Talk:Oscillococcinum
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Thanks for the grammer fix on Oscillococcinum. Regarding the sentence you removed though ("It is also one of the most highly diluted preparations available."), I though it was "one of" the most highly diluted, certainly it's the highest I've seen (not that I've researched extensivly). Could you point me some with above 200C?
- Okay, I guess I should do more research :) I found this page: [hahnemannlabs] that lists several of higher dilution/potency. MickWest 17:54, 24 Jun 2005 (UTC)
I was wondering if you were concerened about the use of the word "diluted", since it implies reduction in potency to a layman? MickWest 17:47, 24 Jun 2005 (UTC)
This referenses were not used in the article. Hence, I removed them from the ref¬es. If someone knows how to attribute these ref to an information inside in the article :
- Oscillococcinum, le joli grand canard. Science et Pseudo-sciences, Cahiers bimestriels de l'Association Française pour l'Information Scientifique, No 202, mars-avril 1993.
- Anas Barbariae, Hepatis et Cordis Extractum. The Homeopathic Pharmacopoeia of the United States, monograph #0137, June 1989.
--Leridant 14:24, 8 November 2006 (UTC)
I'm not very comfortable with the following sentences: "After diluting the original mixture 200 times not a single molecule of its supposed active ingredients will be present in the final product. Scientifically it is impossible for this product to influence an individual's state of health." Would it be better to subsituate: " After diluting the original mixture 200 times there's an overwhelming probability that not a single molecule of its supposed active ingredients will be present in the final product. In terms of chemistry, such a dilution is identical to water. Therefore, actual theories deny its supposed influence over an individual's state of health"
What do you think of this? --Ireon 13:13, 15 November 2006 (UTC)
- Sounds good to me. The only minor changes to your proposal I would suggest would be to change there's to there is, and actual theories to scientific theories. --BillC 18:42, 15 November 2006 (UTC)
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- Changes done --Ireon 09:09, 27 November 2006 (UTC)
Contents |
[edit] Neutrality debate: The Efficacy of Oscillococcinum
Why were the following removed from the article? To list both the homeopathic arguments in favor of the remedy and the scientific viewpoint questioning its effectiveness seem much more balanced.
There is debate over the efficacy of Oscillococcinum. After diluting the original mixture 200 times there is an overwhelming probability that not a single molecule of its supposed active ingredients will be present in the final product. In terms of chemistry, such a dilution is identical to water. Therefore, scientific theories deny its supposed influence over an individual's state of health.
Various clinical trials of Oscillococcinum have been conducted. Some seem to show that Oscillococcinum can reduce the duration of the symptoms of flu. The statistical significance and the scientific rigor of these studies is debated, and in any case the placebo effect could be the result of taking Oscillococcinum. In one systematic review of the published clinical studies, the authors reported that the studies showed that Oscillococcinum possibly reduced the duration of the flu by about six hours, but has no effect on preventing it. They concluded the data are not strong enough to make a general recommendation to use Oscillococcinum for flu. Vickers AJ, Smith C. Homoeopathic Oscillococcinum for preventing and treating influenza and influenza-like syndromes., Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2006, Issue 3. Art. No.: CD001957. Another review of flu treatments (vaccine, medecine, homeopathy) has concluded that the popularity of Oscillococcinum in france was unsupported by the current evidence as to its efficacy. ref:van der Wouden JC, Bueving HJ, Poole P. Preventing influenza: an overview of systematic reviews. Respir Med. 2005 Nov;99(11):1341-9. Epub 2005 Aug 19. PMID 16112852
I did not write the original above content, but think there should be more of an explanation why this viewpoint was removed from the article. 71.202.183.191 16:49, 16 January 2007 (UTC)
People should read this The True Story of Oscillococcinum--67.60.52.136 19:57, 19 January 2007 (UTC)
This article now has severe POV problems. Sourced material relating to Roy's work during the 1918 Spanish Flu Epidemic was removed, together with its description of Oscillococcus. It is highly relevant that no researcher has ever reported seeing any such bacterium again, not to mention that Roy's theories about the causes of disease have now been falsified. As a post above says, clinical reports on the efficacy of Oscillococcinum were removed. These edits were made by Copywriter7 (talk • contribs), who gave no edit summary of his/her changes. — BillC talk 16:21, 28 January 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Preparation section
I added the sentences below because in the past when other users tried to elaborate on the actual preparation it was replaced by the statement that it simply was a process approved by the FDA. This alone is not very informative, and can contribute to the advertisement tone this article has at times taken. In my edit, I tried to be more conservative in the explanation I gave than the list of steps that were given before - elaborating on what the "100C" means in terms of the preparation. It would also seem informative to mention, at least somewhere in the article, that at this dilution it is very unlikely any of the actual duck molecules exist. This is a fact, and not intended to slander, as this is accepted in homeopathy. Someone with more expertise can explain the homeopathic theory and history behind the treatment.
The 200CK indicates that the preparation entails a series of 200 dilutions of the starting ingredient, an extract from the heart and liver of a Barnaby duck. Each step entails a 1:100 dilution, where the first mixture contains 1% of the extract, the second contains 1% of the first mixture, etc. Chemically, the final pill is very unlikely to contain any of the original extract (although as with other homeopathic treatments, it is argued that it is not the pressence of the molecules of these ingredients that provide the therapeutic value). -Akevin 07:59, 5 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Request for comment
This article is felt to have POV problems. Among the issues are:
- Removal of history pertaining to the treatment
- If the preparation section should identify the active ingredient as the extract of duck heart and liver and explain the dilution involved (see Preparation talk section)
- The removal of references to studies or discussion that cast doubt on the efficacy of the treatment (see neutrality debate above)
- The tone of the 'use' section
The article was at one point more balanced [1] Should article sections be restored or are there suggestions for improvements that can be made to better incorporate the various viewpoints? Akevin 09:08, 13 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Comment by Dgies
- History: The only controversy I could see is whether it was OK to mention the Spanish Flu/bacteria theory. This origin should be relatively non-controversial and verifiable. However, including text like "It has been known for some time that this was false: eczema and rheumatism are not caused by bacteria, and measles is caused by a virus far too small for Roy to have observed in his optical microscope.", even if true, is a non-neutral tone. The sentence "Today Oscillo is used in more than 50 countries worldwide. In France, Oscillo has been around for more than 65 years and it has been the country's #1 overall over-the-counter flu medicine." sounds like marketing information. It is OK to mention its sales info if there is a reliable citation, but it is redundant boosterism to mention its age like that. Readers can do math if they care.
- Preparation: In an article about a medicine, one of the key facts to mention is its ingredients. Since a general audience has no idea what "200CK" means, it is appropriate to briefly explain it, including a link to the relevant section in Homeopathy. Information on the number of molecules of ingredients is relevant to Homeopathy, but unless this is a quoted number for this product, it is original research and POV pushing.
- Questions of efficacy: Statements questioning efficacy may be included if they have a reliable source, such as a medical journal. If these criticisms do not come from a mainstream medical expert, they must be identified as such, as in "Homeopathy critics allege .... {citation}". A link to the controversy section in Homeopathy may be included, as it includes ample references.
- "Use" tone: It is appropriate for an article on a medicine to specify its recommended directions for use. It is POV to include statements suggesting efficacy, safety, interactions or side effects unless they are backed up by a reliable source, such as a medical journal. If claims are to be backed up by a reference to a homeopathy advocacy group, such advocacy must be clearly marked as such as in "Homeopathy advocates claim .... {citation}"
Hope this helps. —Dgiest c 17:02, 13 February 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Comment by User:Ttguy
The deleted text has changed this from a balanced bit of work to a one sided advert for the product. It is interesting to know that the product is named after a non-existant bacterium and it is also interesting to know how the product is prepared. But these two bits of info have been deleted. And no justification given. They should go back.Ttguy 13:23, 27 February 2007 (UTC)