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Asked: 4 years agoIn: Analytics, Education, Homoeopathy

Why the myth developed that homoeopathy acts slowly?what step should be taken for it?

Anika Ibnath
Anika Ibnath

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  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Teacher dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 4 years ago

    It's not true that Homoeopathy work slowly. According to the principle of Homoeopathy; We give medicine to the patient on the basis of constitution, individual back H/O; family back H/O, etc. With Homoeopathic similimum, the suppress disease may reappear, when your remedies is perfect. On the otherRead more

    It’s not true that Homoeopathy work slowly. According to the principle of Homoeopathy; We give medicine to the patient on the basis of constitution, individual back H/O; family back H/O, etc. With Homoeopathic similimum, the suppress disease may reappear, when your remedies is perfect. On the other hand Homoeopathic remedies make cure inner to outer. During Homoeopathic medication; first improvement may start with in the mind of your patient than total vital functions of your physiology may start; in an end time improvement may start in organ or tissues phase.
    In anti Homoeopathic system of medicine; they can rapidly reduce the organs or tissues abnormal localized pathology, but the internal process of disease maladies may stay constant. In this procedure of treatment the complete cure not established. When any exciting and maintaining factors may give influence to the patient; the inner maltreated diseases may appear again with as a nature of more critical & complicity. But in Homoeopathy, when cure start inner disharmony to external pathology; you become completely free from the state of diseases.

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Asked: 4 years agoIn: Analytics, Case taking, Food & health, Homoeopathic philosophy, Management, Miasma, Organon

Why raw onion, garlic, prawn and beef should be avoided during Homoeopathic Medication?

Anonymous
Anonymous

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adviceanonymously askdietfood
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  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Teacher dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 4 years ago

    Thi is not true that these foods should be avoided with all Homoeopathic Medicines, as these foods have many nutritional properties. Food and dietary restrictions are to be fixed along with Homoeopathic Medicine by considering the following points: 1. Those food, which can encourage diseases & iRead more

    Thi is not true that these foods should be avoided with all Homoeopathic Medicines, as these foods have many nutritional properties. Food and dietary restrictions are to be fixed along with Homoeopathic Medicine by considering the following points:
    1. Those food, which can encourage diseases & its pathology.
    2. Those food, which can maintain diseases & its pathology.
    3. Those food, which can worsen diseases & its pathology.
    4. Those food, which can depressed your vitality & immunity.
    5. Those food, which can reduced the dynamic medicinal action.
    6. Those food, which can make barriers to the dynamic energy of Homoeopathic Medicine.
    7. Those food, which are harmful for your basement miasmatic status.
    8. Those food, which are susceptible to you, on the basis of your constitution.
    9. Those food, which can make to you any allergic effects.
    so, your Homoeopath can say properly for this purpose.

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Asked: 4 years agoIn: Analytics, Gynecology, Obstetrics, Psychology, Repertory

What changes occur in mind symptoms during pregnancy? And what are rubrics of the Homoeopathic Repertory in this regard?

Jannatun Nisha
Jannatun Nisha

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mindmind symptomspregnancyrubrics
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  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Teacher dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 4 years ago

    During pregnancy, some mind symptoms may arise; for them, many symptoms may be valuable for Homoeopathic prescribing in pregnancy. such as:- 1. Mind; absorbed, buried in thought; strange, pregnancy, during 2. Mind; alcoholism, dipsomania; pregnancy, in or after 3. Mind; anger; - pregnancy, in -ailmeRead more

    During pregnancy, some mind symptoms may arise; for them, many symptoms may be valuable for Homoeopathic prescribing in pregnancy. such as:-
    1. Mind; absorbed, buried in thought; strange, pregnancy, during
    2. Mind; alcoholism, dipsomania; pregnancy, in or after
    3. Mind; anger;
    – pregnancy, in
    -ailments from, agg.; pregnancy, in
    4. Mind; anxiety;
    – pregnancy, in
    – dinner; after; pregnancy, in fifth month of
    – fright, fear; after; pregnancy, in seventh month of
    – household matters, about; pregnancy, in
    – sleeplessness, with; pregnancy, in
    5. Mind; change; personality, of, during pregnancy
    6. Mind; company; aversion to; pregnancy, in
    7. Mind; complaining; pregnancy, in, much, but of nothing in particular
    8. Mind; confusion of mind; pregnancy, in
    9. Mind; day-dreaming; pregnancy, about
    10. Mind; death; ailments from, agg.; pregnancy, in
    11. Mind; delirium;
    – pregnancy, in
    – pregnancy, in; itching of genitals, from
    12. Mind; delusions, imaginations;
    – pregnancy, during
    – pregnancy, during; triplets of
    – bed; looks for it in yard, during pregnancy
    – images, phantoms, sees; frightful; pregnancy, in, usually from engorged condition of brain
    – strange; everything is; pregnancy, in
    – ugly, is; pregnancy, in
    13. Mind; desires;
    – full of; pregnancy, in
    – strange things, during pregnancy
    14. Mind; despair;
    – pregnancy, in
    – pain, with; prolapse, in, or hardening of uterus in pregnancy
    15. Mind; discouraged; pregnancy, in
    16. Mind; escape, desire to; pregnancy, in
    17. Mind; excitement, excitable; pregnancy, in
    18. Mind; fancies; strange; pregnancy, in
    19. Mind; fear;
    – pregnancy, in
    – broken the arm of her child, that she has, in gastroenteritis during pregnancy
    – crossing; streets; pregnancy, in
    – death, of; pregnancy, in
    – falling, of; pregnancy, in
    – happen; something will; pregnancy, in
    – jostling against everyone she meets, during pregnancy
    – pregnancy, in; abortion, of, in latter part
    – pregnancy, in; anxiety in heart region, with
    – pregnancy, in; child would be deformed, that
    – pregnancy, in; conception, in false
    – pregnancy, in; continued
    – pregnancy, in; last part of
    – pregnancy, in; paroxysms, during, lasting two or three hours
    – pregnancy, of
    20. Mind; feigning; pregnancy
    21. Mind; friends, aversion to; pregnancy, in
    22. Mind; fright, fear agg., ailments from; pregnancy, in
    23. Mind; haughty, pride; pregnancy, in
    24. Mind; hide; oneself, desire to; pregnancy, in
    25. Mind; hydrophobia; pregnancy, in
    26. Mind; hysteria; pregnancy, delivery, parturition, during
    27. Mind; impatience; pregnancy, in
    28. Mind; indignation; pregnancy, in
    29. Mind; indolence, aversion to work; pregnancy, in
    30. Mind; insanity, madness; pregnancy, in
    31. Mind; irritability;
    – pregnancy, in
    – pregnancy, in; alone, desires to be
    – pregnancy, in; indigestion and sadness, from
    32. Mind; jumping; prolapse or hardening of uterus, pregnancy, in
    33. Mind; loquacity; pregnancy, in
    34. Mind; mania, madness; pregnancy, in
    35. Mind; mood; changeable, variable; pregnancy, as in
    36. Mind; morose, sulky; pregnancy, in
    37. Mind; nymphomania; pregnancy, in
    38. Mind; persons, aversion to; pregnancy, in
    39. Mind; restlessness, nervousness;
    – pregnancy, in
    – pregnancy, in; feverish, and, during last month
    40. Mind; sadness;
    – pregnancy, in
    – pregnancy, in; hemorrhage of uterus, in occasional and cramps
    41. Mind; sensitive, oversensitive; pregnancy, in
    42. Mind; stupefaction, as if intoxicated; pregnancy, in
    43. Mind; suicidal disposition; pregnancy, in
    44. Mind; suspiciousness, mistrustfulness; reserved, and, during pregnancy
    45. Mind; taciturn, indisposed to talk; pregnancy, in
    46. Mind; thoughts;
    – persistent; pregnancy, of
    – strangeness of; pregnancy, in
    47. Mind; unconsciousness, coma;
    – pregnancy, in
    -congestion; with; head, to; pregnancy, in
    48. Mind; unfeeling, hard-hearted; pregnancy, in
    49. Mind; wander, desires to; pregnancy, in
    50. Mind; weeping, tearful mood;
    – pregnancy, in
    – sudden, paroxysmal; pregnancy, as in
    — COMPLETE DYNAMICS 22.5

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Asked: 6 years agoIn: Analytics, Disease, Health, Public Health

What is ice-berg phenomenon of disease?

Nasim
Nasim

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diseasesiceberg phenomenon
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  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Teacher dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 4 years ago

    The Iceberg phenomenon of disease gives a picture of the spectrum of diseases in a community. The visible part of the iceberg denotes the clinically apparent cases of a disease in the community. The part of the iceberg below the water level denoted the latent, subclinical, undiagnosed, and carrier sRead more

    The Iceberg phenomenon of disease gives a picture of the spectrum of diseases in a community. The visible part of the iceberg denotes the clinically apparent cases of a disease in the community. The part of the iceberg below the water level denoted the latent, subclinical, undiagnosed, and carrier status in the community, which forms the major part. The hidden part is especially important in diseases like hypertension, diabetes, and malnutrition. Some diseases exhibiting iceberg phenomenon:

    1. Diabetes.
    2. Hypertension.
    3. Malnutrition.
    4. Polio.
    5. Leprosy.

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Asked: 6 years agoIn: Analytics, Disease, Health, Microbiology, Pathology, Public Health

What are the Natural history of disease?

Nasim
Nasim

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diseasesnatural history of diseases
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  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Teacher dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 4 years ago

    Natural history of disease refers to the progression of a disease process in an individual over time, in the absence of treatment. For example, untreated infection with HIV causes a spectrum of clinical problems beginning at the time of seroconversion (primary HIV) and terminating with AIDS and usuaRead more

    Natural history of disease refers to the progression of a disease process in an individual over time, in the absence of treatment. For example, untreated infection with HIV causes a spectrum of clinical problems beginning at the time of seroconversion (primary HIV) and terminating with AIDS and usually death. It is now recognized that it may take 10 years or more for AIDS to develop after seroconversion. Many, if not most, diseases have a characteristic natural history, although the time frame and specific manifestations of the disease may vary from individual to individual and are influenced by preventive and therapeutic measures.
    The process begins with the appropriate exposure to or accumulation of factors sufficient for the disease process to begin in a susceptible host. For an infectious disease, the exposure is a microorganism. For cancer, the exposure may be a factor that initiates the process, such as asbestos fibers or components in tobacco smoke (for lung cancer), or one that promotes the process, such as estrogen (for endometrial cancer).

    After the disease process has been triggered, pathological changes then occur without the individual being aware of them. This stage of subclinical disease, extending from the time of exposure to the onset of disease symptoms, is usually called the incubation period for infectious diseases, and the latency period for chronic diseases. During this stage, the disease is said to be asymptomatic (no symptoms) or inapparent. This period may be as brief as seconds for hypersensitivity and toxic reactions to as long as decades for certain chronic diseases. Even for a single disease, the characteristic incubation period has a range. For example, the typical incubation period for hepatitis A is as long as 7 weeks. The latency period for leukemia to become evident among survivors of the atomic bomb blast in Hiroshima ranged from 2 to 12 years, peaking at 6–7 years. Incubation periods for selected exposures and diseases vary from minute to decade.

    Although the disease is not apparent during the incubation period, some pathologic changes may be detectable with laboratory, radiographic, or other screening methods. Most screening programs attempt to identify the disease process during this phase of its natural history since intervention at this early stage is likely to be more effective than treatment given after the disease has progressed and become symptomatic.

    The onset of symptoms marks the transition from subclinical to clinical disease. Most diagnoses are made during the stage of clinical disease. In some people, however, the disease process may never progress to a clinically apparent illness. In others, the disease process may result in illness that ranges from mild to severe or fatal. This range is called the spectrum of disease. Ultimately, the disease process ends either in recovery, disability, or death.

    For an infectious agent, infectivity refers to the proportion of exposed persons who become infected. Pathogenicity refers to the proportion of infected individuals who develop the clinically apparent disease. Virulence refers to the proportion of clinically apparent cases that are severe or fatal.

    Because the spectrum of disease can include asymptomatic and mild cases, the cases of illness diagnosed by clinicians in the community often represent only the tip of the iceberg. Many additional cases may be too early to diagnose or may never progress to the clinical stage. Unfortunately, persons with inapparent or undiagnosed infections may nonetheless be able to transmit the infection to others. Such persons who are infectious but have subclinical diseases are called carriers. Frequently, carriers are persons with incubating disease or inapparent infection. Persons with measles, hepatitis A, and several other diseases become infectious a few days before the onset of symptoms. However, carriers may also be persons who appear to have recovered from their clinical illness but remain infectious, such as chronic carriers of the hepatitis B virus, or persons who never exhibited symptoms. The challenge to public health workers is that these carriers, unaware that they are infected and infectious to others, are sometimes more likely to unwittingly spread infection than are people with an obvious illness.

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Asked: 4 years agoIn: Analytics, Education, Homoeopathic philosophy, Homoeopathy, Miasma, Organon

What are you know about the concept of similar repulse and dissimilar attract?

Dr Beauty Akther
Dr Beauty AktherBegginer

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dissimilar attractsimilar repulse
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  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Teacher dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 4 years ago
    This answer was edited.

    Pioneer: In 1785, Charles-Augustin de Coulomb, measured the magnitude of electrostatic forces between charged objects using a torsion balance that he invented. Nature: Non-contact forces are interactions that can affect a body's motion without the need to touch it. Non-contact forces can be attractiRead more

    Pioneer: In 1785, Charles-Augustin de Coulomb, measured the magnitude of electrostatic forces between charged objects using a torsion balance that he invented.

    Nature: Non-contact forces are interactions that can affect a body’s motion without the need to touch it. Non-contact forces can be attractive or repulsive.

    Force: A force is attractive if the objects interacting exert a pull on each other, creating a tendency to move closer. On the other hand, a force is repulsive if the interacting objects push each other away.

    Types of charges:
    1. Positive.
    2. Negative.

    Same charges: If two objects have the same type of charge the electrostatic force between them will be repulsive. This means that if a positively charged object gets close to another, they both will push each other away. The same occurs for two negatively charged objects.

    Opposite charges: On the other hand, opposite charges attract each other. So when one positively charged object is near a negatively charged object, they pull towards each other, tending to move closer.

    The earth: The earth is like a giant magnet itself, but its geographic north pole is really a magnetic south pole. Similarly, the geographic South Pole is a magnetic north pole. Because of this, a free-to-move magnet – the needle of a compass, for instance – will always align its magnetic north pole to the earth’s geographical North Pole, and the magnet’s South Pole aligns with the earth’s geographic South Pole. This is why magnets’ poles are named that way.

    Magnets: Magnets work due to magnetic forces that occur in atoms forming magnetic zones in the material that act like tiny magnets themselves. Usually, these zones are randomly aligned. However, there is a special type of material called ferromagnetic. They have the property that their magnetic zones align easily when exposed to an external magnetic field, and they maintain this alignment after the magnetic field is gone, becoming magnets themselves! An object that generates a magnetic field due to its internal structure is called a permanent magnet. Ferromagnetic materials are strongly attracted to magnets. Some examples are iron, cobalt, and nickel.

    Attraction and Repulsion – Key features:

    1. Attraction and repulsion are characteristics of non-contact forces such as electrostatic and magnetic forces.

    2. Non-contact forces are interactions that can affect a body’s motion without the need to touch it. Examples of non-contact forces include electric and magnetic forces.

    3. Objects having opposite charges experience an attractive electrostatic force, pulling them towards each other.

    4. Objects having the same charge experience a repulsive electrostatic force, pushing them away from each other.

    5. Like poles of two magnets experience an attractive magnetic force, pulling them towards each other.

    6. Opposite poles of two magnets experience a repulsive magnetic force, pushing them away from each other.

    7. Coulomb’s law states that the force exerted between two charged objects, whether a force of attraction or repulsion, can be determined by the charge of both objects, the distance between them, and the medium in which the charges are.

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Asked: 4 years agoIn: Analytics, Education, Research Methodology

What do you mean by blueprint of research?

Dr Beauty Akther
Dr Beauty AktherBegginer

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  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Teacher dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 4 years ago

    Research design: it can be defined as a conceptual structure (making up the master plan) within which research will likely be done. It is a “blueprint” of research, for the collection, measurement and analysis of needed data. It specifies the methods and procedures for collecting and analyzing the iRead more

    Research design: it can be defined as a conceptual structure (making up the master plan) within which research will likely be done. It is a “blueprint” of research, for the collection, measurement and analysis of needed data. It specifies the methods and procedures for collecting and analyzing the information.
    A research design will typically include:
    1. How data is to be collected?
    2. What instruments will be employed?
    3. How the instruments will be used?
    4. The intended means for analyzing data collected.
    A research design is based in the research questions and can be considered as a addressing at least four of the problems:
    1. What questions to be study?
    2. Which data are relevant?
    3. What data to collect?
    4. How to analyze the results?

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Asked: 4 years agoIn: Analytics, Education, Research Methodology

What are the objectives of research?

Dr Beauty Akther
Dr Beauty AktherBegginer

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objectivesresearch
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  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Teacher dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 4 years ago

    Research objective: the research objective addresses the purpose of the investigation and the types of knowledge to be generated. 1. General objective: it is a goal that the project hopes to achieve. The general objective of the study states what is expected to achieve by the study in general terms.Read more

    Research objective: the research objective addresses the purpose of the investigation and the types of knowledge to be generated.
    1. General objective: it is a goal that the project hopes to achieve. The general objective of the study states what is expected to achieve by the study in general terms.
    2. Specific objectives are statements of precise outcomes that can be measured in support of the project’s general objective.
    3. Intermediate objectives: these serve to indicate the focus of the proposed research in behavioral terms. (who will conduct the study? What are the key variables to be studied?)
    4. Ultimate objectives: it is how the results will be utilized by the policymakers for the benefit of the people.

    All specific objectives for effectiveness should meet the SMART criteria:
    S- specific- each objective has a single key result.
    M- measurable- each objective relates to behavior that can be measured.
    A-achievable- each objective is realistic in terms of the available resources.
    R- reliable- each objective is central to district or job site goals; makes a difference in job performance or student achievement.
    T- timely- each objective should be able to be accomplished within the time frame established for the staff.

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Asked: 4 years agoIn: Analytics, Education, Research Methodology

What is Research questions?

Dr Beauty Akther
Dr Beauty AktherBegginer

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questionsresearch
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  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Teacher dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 4 years ago

    Research questions: a clear statement in the form of a question about the specific issues that a researcher wishes to analyze. It is needed to define the nature and scope of research. Questions are as follows: 1. What is to be studied? 2. Why will it be studied? 3. How it will be studied?

    Research questions: a clear statement in the form of a question about the specific issues that a researcher wishes to analyze. It is needed to define the nature and scope of research.
    Questions are as follows:
    1. What is to be studied?
    2. Why will it be studied?
    3. How it will be studied?

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Asked: 4 years agoIn: Analytics, Education, Research Methodology

What are the Research problem?

Dr Beauty Akther
Dr Beauty AktherBegginer

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researchresearch problem
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  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Teacher dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 4 years ago

    Research problem: it is a perceived difficulty, a feeling of discomfort, or a discrepancy between the common belief and reality. ( what is it? and what it should be ?) Identification of the research problem is possible through the: 1. Literature review. 2. Pilot survey. 3. Case study. 4. Focus groupRead more

    Research problem: it is a perceived difficulty, a feeling of discomfort, or a discrepancy between the common belief and reality. ( what is it? and what it should be ?)
    Identification of the research problem is possible through the:
    1. Literature review.
    2. Pilot survey.
    3. Case study.
    4. Focus group interviews experience survey.

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