victorian Britain |journal=Social History of Medicine |volume=9 |issue=2 |pages=175–194 |doi=10.1093/shm/9.2.175|pmid=11613446 |issn=0951-631X}}</ref><ref name=FREEDICT>{{cite web|url=http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/allopathy |website=The Free Dictionary |publisher=Farlex |title=Definition {{ndash}} allopathy |access-date=25 October 2013}} Citing: ''Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine'' (2008) and ''Mosby's Medical Dictionary'', 8th ed. (2009).</ref> There are regional variations in usage of the term. In the United States, the term is sometimes used to contrast with ], especially in the field of medical education. In India, the term is used to distinguish conventional modern medicine from ], ], ], ] and other alternative and traditional medicine traditions, especially when comparing treatments and drugs.
==Origin ==
Before the advent of science-based approaches, repeated attempts were made to construct systems of therapeutics, many of which produced even worse results than pure empiricism. One of these was allopathy<ref name="royal">{{cite web |title= The innovation, benefits, drawbacks
and control of drugs | url = http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1436599/pdf/jrsocmed00297-0016.pdf | author = Sir Derrick Dunlop, MD, FRCP | publisher = Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine Volume 71 | year = May 1978 |accessdate=2010-08-30}}</ref>, which was popularised by ] (1735-1821) from 1753 onwards.<ref name ="pathak">{{cite book | title = Industrial Psychology & Sociology | author =Mr. B. V. Pathak | url= http://books.google.co.in/books?id=z0M6Gdq0HBUC&pg=SA5-PA29&lpg=SA5-PA29&dq=james+gregory+allopath&source=bl&ots=rubY9rRbH4&sig=ML4NfQHkIrrcw63L9gr4ArlPP80&hl=en&ei=DWd7TJHSN8qrcZzizIcG&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=8&ved=0CDgQ6AEwBw#v=onepage&q&f=false | publisher = Nirali Prakashan | isbn = 8185790426, 9788185790428 | pages = 5 of 268 | location = India | year = 2008}}</ref> The favoured remedies included blood-letting, emetics and purgatives, which were used until the dominant symptoms of the disease were suppressed. Many patients died from such treatment, and it was in reaction against it that ] introduced the practice of ] in the early 19th century. <ref name="pharmabase">{{cite web | title=
What is pharmacology? | url =http://www.pharmabase.ru/eng/articles/what-is-pharmacology.html |year = 2008 |accessdate=2010-08-30}}</ref><ref name="alternativemedicine">{{cite web |title= The bunk that is alternative medicine | url =http://cantmakeadifference.blogspot.com/2008/02/bunk-that-is-alternative-medicine.html |year = 2008 |accessdate=2010-08-30}}</ref> The term was coined by Hahnemann,<ref name="whorton">{{cite book | title = Nature Cures: The History of Alternative Medicine in America | author = James C. Whorton | edition = illustrated | editor = ] | year = 2004 | isbn = 0195171624 | pages = 18, 52 | url = http://books.google.com/?id=RU0DndWVSPoC&pg=PA18&vq=allopathy+allopathic+greek+hahnemann | publisher = Oxford University Press | location = New York }}</ref> who conjoined the term (from ] ''ἄλλος'', ''állos'', other, different + ''πάϑος'', ''páthos'', suffering) as a referent to harsh medical practices of his era which included bleeding, purging, vomiting and the administration of highly toxic drugs.<ref name="jarvis">{{cite web |url=http://www.ncahf.org/articles/a-b/allopathy.html | title = Misuse of the Term "Allopathy" | author = William T. Jarvis, Ph.D; |accessdate=2010-08-30| year = 2000}}</ref> It meant "other than the disease" and it was intended, among other things, to point out how regular doctors used methods that Hahnemann felt had nothing to do with the disharmony produced by disease, merely addressing symptoms, which, in Hahnemann's view, meant that these methods were harmful to the patients.<ref name="whorton" />


The terms were coined in 1810 by the creator of homeopathy, ].<ref name="Whorton2004">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RU0DndWVSPoC&q=allopathy+allopathic+greek+hahnemann&pg=PA18|title=Nature Cures: The History of Alternative Medicine in America|author=Whorton JC|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2004|isbn=978-0-19-517162-4|editor=Oxford University Press US|editor-link=Oxford University Press US|edition=illustrated|location=New York|pages=18, 52}}</ref> Heroic medicine was the conventional European medicine of the time and did not rely on ]. It was based on the belief that disease is caused by an imbalance of the four "]" (blood, phlegm, yellow bile, and black bile) and sought to treat disease symptoms by correcting that imbalance, using "harsh and abusive" methods to induce symptoms seen as opposite to those of diseases<ref name="Gundling1998">{{cite journal|last=Gundling|first=Katherine E.|title=When Did I Become an 'Allopath'?|doi=10.1001/archinte.158.20.2185|journal=]|year=1998|volume=158|number=20|pages=2185–2186|publisher=]|pmid=9818797}}</ref> rather than treating their underlying causes: disease was caused by an excess of one humour and thus would be treated with its "opposite".<ref name="ConsumerHealth9th">{{Cite book|title=Consumer health: a guide to intelligent decisions|last1=Barrett|first1=Stephen|last2=London|first2=William M.|last3=Kroger|first3=Manfred|last4=Hall|first4=Harriet|last5=Baratz|first5=Robert S.|publisher=McGraw-Hill|year=2013|isbn=9780078028489|edition=9th|location=New York|pages=34–35, 134, 137|oclc=758098687}}</ref>
==Significance of a Misnomer==


A study released by the ] (WHO) in 2001 defined ''allopathic medicine'' as "the broad category of medical practice that is sometimes called ], ], ], or modern medicine."<ref name="WHO">{{cite web |author=Xiaorui Zhang |year=2001 |title=Legal Status of Traditional Medicine and Complementary/Alternative Medicine: A Worldwide Review |url=http://whqlibdoc.who.int/hq/2001/WHO_EDM_TRM_2001.2.pdf |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070926083307/http://whqlibdoc.who.int/hq/2001/WHO_EDM_TRM_2001.2.pdf |archive-date=26 September 2007 |access-date=2007-09-12 |publisher=World Health Organization}}</ref> The WHO used the term in a global study in order to differentiate Western medicine from ] and ], noting that in certain areas of the world "the legal standing of practitioners is equivalent to that of allopathic medicine" where practitioners can be separately certified in complementary/alternative medicine and Western medicine.<ref name="WHO" />
Although medicine never accepted the label of allopathy, nonmedical practitioners such as chiropractors, homeopaths, and naturopaths regularly misrepresent physicians as ''allopaths''. This is usually done in order to make differences between their practice guilds appear based upon conflicting philosophies rather than ideology versus science. Opponents of medicine claim that they treat the underlying causes of disease, while MDs treat only the symptoms. Further, they claim that medicine suppresses the symptoms, thus interfering with the body's inherent healing processes. A close examination reveals that this line of reasoning is only clever rhetoric. When they say the are treating the underlying causes, these vitalistic ideologists refer to a metaphysical life force rather than actual causes of disease such as viruses, bacteria, protozoa, genetic defects, radiation, chemical insult, and so forth. In reality, chiropractic manipulative therapy's main value is symptomatic relief from back pain. Homeopathy has always been based upon symptomatic relief. Homeopathic remedies are based upon a process called ''proving'' which identifies prospective remedies by matching the symptoms they produce in high dosages with the symptoms reported by a patient.<ref name="jarvis">{{cite web |url=http://www.ncahf.org/articles/a-b/allopathy.html | title = Misuse of the Term "Allopathy" | author = William T. Jarvis, Ph.D; |accessdate=2010-08-30| year = 2000}}</ref>


The term ''allopathy'' was also used to describe anything that was not homeopathy.<ref name="ConsumerHealth9th" /> ], an American medical researcher and alternative medicine critic, said the meaning implied by the label of allopathy has never been accepted by conventional medicine and is still considered pejorative.<ref name="Atwood2004" /> American health advocate and sceptic ], stated that "although many modern therapies can be construed to conform to an allopathic rationale (e.g., using a laxative to relieve constipation), standard medicine has never paid allegiance to an allopathic principle" and that the label "allopath" was "considered highly derisive by regular medicine."<ref name="Jarvis" /> Most modern science-based medical treatments (], ], and ], for example) do not fit Hahnemann's definition of allopathy, as they seek to ] or to alleviate an illness by eliminating its ].<ref name="Berkenwald1998" /><ref name="Federspil2003" />
== Allopathic Methods of Treatment ==
Allopaths used bleeding, leeching, cupping, blistering, purging, puking, poulticing and rubbing with toxic ointments to treat their patients.<ref name=sheldon>{{cite book | author = Herbert M. Shelton | title = Natural Hygiene: Man's Pristine Way Of Life | url = http://www.soilandhealth.org/02/0201hyglibcat/020125shelton.pristine/020125toc.htm | publisher = Dr. Shelton's Health School, San Antonio | location = Texas | year = 1968 | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref> All of these allopathic treatment methods were thought to be cleansing, purifying, and balancing treatments which sought to re-establish humoral harmony of the four humors.


The terms "allopathic medicine" and "allopathy" are drawn from the ] prefix ''{{lang|grc|ἄλλος}}'' (''állos''), "other," "different" + the suffix ''{{lang|grc|πάθος}}'' (''páthos''), "suffering".
In an account of the Bilious Yellow Fever written in a Philadelphia newspaper in 1798, '''Benjamin Rush (1745-1813)''', the Allopath, commented upon his methods of treatment. Bloodletting was used twice on a child, Isaac Pisso, who was only six weeks old, with success. Children were cured with "gentle pukes, purges of calomel, and blood-letting." In most cases of yellow fever "the pulse flagged after two or three bleedings." But, in the cases of "Dr. Mease it called for the loss of 162 ounces of blood, and in Mr. J. C. Warren for the loss of 200 ounces, by successive bleedings, before it was subdued." In this account, Rush also claimed that "the origin of this fever was from the exhalations of gutters, docks, cellars, common sewers, ponds of stagnating water, and from the foul air," an obvious reference to belief in miasmas, rather than from the correct source of mosquitos.<ref name="rush">{{cite book | author = Benjamin Rush | title = An Account of the Bilious Yellow Fever | location = Philadelphia | year = 1798}}</ref>


===Bleeding=== ==History==
"Bleeding was usually the initial treatment."<ref name="toledo">{{cite book | title= From Quackery to Bacteriology: The Emergence of Modern Medicine in 19th Century America | url = http://www.utoledo.edu/library/canaday/exhibits/quackery/quack-index.html | publisher = University of Toledo Libraries | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref>
There were a few different methods of bleeding a person. Bleeding was said to reduce the patient. It was believed that the use of bleeding released bad blood which contained disease from a person's body. "Physicians used to bleed for congestion of the brain, sore eyes, spinal disease, sore throat or swelled tonsils, asthma, inflammation of the lungs, pulmonary consumption, diseases of the heart, dyspepsia, liver complaint, enlargement of the spleen, inflammation of the bowels, piles, genital diseases, rheumatism, neuralgia, in all cases of fever, such as intermittent fever, remittant fever, typhoid fever, typhus fever, yellow fever, ship fever, black tongue, dysentery, dengue and, in fact, for every particular and special morbid condition which could be found."<ref name=sheldon>{{cite book | author = Herbert M. Shelton | title = Natural Hygiene: Man's Pristine Way Of Life | url = http://www.soilandhealth.org/02/0201hyglibcat/020125shelton.pristine/020125toc.htm | publisher = Dr. Shelton's Health School, San Antonio | location = Texas | year = 1968 | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref>


The practice of medicine in both Europe and North America during the early 19th century is sometimes referred to as ] because of the extreme measures (such as ]) sometimes employed in an effort to treat diseases.<ref name = Trick>{{cite book | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=bZjlC2LELlIC&pg=PA108 | page = 108 | title = Trick Or Treatment: The Undeniable Facts about Alternative Medicine | first1 = Simon | last1 = Singh | author-link1 = Simon Singh | first2 = Edzard | last2 = Ernst | author-link2 = Edzard Ernst | publisher = W. W. Norton & Company | year = 2008 | isbn=978-0-393-06661-6 }}</ref> The term ''allopath'' was used by Hahnemann and other early homeopaths to highlight the difference they perceived between homeopathy and the "conventional" heroic medicine of their time. With the term allopathy (meaning "other than the disease"), Hahnemann intended to point out how physicians with conventional training employed therapeutic approaches that, in his view, merely treated symptoms and failed to address the disharmony produced by underlying disease.{{clarify|date=March 2011}} Homeopaths saw such ]s as "opposites treating opposites" and believed these methods were harmful to patients.<ref name=Whorton2004/>
===Blood-Letting===
A patient's vein was directly cut with a lancet (venesection).


Practitioners of alternative medicine have used the term "allopathic medicine" to refer to the practice of conventional medicine in both Europe and the United States since the 19th century. In that century, the term allopath was used most often as a derogatory name for the practitioners of heroic medicine,<ref name="DOI 10.1177/0002716202583001002">{{cite journal|doi=10.1177/000271620258300102 |journal=The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science |date=September 2002 |volume=583 |issue=1 |pages=12–28 |title=Why Not Call Modern Medicine "Alternative"? |last=Bates|first=DG |pmid=11058987 |s2cid=145294892 }}</ref><ref name="isbn0-7637-3888-3">{{cite book |author=Cuellar NG|title=Conversations in complementary and alternative medicine: insights and perspectives from leading practitioners |publisher=Jones and Bartlett |location=Boston |year=2006 |pages=4 |isbn=978-0-7637-3888-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Nmkm7zu7NDMC}}</ref> a precursor to modern medicine that itself did not rely on ].
===Leeching===
Leeching is a method of bleeding with leeches. "A leech was placed in a thin tube while the patient's skin was washed and shaved. To encourage the leech to bite, a drop of blood or milk was placed on the area of a vein. Then the tube with the leech in it was inverted over the spot, and the leech sucked blood from the vein. When it was felt that the leech had taken enough blood, salt was sprinkled on the leech, causing the leech to stop sucking and to let go of the skin."<ref name=sheldon>{{cite book | author = Herbert M. Shelton | title = Natural Hygiene: Man's Pristine Way Of Life | url = http://www.soilandhealth.org/02/0201hyglibcat/020125shelton.pristine/020125toc.htm | publisher = Dr. Shelton's Health School, San Antonio | location = Texas | year = 1968 | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref>


James Whorton discusses this historical pejorative usage: {{blockquote|One form of verbal warfare used in retaliation by irregulars was the word "allopathy". ..."Allopathy" and "allopathic" were liberally employed as pejoratives by all irregular physicians of the nineteenth century, and the terms were considered highly offensive by those at whom they were directed. The generally uncomplaining acceptance of "allopathic medicine" by today's physicians is an indication of both a lack of awareness of the term's historical use and the recent thawing of relations between irregulars and allopaths.<ref name=Whorton2003>{{cite web |author=Whorton JC |url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/altmed/clash/history.html |title=Counterculture healing: A brief history of alternative medicine in America |date=4 Nov 2003 |publisher=WGBH Educational Foundation |access-date=25 Dec 2007}}</ref>}}
===Cupping===
A treatment in which evacuated glass cups are applied to cut skin in order to draw blood. Cupping was usually used in combination with blood-letting. After one or two aggressive bleedings, a patient's blood pressure would drop to the point where blood would no longer spurt out, so heated cups were placed over cuts to help draw more blood. Special cups were heated and placed over the cuts, creating a vacuum, allowing the blood to freely flow from the vein.


The controversy surrounding the term can be traced to its original usage during a heated 19th-century debate between practitioners of homeopathy and those they derisively referred to as "allopaths."<ref name=Whorton2002>{{cite book |last=Whorton |first=JC |year=2002 |title=Nature Cures: The History of Alternative Medicine in America |url=https://archive.org/details/naturecureshisto00whor |url-access=registration |isbn=978-0-19-517162-4 |publisher=]}}</ref>
===Blistering===
It was believed that the pain of blistering caused the patient to focus on a new pain, taking their minds away from the more serious pain from which they suffered. The practice of blistering was performed by deliberately giving the patient a second degree burn and then draining the resulting sore. "Blistering was a common method of treating the following diseases: congestion of the brain, inflammation of the brain, sore eyes, sore throat, inflammation of the stomach and lungs, of the liver, of the spleen, spinal irritation, bilious, typhus and typhoid fevers, and a great many other diseases too numerous to mention."<ref name=sheldon>{{cite book | author = Herbert M. Shelton | title = Natural Hygiene: Man's Pristine Way Of Life | url = http://www.soilandhealth.org/02/0201hyglibcat/020125shelton.pristine/020125toc.htm | publisher = Dr. Shelton's Health School, San Antonio | location = Texas | year = 1968 | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref> The practiced of blistering, according to James C. Jackson, M.D. had significantly declined by 1862.<ref name = "trall">{{cite book | title = The True Healing Art: Or, Hygienic vs. Drug Medication, | author = R. T. Trall (speech given in 1862) | publisher = Fowler & Wells, Publishers | location = New York | year = Reprinted 1880}}</ref>


Hahnemann used "allopathy" to refer to what he saw as a system of medicine that combats disease by using remedies that produce effects in a healthy subject that are different (hence the Greek root ''allo-'' "different") from the effects produced by the disease to be treated. The distinction comes from the use in homeopathy of substances that are meant to cause similar effects as the symptoms of a disease to treat patients (''homeo'' - meaning "similar").
===Plastering===
Plasters were paste-like mixtures, made from a variety of ingredients, including even substances such as cow manure. They were applied to the chest or back of a person suffering from a chest cold, or an internal pain--even pneumonia. These were often blistering plasters.


As used by homeopaths, the term ''allopathy'' has always referred to the principle of treating disease by administering substances that produce other symptoms (when given to a healthy human) than the symptoms produced by a disease. For example, part of an allopathic treatment for ] may include the use of a drug which reduces the fever, while also including a drug (such as an ]) that attacks the cause of the fever (such as a bacterial infection). A homeopathic treatment for fever, by contrast, is one that uses a diluted dosage of a substance that in an undiluted form would induce fever in a healthy person. These preparations are typically diluted so heavily that they no longer contain any actual molecules of the original substance. Hahnemann used this term to distinguish medicine as practiced in his time from his use of infinitesimally small (or nonexistent) doses of substances to treat the spiritual causes of illness.
===Poulticing===
Poultices were made from bread and milk, and sometimes other ingredients were added such as potatoes, onions, herbs, and linseed oil. Poultices were applied to cuts, wounds, bites, and boils.


The ''Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine'' states that " gave an all-embracing name to regular practice, calling it 'allopathy'. This term, however imprecise, was employed by his followers and other unorthodox movements to identify the prevailing methods as constituting nothing more than a competing 'school' of medicine, however dominant in terms of number of practitioner proponents and patients".<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bynum |first1=W. F. |title=Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine |year=2013 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=9781136110368 |page=608 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gyidO-ZLdiYC&pg=PA608}}</ref>
===Puking===
Puking consisted of dosing a patient with emetics in order to produce vomiting. The practice of puking was believed to relieve tension on arteries and to expel poisons from the body.


Contrary to the present usage, Hahnemann reserved the term "allopathic medicine" to the practice of treating diseases by means of drugs inducing symptoms unrelated (i.e., neither similar nor opposite) to those of the disease. He called the practice of treating diseases by means of drugs producing symptoms opposite to those of the patient "enantiopathic" (from the ] ''{{lang|grc|ἐνάντιος}}'' (''enántios''), meaning "opposite") or "antipathic medicine".<ref>e.g., see , paragraphs 54-56</ref>
===Sweating===
Sweating is a treatment where patients were made to sweat out the poisons that caused their disease.


===Fumigations=== ==Current usage==
The practice of fumigating was one of drugging the breathing apparatus with everything that could be smoked, solvented, pulverized and gasified. "Among their multitudinous remedies which they recommended to be introduced into the delicate structure of the lungs, through the medium of their multiform poisons, were such wholesome substances as opium, cubebs, deadly nightshade, iodine, calomel, corrosive sublimate, sugar of lead, belladonna, digitalis, hellebore, aconite, dog-bane, tobacco, arsenic, antimony, niter, lobelia, cinebar, etc."<ref name=sheldon>{{cite book | author = Herbert M. Shelton | title = Natural Hygiene: Man's Pristine Way Of Life | url = http://www.soilandhealth.org/02/0201hyglibcat/020125shelton.pristine/020125toc.htm | publisher = Dr. Shelton's Health School, San Antonio | location = Texas | year = 1968 | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref>


In the United States, the term is used in the modern era to differentiate between two types of US medical schools (both of which teach aspects of science-based medicine and neither of which teach homeopathy): Allopathic (granting the MD degree) and Osteopathic (granting the DO degree).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hpplc.indiana.edu/medicine/med-res-twokinds.shtml|title=Two Kinds of Physicians - Health Professions and Prelaw Center - Indiana University - University Division|website=www.hpplc.indiana.edu|access-date=27 February 2019|archive-date=27 May 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190527153218/http://www.hpplc.indiana.edu/medicine/med-res-twokinds.shtml|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.usnews.com/education/blogs/medical-school-admissions-doctor/2012/04/23/how-to-decide-between-an-md-and-a-do|title=How to Decide Between an M.D. and a D.O.|last1=Prep|first1=Veritas|publisher=U.S. News & World Report|access-date=27 February 2019}}</ref>
===Purging===
Purging is a treatment that induces evacuation of the patient's bowels or intestines with powerful laxatives. Purging, which was done to cleanse the body of toxins or irritants. "The most commonly used purgative was calomel, a form of mercuric chloride"<ref name="toledo">{{cite book | title= From Quackery to Bacteriology: The Emergence of Modern Medicine in 19th Century America | url = http://www.utoledo.edu/library/canaday/exhibits/quackery/quack-index.html | publisher = University of Toledo Libraries | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref>


In India the term is used principally to distinguish "Western medicine" from ], especially when comparing treatments and drugs.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Chandra |first1=Shailaja |last2=Patwardhan |first2=Kishor |date=2018 |title=Allopathic, AYUSH and informal medical practitioners in rural India: a prescription for change |journal=Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine |volume=9 |issue=2 |pages=143–150 |doi=10.1016/j.jaim.2018.05.001 |issn=0975-9476 |pmc=6033720 |pmid=29858128}}</ref>
===Ointments===
Ointments containing mercury were topically used against venereal diseases. Sulfur was quited commonly used to treat itching.


A study released by the ] (WHO) in 2001 defined "allopathic medicine" as "the broad category of medical practice that is sometimes called Western medicine, ], ], or modern medicine."<ref name="WHO" /> The WHO used the term in a global study in order to differentiate Western medicine from ], and from complementary/], noting that in certain areas of the world “the legal standing of practitioners is equivalent to that of allopathic medicine” where practitioners are certified in both complementary/alternative medicine and Western medicine.<ref name="WHO" />
===Dehydration===
"During most of the last century, it was standard medical practice to withhold water from the acutely ill and thousands of patients literally died of dehydration. ... It was contrary to the teachings of the allopathic school of medicine to give water, inside or out, to a fever patient. Often the dying, when being granted their 'last wish,' were given the previously denied water and recovered. The sick body called for water, which was needed, and would have received it with gratitude and benefited from it, but the physicians denied it."<ref name=sheldon>{{cite book | author = Herbert M. Shelton | title = Natural Hygiene: Man's Pristine Way Of Life | url = http://www.soilandhealth.org/02/0201hyglibcat/020125shelton.pristine/020125toc.htm | publisher = Dr. Shelton's Health School, San Antonio | location = Texas | year = 1968 | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref>


As of 2004, use of the term remained common among homeopaths and had spread to other ] practices. ], an American medical researcher and alternative medicine critic, said the meaning implied by the label of allopathy has never been accepted by conventional medicine and is still considered pejorative by some.<ref name="Atwood2004">{{cite journal |author=Atwood |first=Kimball C. |year=2004 |title=Naturopathy, pseudoscience, and medicine: myths and fallacies vs truth |journal=Medscape General Medicine |volume=6 |issue=1 |pages=33 |pmc=1140750 |pmid=15208545}}</ref> American health educator and skeptic ], stated in 2008 that "although many modern therapies can be construed to conform to an allopathic rationale (e.g., using a laxative to relieve constipation), standard medicine has never paid allegiance to an allopathic principle" and that the label "allopath" was "considered highly derisive by regular medicine".<ref name="Jarvis">{{cite web |url=http://www.ncahf.org/articles/a-b/allopathy.html |title=Misuse of the term "Allopathy" |access-date=2013-02-07 |last=Jarvis |first=William T. |year=1996 |publisher=]}}</ref>
== Allopathic Practices of Hygiene ==
Herbert M. Shelton, in his Natural Hygiene: Man's Pristine Way Of Life, quotes Oliver Wendell Holmes, MD (1809-1894) and a well known therapeutic nihilist, as follows. ''"The hospitals were not only poorly lighted, but they were poorly ventilated. Trall marveled that graduates of the best medical schools were entirely ignorant of the necessity for pure air in the hospitals and apartments of the sick, but said: 'When it is understood that health is not taught in medical schools, the wonder will cease."''<ref name=sheldon>{{cite book | author = Herbert M. Shelton | title = Natural Hygiene: Man's Pristine Way Of Life | url = http://www.soilandhealth.org/02/0201hyglibcat/020125shelton.pristine/020125toc.htm | publisher = Dr. Shelton's Health School, San Antonio | location = Texas | year = 1968 | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref> Holmes was also famous for having promoted the healing power of nature in a widely known speech voicing therapeutic nihilism when he said "that if the whole materia medica, as now used, could be sunk to the bottom of the sea, it would be so much the better for mankind and all the worse for the fishes."<ref name="warner">{{citebook | author = John H Warner | title = The Therapeutic Perspective: Medical Practice, Knowledge and Identity in America, 1828-1885 | publisher = Cambridge: Harvard Univ. Press | year = 1986 | pages 28, 33}}</ref>
"It was not until the late 1880s that American surgeon Dr. William Mayo began practicing antiseptic surgery in his clinics in Rochester, Minnesota, and won converts among colleagues."<ref name="toledo">{{cite book | title= From Quackery to Bacteriology: The Emergence of Modern Medicine in 19th Century America | url = http://www.utoledo.edu/library/canaday/exhibits/quackery/quack-index.html | publisher = University of Toledo Libraries | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref>


Most modern science-based medical treatments (antibiotics, vaccines, and chemotherapeutics, for example) do not fit Samuel Hahnemann's definition of allopathy, as they seek to prevent illness, or remove the cause of an illness by acting on the cause of disease.<ref name=Berkenwald1998>{{cite journal|title=In the name of medicine|journal=]|year=1998|first=AD|last=Berkenwald|volume=128|pages=246–50|issue=3|doi=10.7326/0003-4819-128-3-199802010-00023 |s2cid=53089206}}</ref><ref name=Federspil2003>{{cite journal|author=Federspil G|author2=Presotto F|author3=Vettor R|year=2003|title=A critical overview of homeopathy|journal=Annals of Internal Medicine|volume=139|issue=8|pages=W-75|url=http://annals.highwire.org/cgi/content/full/139/8/W-75|doi=10.7326/0003-4819-139-8-200310210-00026-w3|pmid=14568881|access-date=2010-12-30|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20031230014516/http://annals.highwire.org/cgi/content/full/139/8/W-75|archive-date=2003-12-30|url-status=dead}}</ref>
How the military implemented the basics of hygiene and sanitation during the various wars of this time period has been well documented.


==See also==
During the Revolutionary War (1775-1783) ten men died of disease to every one whose life was taken by the enemy. During the Mexican War (1846-1848) a ratio of 7 deaths from diseases of the camp (chiefly dysentery) to every death caused by battle injury took place.<ref name="bynes">{{cite book | author = Bynes-Jones, S. | title = The Evolution of Preventive Medicine in the United States Army, 1607-1939 | publisher = U.S. Government Printing Office | location = Washington, D.C. | year = 1968}}</ref>


* ]
In 1854, Florence Nightingale (1820-1910) organized and directed a unit of field nurses during the Crimean War in Europe. Nightingale tried during the Crimean War to implement hygineic reform in the military hospitals. Nightingale was, also, hired as a consultant by the American Civil War Sanitary Commission.
* ]
* ]


==References==
Two Civil War soldiers died of disease for every one killed in battle, or some 560,000 soldiers died from disease during the Civil War.<ref name="toledo">{{cite book | title= From Quackery to Bacteriology: The Emergence of Modern Medicine in 19th Century America | url = http://www.utoledo.edu/library/canaday/exhibits/quackery/quack-index.html | publisher = University of Toledo Libraries | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref> About half of the deaths from disease during the Civil War were caused by intestinal disorders, mainly typhoid fever, diarrhea, and dysentery. Malaria struck approximately one quarter of all servicemen. The remainder died from pneumonia and tuberculosis. Outbreaks of these diseases were caused by overcrowded and unsanitary conditions in the field. Risks from surgery were great. Doctors in the field hospitals had no notion of antiseptic surgery, resulting in extremely high death rates from post-operative infection.<ref name="warhistory">{{citebook | ed = United States Army, Surgeon-General's Office | title = The Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion | publisher = Government Printing Office | year = 1870-1888 | place = Washington}}</ref>


{{Reflist|30em}}
== Famous People Killed by Allopathy ==
R. T. Trall, M.D. in a famous speech delivered in 1862 mentions many people who according to him were killed by Heroic Medicine, including three US presidents: Washington, Harrison, Taylor and Prince Albert in Great Britain.<ref name = "trall">{{cite book | title = The True Healing Art: Or, Hygienic vs. Drug Medication, | author = R. T. Trall (speech given in 1862) | url = http://www.whale.to/v/trall.htm | publisher = Fowler & Wells, Publishers | location = New York | year = Reprinted 1880 | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref>


==External links==
'''George Washington (1732-1799)''', the first president of the United States died on December 14, 1799. Washington was prematurely bleed and poisoned to death. His death has been very well documented right down to the attending physicians responsible for his death. Washington caught cold while riding on his estate and developed pneumonia. As Washington's condition declined, Doctor James Craik called on fellow physicians Elisha Dick and Gustavus Brown for help. Washington's doctors bled, blistered, and purged him. He did not respond to these treatments and died. Today, doctors believe George Washington was dying from an acute streptococchal infection of the larynx, which caused a painful swelling of the interior of the larynx resulting in suffocation. A tracheostomy would probably have saved his life, and indeed one was suggested by the youngest doctor in attendance, Elisha Dick, but the technique was new and considered unsafe by the elder physicians.<ref>Morens DM. Death of a president. N Engl J Med. 1999 Dec 9;341(24):1845-9. No abstract available. PMID: 10588974</ref>,<ref name="presidents">{{cite web | title = Early Presidents and Their Illnesses | url = http://www.healthmedialab.com/html/president/early.html | publisher = Health Media Lab | year = 2004 | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref>,<ref name="dead">{{cite web | author = Manus Hand | title = Frequently Asked Dead Presidents Questions, How Did Each Dead President Die?? | url = http://www.diplom.org/manus/Presidents/faq/causes.html | publisher = Worldwide Diplomacy Hobby | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref>


* {{Wiktionary inline|allopathy}}
'''William Harrison (1773-1841'''), was the 9th President of the United States, and held the shortest term as President. He served only 31 days. He was also the first US President to die in office. And, was 68 years old. Harrison gave a two hour inaugural speech on a cold, wet, and blustery March 4th; he caught a severe cold that developed quickly into pneumonia. The President's attending physicians tried blistering the right side of his chest. But, Harrison did not improve. Next, the doctors tried cupping. Then ipecac was given to induce vomiting. They also gave him calomel and castor oil to purge his bowels. Sedatives were administered to the fast-weakening President in the form of opium and brandy. They concluded their treatment with Virginia Snakeweed, a Seneca Indian remedy.<ref name="presidents">{{cite web | title = Early Presidents and Their Illnesses | url = http://www.healthmedialab.com/html/president/early.html | publisher = Health Media Lab | year = 2004 | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref>,<ref name="whitehouse">{{ cite book | author = MacMahon, Edward B. and Curry, Leonard | title = Medical Cover-Ups in the White House | publisher = Farragut | location = Washington, DC | year = 1987 | page = 18}}</ref>

'''Zachary Taylor (1784-1850)''', was the 12th President of the United States. Taylor became ill after attending a July 4th celebration at the Washington Monument for several hours. Afterwards, he took a long walk along the Potomac River. Upon returning to the White House, the President drank large amounts of cold water and chilled milk, and ate fruit. The President was diagnosed as having cholera morbus, a term then used for intestinal ailments, or acute gastroenteritis. His condition declined over the next two days and a regimen of ipecac, calomel, opium, and quinine did little to relieve him. Blisters, bleeding, and purging were also used. On July 8th, after suffering through four days of sharp abdominal pains, diarrhea, and vomiting, President Taylor died. Here with Zachary Taylor, we have a documented case of a U.S. President dying in 1850 from indigestion caused from eating Blackberries and milk after having received the finest allopathic treatment of the day!<ref name="presidents">{{cite web | title = Early Presidents and Their Illnesses | url = http://www.healthmedialab.com/html/president/early.html | publisher = Health Media Lab | year = 2004 | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref>,<ref name="holman">{{cite book | author = Holman Hamilton, Zachary Taylor | title = Soldier in the White House | publisher = Indianapolis and New York: Bobbs-Merrill Co. | year = 1951 | page = 388-93}}</ref>

'''Prince Albert (1819-1861)''' - Dr. Trall alluded to the fact that Prince Albert had been taking some type of alcoholic based medicine. Trall claimed that the English newspapers at the time reported that Prince Albert was "'kept up on stimulants' for five or six days." He further claimed that allopathic treatments, such as this, weaken the patient which allowed typhoid to set in. Going on Trall said: "So inexplicable and mysterious was the death of Prince Albert, that suspicions were entertained of foul play for political considerations. My own opinion is that the treatment is sufficient to account for the death. ... The London Lancet, of Feb. 1862, in allusion to the death of Prince Albert, makes a very significant remark: 'The disease was typhoid fever, not very severe in its early stages. But this is a disease which has inevitably proved far more fatal to sufferers of the upper classes of life than to patients of the poorer kind.'" Thus, according to Trall, Prince Albert died in 1861 indirectly from the drug medication that he had received. And, according to Lancet had Prince Albert been poor, and thus without access to allopathic care, he would have been more likely to have survived. History tells us that Albert's death was so unexpected that historians long suspected Albert to have been poisoned with arsenic. Trall, thus, offered in 1862 a very plausible explanation of Prince Albert's death in 1861.<ref name = "trall">{{cite book | title = The True Healing Art: Or, Hygienic vs. Drug Medication, | author = R. T. Trall (speech given in 1862) | url = http://www.whale.to/v/trall.htm | publisher = Fowler & Wells, Publishers | location = New York | year = Reprinted 1880 | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref>

== Conclusion ==

Originally intended as a characterization of standard medicine in the early 19th century, these terms were rejected by mainstream physicians and quickly acquired negative overtones. During the 19th century it was used widely among irregular doctors as a pejorative term for regular doctors.<ref name="whorton" /> In the United States the term "allopathic" has been used by persons not related to homeopathy,<ref>{{cite journal| title=When did I become an "allopath"? (Commentary)| journal=]| year=1998| first=Katherine E.| last=Gundling| volume=158| pages=2185–6| pmid=9818797| accessdate=2008-04-28 | quote = Just when did I become an allopath? I am hearing and reading this term more and more lately. … Nevertheless, there is a clear trend of increased use of the term among mainstream physicians.| doi=10.1001/archinte.158.20.2185| issue=20}}</ref> but it has never been accepted by the medical establishment, and is not a label that such individuals apply to themselves.<ref>{{cite journal| title=When did I become an "allopath"? (Commentary)| journal=]| year=1998| first=Katherine E.| last=Gundling| volume=158| pages=2185–6| pmid=9818797| accessdate=2008-04-28 | quote = Allopathy artificially delimits the practice of medicine . It embodies an unnatural, inflexible philosophy of care and implies that our system of care is merely one of many from which a discerning health care consumer may choose. The practice of medicine deserves so much more than the parsimonious title allopathy.| doi=10.1001/archinte.158.20.2185| issue=20}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|title=In the Name of Medicine|journal=]|date= February 1, 1998 |first=Alan D.|last=Berkenwald|coauthors=|volume=128|pages=246–50|id= |url=http://www.annals.org/cgi/content/full/128/3/246|format=|accessdate=2008-04-28 | quote = Frequently used terms such as scientific, regular, mainstream, conventional, organized, allopathic, or conservative fail to describe adequately what licensed physicians do in our society.|issue=3|doi=10.1059/0003-4819-128-3-199802010-00023|doi_brokendate=2010-01-05}}</ref>

In the ], allopathic medicine can sometimes refer to the medical training that leads to the degree ] rather than the degree ], although this is uncommon. See ].<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.bls.gov/oco/ocos074.htm| title=Physicians and Surgeons| accessdate=2008-04-28| date=2007-12-18| work=Occupational Outlook Handbook| publisher=U.S. Department of Labor | quote = "There are two types of physicians: MD — Doctor of Medicine — and DO — Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine. MDs also are known as allopathic physicians."}}</ref><ref>'''' - ] (a college admissions testing preparation company unaffiliated with ])</ref>

In particular, the terms allopathic medicine and allopathy may be used for regular ] in a context of ] such as ],<ref>{{cite journal |author=Gogtay NJ, Bhatt HA, Dalvi SS, Kshirsagar NA |title=The use and safety of non-allopathic Indian medicines |journal=Drug Safety |volume=25 |issue=14 |pages=1005–19 |year=2002 |pmid=12408732 |doi=10.2165/00002018-200225140-00003 }}</ref><ref>Verma U, Sharma R, Gupta P, Gupta S, Kapoor B. Indian Journal of Pharmacology 39:52-54. accessed 1 Oct 2007.</ref><ref> accessed 1 Oct 2007.</ref> as well as in a context of ] such as homeopathy (see ]). However, many aspects of traditional medicine systems such as Ayurveda or ] are themselves allopathic in that they act by opposing the patient's symptoms.<ref>{{Cite book
|author = Wengell D, Gabriel N
|year = 2008
|url = http://books.google.com/?id=BNR1KGJXX9cC&pg=PA198&dq=homeopathy+suppression
|title = Educational Opportunities in Integrative Medicine
|publisher = Hunter Press
|location = Atlanta
|page = 198
|isbn = 9780977655243
}}</ref>

==Fate==
The development of alternative medicine in America during the 19th century owes much to allopaths, like Rush, who were largely responsible for fostering a rebellion against the aristocracy, or the intellectual elite ruling class, in the medical profession. Alternative medicine in America was not a rebellion against science during this time period. It should be viewed historically as an empirical rebellion against the authoritarian, backward, rationalistic, and dehumanized academia that was in fact both killing and torturing their patients. Allopaths were calling their competitors Quacks long before any allopath ever used the scientific method, long before their science was anything but laughable, and long before allopathic treatment methods were anything but bizarre if not down right lethal torture.

In addition, the claim that preventive medicine started in 1876 is totally erroneous from the perspective of the patient, since it had no practical effect outside of antiseptic surgery until some 50 years later when penicillin was discovered in 1928.

What is generally not realized is that the American Health Reform Movement of hygienic systems obviously embraced many of the 18th and 19th century philosophical beliefs of allopathy (ex, health benefits of fresh air, miasmas, enervation as the cause of all disease, belief that a complete diagnosis is unnecessary before treatment begins because there basically is only one disease, and concern with the acidity and alkalinity of the body) while strongly rejecting most, but not all of the allopathy's treatment methods (health benefits of drinking vinegar, importance of cleansing the digestive tract, and use of enemas were adopted by the Health Reform Movement, for example). It is, thus, historical fact that the American Health Reform Movement of hygienic systems embraced many of the 18th and 19th century philosophical beliefs of allopathy and, thus, these forms of alternative medicine started out by embracing the then science of allopathy.

''"In time , through a process of reform , 'scientization' , and centralization , heroic medicine would become ... biomedicine, ... the dominant Western medical system."''<ref name="alternative">{{cite web | title = Alternative Medicine and the Appropriation of Scientific Discourse | author = Steve Mizrach | accessdate = 2010-08-30}}</ref><ref name="naturalhealthperspective">{{cite web | title = A History of Allopathy | url = http://naturalhealthperspective.com/tutorials/allopathy.html |accessdate=2010-08-30}}</ref>

==References==
{{Reflist|2}}


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Latest revision as of 15:00, 22 July 2024

Term for science-based, modern medicine
Homeopathy Looks at the Horrors of Allopathy, by Alexander Beideman (1857)

Allopathic medicine, or allopathy, is an archaic and derogatory label originally used by 19th-century homeopaths to describe heroic medicine, the precursor of modern evidence-based medicine. There are regional variations in usage of the term. In the United States, the term is sometimes used to contrast with osteopathic medicine, especially in the field of medical education. In India, the term is used to distinguish conventional modern medicine from Siddha medicine, Ayurveda, homeopathy, Unani and other alternative and traditional medicine traditions, especially when comparing treatments and drugs.

The terms were coined in 1810 by the creator of homeopathy, Samuel Hahnemann. Heroic medicine was the conventional European medicine of the time and did not rely on evidence of effectiveness. It was based on the belief that disease is caused by an imbalance of the four "humours" (blood, phlegm, yellow bile, and black bile) and sought to treat disease symptoms by correcting that imbalance, using "harsh and abusive" methods to induce symptoms seen as opposite to those of diseases rather than treating their underlying causes: disease was caused by an excess of one humour and thus would be treated with its "opposite".

A study released by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2001 defined allopathic medicine as "the broad category of medical practice that is sometimes called Western medicine, biomedicine, evidence-based medicine, or modern medicine." The WHO used the term in a global study in order to differentiate Western medicine from traditional and alternative medicine, noting that in certain areas of the world "the legal standing of practitioners is equivalent to that of allopathic medicine" where practitioners can be separately certified in complementary/alternative medicine and Western medicine.

The term allopathy was also used to describe anything that was not homeopathy. Kimball Atwood, an American medical researcher and alternative medicine critic, said the meaning implied by the label of allopathy has never been accepted by conventional medicine and is still considered pejorative. American health advocate and sceptic William T. Jarvis, stated that "although many modern therapies can be construed to conform to an allopathic rationale (e.g., using a laxative to relieve constipation), standard medicine has never paid allegiance to an allopathic principle" and that the label "allopath" was "considered highly derisive by regular medicine." Most modern science-based medical treatments (antibiotics, vaccines, and chemotherapeutics, for example) do not fit Hahnemann's definition of allopathy, as they seek to prevent illness or to alleviate an illness by eliminating its cause.

The terms "allopathic medicine" and "allopathy" are drawn from the Greek prefix ἄλλος (állos), "other," "different" + the suffix πάθος (páthos), "suffering".

History

The practice of medicine in both Europe and North America during the early 19th century is sometimes referred to as heroic medicine because of the extreme measures (such as bloodletting) sometimes employed in an effort to treat diseases. The term allopath was used by Hahnemann and other early homeopaths to highlight the difference they perceived between homeopathy and the "conventional" heroic medicine of their time. With the term allopathy (meaning "other than the disease"), Hahnemann intended to point out how physicians with conventional training employed therapeutic approaches that, in his view, merely treated symptoms and failed to address the disharmony produced by underlying disease. Homeopaths saw such symptomatic treatments as "opposites treating opposites" and believed these methods were harmful to patients.

Practitioners of alternative medicine have used the term "allopathic medicine" to refer to the practice of conventional medicine in both Europe and the United States since the 19th century. In that century, the term allopath was used most often as a derogatory name for the practitioners of heroic medicine, a precursor to modern medicine that itself did not rely on evidence of effectiveness.

James Whorton discusses this historical pejorative usage:

One form of verbal warfare used in retaliation by irregulars was the word "allopathy". ..."Allopathy" and "allopathic" were liberally employed as pejoratives by all irregular physicians of the nineteenth century, and the terms were considered highly offensive by those at whom they were directed. The generally uncomplaining acceptance of "allopathic medicine" by today's physicians is an indication of both a lack of awareness of the term's historical use and the recent thawing of relations between irregulars and allopaths.

The controversy surrounding the term can be traced to its original usage during a heated 19th-century debate between practitioners of homeopathy and those they derisively referred to as "allopaths."

Hahnemann used "allopathy" to refer to what he saw as a system of medicine that combats disease by using remedies that produce effects in a healthy subject that are different (hence the Greek root allo- "different") from the effects produced by the disease to be treated. The distinction comes from the use in homeopathy of substances that are meant to cause similar effects as the symptoms of a disease to treat patients (homeo - meaning "similar").

As used by homeopaths, the term allopathy has always referred to the principle of treating disease by administering substances that produce other symptoms (when given to a healthy human) than the symptoms produced by a disease. For example, part of an allopathic treatment for fever may include the use of a drug which reduces the fever, while also including a drug (such as an antibiotic) that attacks the cause of the fever (such as a bacterial infection). A homeopathic treatment for fever, by contrast, is one that uses a diluted dosage of a substance that in an undiluted form would induce fever in a healthy person. These preparations are typically diluted so heavily that they no longer contain any actual molecules of the original substance. Hahnemann used this term to distinguish medicine as practiced in his time from his use of infinitesimally small (or nonexistent) doses of substances to treat the spiritual causes of illness.

The Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine states that " gave an all-embracing name to regular practice, calling it 'allopathy'. This term, however imprecise, was employed by his followers and other unorthodox movements to identify the prevailing methods as constituting nothing more than a competing 'school' of medicine, however dominant in terms of number of practitioner proponents and patients".

Contrary to the present usage, Hahnemann reserved the term "allopathic medicine" to the practice of treating diseases by means of drugs inducing symptoms unrelated (i.e., neither similar nor opposite) to those of the disease. He called the practice of treating diseases by means of drugs producing symptoms opposite to those of the patient "enantiopathic" (from the Greek ἐνάντιος (enántios), meaning "opposite") or "antipathic medicine".

Current usage

In the United States, the term is used in the modern era to differentiate between two types of US medical schools (both of which teach aspects of science-based medicine and neither of which teach homeopathy): Allopathic (granting the MD degree) and Osteopathic (granting the DO degree).

In India the term is used principally to distinguish "Western medicine" from Ayurveda, especially when comparing treatments and drugs.

A study released by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2001 defined "allopathic medicine" as "the broad category of medical practice that is sometimes called Western medicine, biomedicine, evidence-based medicine, or modern medicine." The WHO used the term in a global study in order to differentiate Western medicine from traditional medicine, and from complementary/alternative medicine, noting that in certain areas of the world “the legal standing of practitioners is equivalent to that of allopathic medicine” where practitioners are certified in both complementary/alternative medicine and Western medicine.

As of 2004, use of the term remained common among homeopaths and had spread to other alternative medicine practices. Kimball Atwood, an American medical researcher and alternative medicine critic, said the meaning implied by the label of allopathy has never been accepted by conventional medicine and is still considered pejorative by some. American health educator and skeptic William T. Jarvis, stated in 2008 that "although many modern therapies can be construed to conform to an allopathic rationale (e.g., using a laxative to relieve constipation), standard medicine has never paid allegiance to an allopathic principle" and that the label "allopath" was "considered highly derisive by regular medicine".

Most modern science-based medical treatments (antibiotics, vaccines, and chemotherapeutics, for example) do not fit Samuel Hahnemann's definition of allopathy, as they seek to prevent illness, or remove the cause of an illness by acting on the cause of disease.

See also

References

  1. Weatherall, Mark W. (1996-08-01). "Making Medicine Scientific: Empiricism, Rationality, and Quackery in mid-Victorian Britain". Social History of Medicine. 9 (2): 175–194. doi:10.1093/shm/9.2.175. ISSN 0951-631X. PMID 11613446.
  2. "Definition – allopathy". The Free Dictionary. Farlex. Retrieved 25 October 2013. Citing: Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine (2008) and Mosby's Medical Dictionary, 8th ed. (2009).
  3. ^ Whorton JC (2004). Oxford University Press US (ed.). Nature Cures: The History of Alternative Medicine in America (illustrated ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 18, 52. ISBN 978-0-19-517162-4.
  4. Gundling, Katherine E. (1998). "When Did I Become an 'Allopath'?". Archives of Internal Medicine. 158 (20). American Medical Association: 2185–2186. doi:10.1001/archinte.158.20.2185. PMID 9818797.
  5. ^ Barrett, Stephen; London, William M.; Kroger, Manfred; Hall, Harriet; Baratz, Robert S. (2013). Consumer health: a guide to intelligent decisions (9th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. pp. 34–35, 134, 137. ISBN 9780078028489. OCLC 758098687.
  6. ^ Xiaorui Zhang (2001). "Legal Status of Traditional Medicine and Complementary/Alternative Medicine: A Worldwide Review" (PDF). World Health Organization. Archived (PDF) from the original on 26 September 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-12.
  7. ^ Atwood, Kimball C. (2004). "Naturopathy, pseudoscience, and medicine: myths and fallacies vs truth". Medscape General Medicine. 6 (1): 33. PMC 1140750. PMID 15208545.
  8. ^ Jarvis, William T. (1996). "Misuse of the term "Allopathy"". National Council Against Health Fraud. Retrieved 2013-02-07.
  9. ^ Berkenwald, AD (1998). "In the name of medicine". Annals of Internal Medicine. 128 (3): 246–50. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-128-3-199802010-00023. S2CID 53089206.
  10. ^ Federspil G; Presotto F; Vettor R (2003). "A critical overview of homeopathy". Annals of Internal Medicine. 139 (8): W-75. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-139-8-200310210-00026-w3. PMID 14568881. Archived from the original on 2003-12-30. Retrieved 2010-12-30.
  11. Singh, Simon; Ernst, Edzard (2008). Trick Or Treatment: The Undeniable Facts about Alternative Medicine. W. W. Norton & Company. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-393-06661-6.
  12. Bates, DG (September 2002). "Why Not Call Modern Medicine "Alternative"?". The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 583 (1): 12–28. doi:10.1177/000271620258300102. PMID 11058987. S2CID 145294892.
  13. Cuellar NG (2006). Conversations in complementary and alternative medicine: insights and perspectives from leading practitioners. Boston: Jones and Bartlett. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-7637-3888-4.
  14. Whorton JC (4 Nov 2003). "Counterculture healing: A brief history of alternative medicine in America". WGBH Educational Foundation. Retrieved 25 Dec 2007.
  15. Whorton, JC (2002). Nature Cures: The History of Alternative Medicine in America. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-517162-4.
  16. Bynum, W. F. (2013). Companion Encyclopedia of the History of Medicine. Routledge. p. 608. ISBN 9781136110368.
  17. e.g., see Organon, VI edition, paragraphs 54-56
  18. "Two Kinds of Physicians - Health Professions and Prelaw Center - Indiana University - University Division". www.hpplc.indiana.edu. Archived from the original on 27 May 2019. Retrieved 27 February 2019.
  19. Prep, Veritas. "How to Decide Between an M.D. and a D.O." U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved 27 February 2019.
  20. Chandra, Shailaja; Patwardhan, Kishor (2018). "Allopathic, AYUSH and informal medical practitioners in rural India: a prescription for change". Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine. 9 (2): 143–150. doi:10.1016/j.jaim.2018.05.001. ISSN 0975-9476. PMC 6033720. PMID 29858128.

External links

  • The dictionary definition of allopathy at Wiktionary
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