Journal article

Efficacy of homeopathy in livestock according to peer-reviewed publications from 1981 to 2014



Publication Details
Authors:
Döhring, C.; Sundrum, A.

Publication year:
2016
Journal:
Veterinary Record
Pages range :
628
Volume number:
179
Issue number:
24
ISSN:
0042-4900
eISSN:
2042-7670
DOI-Link der Erstveröffentlichung:


Abstract
Homeopathy is widely used in livestock, especially in order to reduce the use of antibiotics, although it is often seen as controversial. A comprehensive literature review has been conducted to assess the efficacy of homeopathy in cattle, pigs and poultry. Only peer-reviewed publications dealing with homeopathic remedies, which could possibly replace or prevent the use of antibiotics in the case of infective diseases or growth promotion in livestock were included. Search results revealed a total number of 52 trials performed within 48 publications fulfilling the predefined criteria. Twenty-eight trials were in favour of homeopathy, with 26 trials showing a significantly higher efficacy in comparison to a control group, whereas 22 showed no medicinal effect. Cure rates for the treatments with antibiotics, homeopathy or placebo varied to a high degree, while the remedy used did not seem to make a big difference. Looking at all the studies, no study was repeated under comparable conditions. Consequently, the use of homeopathy currently cannot claim to have sufficient prognostic validity where efficacy is concerned. When striving for high therapeutic success in treatment, the potential of homeopathy in replacing or reducing antibiotics can only be validated if evidence of efficacy is confirmed by randomised controlled trials under modified conditions.


Keywords
Animals, Communicable Diseases/therapy/veterinary, Homeopathy/veterinary, Livestock, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Treatment Outcome


Authors/Editors

Last updated on 2025-25-03 at 10:10