The new SPEKTRUM is here and offers an astonishing wealth of renowned authors, overwhelming images and impressive atmospheres. Particularly moving are the contributions from the Third World by Edouard Broussalian on cholera in Haiti, by Jeremy Sherr on HIV patients in Tanzania, and by Homeopaths Without Borders, who report on the prompt effect of homeopathic globules in Bolivian shantytowns.
Internationally renowned authors demonstrate, using infections in industrialised countries such as swine flu, that these can be coped with even without costly mass vaccinations, and how common childhood illnesses can be treated gently. Using a variety of methods, well-known physicians such as Heiner Frei and Didier Grandgeorge show how effective it can be to work as a Bönninghausen specialist or as a clinician with keynotes. Rina Markowits, Resie Moonen and Sunil Anand present, through case studies from everyday practice and in critical emergency situations, how the acute sensation points the way to a deep, lasting prescription. In every acute illness there may lie the opportunity for a profound cure: Christoph Schubert first recognises the panic attack and thereby also the more deeply rooted psychological disorder. Finally, Judyth Reichenberg-Ullman champions tried-and-tested acute remedies beyond the simillimum and sums up what all the authors in this issue of SPEKTRUM convey in their contributions: acute treatment repeatedly provides homeopaths and patients with remarkably rapid healing stories.
Also available as an E-Book.