The Marcy surname gave us the wife, daughter, father and uncle homeopathic team supporting a US General; and a Surgeon-in-Chief to the Railroad Men’s Hospital, Surgeon of the New York Central Railroad and the Pullman Palace Car Company, Surgeon to Buffalo Homœopathic Hospital, Gynecologist to Ingleside Home, Surgeon to the Emergency Hospital and Riverside Hospital, New York Central Employees and Surgeon to the Fire Department of Buffalo City. (more…)
With thanks to Mercola.com and Time Magazine 15.2.2007
Researchers can gather all the hard-nosed evidence they want about the effectiveness of a particular drug or treatment. But there’s one figure doctors don’t much talk about despite its importance. It’s called number needed to treat, or NNT, a new measure developed in the past 20 years that’s one of the best-kept statistical secrets in medicine.
The Gregg surname gave us a United States Health Officer and Surgeon and Secretary at the Homœopathic Hospital, Pittsburgh, Surgeon for Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad Company and Lecturer on Surgery to the Pittsburgh Training School for Nurses; a homeopathic author, and an othodox doctor who converted to homeopathy to become the pioneer of homeopathy in New England, one of the founders of the American Institute of Homeopathy and of the Massachusetts Homeopathic Society and the Massachusetts Homeopathic Hospital. (more…)
The Copeland surname contributed six jobbing homeopaths; an Engineer; a Superintendent of a Women’s Homeopathic Hospital; a Medical Examiner; and a Professor of Ophthalmology and Otology in the University of Michigan Medical School, a President of the New York Board of Health and U.S. Senator, and the Primary Author and sponsor of the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act of 1938 and President of the American Institute of Homeopathy, President Homœopathic Medical Society of the State of Michigan and President of the Saginaw Valley Homœopathic Medical Society. (more…)
The Chase surname provided twelve jobbing homeopaths, including two orthodox doctors who converted to homeopathy; the President of the The Homeopathic Hospital in New York; the editor of the New England Medical Gazette; a Physician at the New York Homeopathic Medical College; an orthodox doctor who converted to homeopathy to become President of the Wayne County Homeopathic Medical Society; an orthodox doctor who converted to homeopathy to become the President of the Massachusetts Homœopathic Medical Society; an orthodox doctor who converted to homeopathy to become a jobbing homeopath for many years and then the Chair of Surgical and Operative Dentistry at the Missouri Dental College and lecturer on Dental Medicine in the Homœopathic College of St. Louis and Doctor of Dental Surgery at the Ohio Dental College; a Resident Physician to the Ward’s Island Homœopathic Hospital; a Chief Justice of the United States who was an advocate of homeopathy; (more…)
The McClellan surname supplied a Vice President of the Ohio State Eclectic Medical Association; one jobbing homeopath; a Major General during the American Civil War who was an advocate of homeopathy; and a Surgeon at the Homœopathic Medical and Surgical Hospital and Dispensary of Pittsburgh and Secretary to the Homœopathic Medical Society of Alleghany County and Vice President of the Homœopathic Medical Society of Pennsylvania. (more…)
Thomas Jonathan “Stonewall” Jackson 1824 – 1863 was a Confederate general during the American Civil War, and probably the most revered Confederate commander after General Robert Edward Lee.
He was also a supporter of homeopathy. (more…)
Robert Edward Lee 1807 - 1870 was a career United States Army officer, an engineer, and the most celebrated general of the Confederate forces during the American Civil War.
Lee was also a supporter of homeopathy. (more…)