(also
spelled homœopathy or homoeopathy) from the Greek words hómoios
(similar) and páthos (suffering), is a system of alternative
medicine that strives to treat "like with like" [the etymological
origin of the word homeopathy: 'similar suffering' Homeopathy
is one type of alternative medicine, being particularly popular
in Europe and India, although less so in the USA, where such
therapies have been subject to tighter regulation. Recently,
even stricter European regulations were also implemented by
the EDQM.
Homeopathy rests on the premise of treating sick persons with
extremely diluted agents that - in undiluted doses - are deemed
to produce similar symptoms in a healthy individual. Its adherents
and practitioners assert that the therapeutic potency of a
remedy can be increased by serial dilution of the drug, combined
with succussion or vigorous shaking. In common with allopathic
medicine, homeopathy regards diseases as morbid derangements
of the organism.
However, it differs in preferring to view each case of sickness
as a strictly individual phenomenon.[6] The term "homeopathy"
was coined by the Saxon physician Christian Friedrich Samuel
Hahnemann (1755–1843) and first appeared in print in 1807.[7],
although he had previously outlined his axiom of medical similars
in a series of articles and monographs commencing in 1796