Homoeopathy vs. conventional primary care in children during the first 24 months of life-a pragmatic randomised controlled trial
Senza nome 3
Menachem Oberbaum, Anupriya Chaudhary, Hima Bindu Ponnam, Reetha Krishnan, Dinesh V Kumar, Mohammed Irfan, Debadatta Nayak, Swati Pandey, Akula Archana, Sai Bhargavi, Divya Taneja, Mohua Datta, Navin Pawaskar, Ravindra Mohan Pandey, Anil Khurana, Shepherd Roee Singer, Raj Kumar Manchanda
Eur J Ped, 2024, 183 (12), 5455-5465

Abstract

To compare the difference between primary homoeopathic and conventional paediatric care in treating acute illnesses in children in their first 24 months of life. One hundred eight Indian singleton newborns delivered at 37 to 42 weeks gestation were randomised at birth (1:1) to receive either homoeopathic or conventional primary care for any acute illness over the study period. In the homoeopathic group, conventional medical treatment was added when medically indicated. Clinicians and parents were unblinded. Children in the homoeopathic group experienced significantly fewer sick days than those in the conventional group (RR: 0.37, 95% CI: 0.24-0.58; p < 0.001), with correspondingly fewer sickness episodes (RR: 0.53, 95% CI: 0.32-0.87; p = .013), as well as fewer respiratory illnesses over the 24-month period. They were taller (F (1, 97) = 8.92, p = .004, partial eta squared = 0.84) but not heavier than their conventionally treated counterparts. They required fewer antibiotics, and their treatment cost was lower.