What is dose ? explain the logical view of use of changing dose in treatment.
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In homœopathy, the “dose” isn’t simply how much medicine one swallows—it’s the entire combination of: - The single remedy selected - Its potency (dilution level and dynamization) - The quantity given (number of pellets or drops) - The method of preparation (succussion or trituration) - The repetitioRead more
In homœopathy, the “dose” isn’t simply how much medicine one swallows—it’s the entire combination of:
– The single remedy selected
– Its potency (dilution level and dynamization)
– The quantity given (number of pellets or drops)
– The method of preparation (succussion or trituration)
– The repetition schedule (when and how often)
Together these elements form the **posology**, or science of doses.
The Logic Behind Changing the Dose
Homeopathic dose adjustment isn’t arbitrary; it follows a dynamic, feedback-driven logic:
1. Minimum Dose, Maximum Action
• Start with the smallest dose likely to stimulate the vital force—this avoids unnecessary aggravation and respects the law of least action.
• Doses are always sub-pathogenetic: large enough to heal, not to produce new symptoms.
2. Observe the Response Curve
• After one dose you watch for:
– A mild, temporary homeopathic aggravation (proof that the remedy “took”).
– A clear amelioration of symptoms.
– A “stagnation” or return of old complaints.
• Only when the remedy’s action plateaus or symptoms relapse do you consider a repeat or potency change.
3. Repetition Rules
• Law of Minimum Repetition: repeat only when the last dose’s effect has truly waned.
• In acute, rapidly evolving conditions you may repeat every few minutes to hours.
• In chronic cases allow days to weeks between doses, letting the organism fully integrate each stimulus.
4. Potency Adjustment
• Lower potencies (6X–30C) act more superficially and may be repeated more often.
• Higher potencies (200C–1M and above) penetrate deeper; are given more sparingly, often as a single dose, then watched for weeks.
• Raise potency when:
– Symptoms reappear in a more intense or altered form.
– The patient shows marked improvement on one level but residual deeper symptoms persist.
5. Individual Sensitivity Guides Dose Strength
• Highly sensitive patients or children often need smaller potencies and longer gaps.
• Stubborn, dampened vital forces may require higher potencies to reawaken the healing response.
6. Dynamic Equilibrium
• Each dose is a “nudge” to the vital force. Too frequent or too strong a nudge overwhelms; too weak or too rare a nudge fails to shift.
• By changing dose—either repetition interval or potency—you calibrate exactly to the patient’s healing momentum.
Every adjustment answers one question:
See less“How has the organism reacted to the last stimulus?”
That single feedback loop—dose → response → dose change—is the heartbeat of homœopathic therapeutics.