In Homoeopathy, diagnosis does not hold the same dominant position as in modern medicine because prescription is based on the totality of symptoms, not merely on the name of the disease.
However, diagnosis is not ignored. It plays an important supportive role in understanding the case, planning treatment, assessing prognosis, and deciding limitations of the system.
According to Samuel Hahnemann, careful observation and individualization form the foundation of treatment. In Aphorism 90 of Organon of Medicine, he emphasizes observing what is peculiar in the patient during health and disease.
Role of Diagnosis in Homoeopathy
Difference Between Modern Medicine and Homoeopathy
| Modern Medicine | Homoeopathy |
|---|---|
| Diagnosis is primary | Individualization is primary |
| Disease name guides treatment | Totality of symptoms guides remedy |
| Pathology-focused | Patient-focused |
Yet, diagnosis is essential for rational practice.
Importance of Diagnosis
Helps in Identifying Characteristic Symptoms
- Knowledge of diagnostic symptoms helps distinguish:
- Common symptoms
- Characteristic (individualizing) symptoms
- These characteristic symptoms form the basis of prescription according to the Totality of Symptoms.
Helps in Case Selection
- Determines whether the case is:
- Curable
- Palliative
- Surgical
- Beyond the scope of Homoeopathy
- Helps understand scope and limitations of the system.
Helps in Understanding Pathology
- Provides information about:
- Location of disease
- Nature of pathological changes
- Extent of tissue damage
This helps in remedy selection and management.
Determines Stage & Vital Organ Involvement
If pathology is advanced and vital organs are affected:
Contraindications:
- Deep acting constitutional remedies like
- Silicea
- Lycopodium
- Sulphur
- High potency is contraindicated
- Frequent repetition of deep acting remedy is contraindicated
Hence, diagnosis guides potency and repetition.
Planning Treatment & Prophylaxis
- Helps in preventive measures
- Guides diet, regimen, and lifestyle advice
Comparative Assessment of Results
- Baseline diagnosis allows:
- Before–after comparison
- Monitoring improvement
- Objective assessment
Diagnostic Rubrics in Repertorisation
- Some rubrics are clinical/diagnostic
- Useful for:
- Repertorisation
- Differential diagnosis
- Clinical repertories
Importance of Clinical Examination & Laboratory Investigations
According to Aphorism 90, the physician must carefully observe the patient.
What Should Be Observed?
Mental Peculiarities
- Change in behavior during disease
- Emotional state
- Comparison with healthy state
Physical Peculiarities
Includes complete physical examination:
- Inspection
- Palpation
- Percussion
- Auscultation
Helps in understanding physical changes and individual traits.
Laboratory & Imaging Investigations
- Blood tests
- Urine examination
- X-ray
- USG
- CT/MRI (when required)
How Clinical Examination & Investigations Help
1. Completing the Portrait of Disease
Adds objective data to subjective symptoms.
2. Understanding Obstacles to Cure
- Maintaining causes
- Structural changes
- Irreversible pathology
3. Forming Totality of Symptoms
Helps classify:
- Common symptoms
- Characteristic symptoms
Diagnosis of Disease
Especially important in:
- Unconscious patients
- Comatose cases
- Newborn children
Where subjective symptoms cannot be obtained.
5. Prognosis
Helps determine:
- Curability
- Chronicity
- Severity
6. Scope & Limitations of Homoeopathy
Not all cases are suitable for homoeopathic treatment alone.
7. Understanding Miasmatic State
- Tubercular
- Syphilitic
- Sycosis
- Psora
Diagnosis often indicates miasmatic background.
8. Clinical Rubrics & Remedy Differentiation
Helps in:
- Clinical repertories
- Remedy comparison
- Selecting similimum
9. Selection of Potency & Dose
- Advanced pathology → Low potency
- Functional disorder → Higher potency (carefully)
- Frequent repetition avoided in deep pathology