Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Investigations of the motivation underlying Norwegian dairy farmers' use of homoeopathy.
- Journal:
- The Veterinary record
- Year:
- 2004
- Authors:
- Hektoen, L
- Affiliation:
- Department of Production Animal Clinical Sciences
Plain-English summary
A study looked at why eighteen dairy farmers in Norway choose to use homeopathic treatments (natural remedies that aim to stimulate the body's healing processes) for their cows' health. The farmers often relied on their own experiences and those of their peers when deciding to use these treatments, sometimes opting for homeopathy instead of traditional veterinary care for individual animals, while using it alongside conventional methods for the herd as a whole. They were motivated by a desire to reduce the use of antibiotics, lower costs, and find alternatives when standard veterinary treatments weren't effective. Interestingly, the farmers placed more importance on their personal experiences with homeopathy rather than scientific studies or the skepticism from some veterinarians about its effectiveness. Overall, the study suggests that personal experience plays a significant role in their decision to use homeopathic treatments.
Abstract
Eighteen Norwegian dairy farmers were interviewed to examine their reasons for using homoeopathic treatments in managing their herds' health. Overall, they chose the treatments on the basis of factors related to their personal experience, considerations of individual animals and the framework for dairy production. For individual animals homoeopathy was used as an alternative to conventional veterinary treatment, but at the herd level it was used to complement it. The farmers' use of homoeopathic treatment for personal health problems and the experience of their colleagues with its use in dairy production were important factors motivating their initial use of homoeopathy. Other factors included a desire to decrease the use of antibacterial drugs, reduce costs and find alternatives when conventional veterinary medicine provided no effective treatment. In individual cases, the severity of disease, previous experience and the farmers' personal knowledge and resources were important. These factors parallel those found to influence the use of complementary and alternative therapies in human medicine. The lack of understanding and documentation of the effects of homoeopathic remedies was not important to the farmers, and they valued personal experience more highly than scientific evidence or the opposition to homoeopathy encountered within the veterinary profession.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15605537/