16/12/2025
Homeopathy in History...
In 1889, there was a great epidemic of typhoid in Melbourne, Australia. All hospitals were cleared for the typhoid patients, as they were so numerous. The allopathic hospitals, with 462 beds, treated 755 patients with a mortality of 16.7 percent. The homeopathic hospitals with 60 beds received and treated 305 patients with typhoid fever with a 7.2 percent mortality.
Dr. E. Petrie Hoyle of London offered the following comments, โThus the mortality under allopathy was more than double what it was under homลopathy, and besides the duration of the illness was so much shortened under homลopathy, as will be evident, where it is seen that the sixty beds of the homลopathic hospital dealt with nearly half as many patients as the 462 beds of the allopathic hospitals.โ
The lesson was not clearly learned because in 1890-91, 168 patients with typhoid fever were treated at the Melbourne Homลopathic Hospital in Australia with 4 deaths, a mortality of 2.38 percent. During the same period, 211 cases with typhoid fever were treated at the Melbourne General Hospital (allopathic) with 42 deaths, a mortality of 19.9 percent.
Sources:
**J. Robertson Day and E. Petrie Hoyle (eds.). International Homลopathic Directory, 1911-12. London : Homลopathic Publishing Company, 1911 :17.
**H. R. Strout. The present status of homลopathy and its future. San Antonio : Maverick Printing House, 1891, 6.