Summary
Report of a trial of Peter Chappell's trauma remedies, including Genocide and War
Trauma (PC304x), Rape (PC435p), and Torture (PC311f), at the Crossroads Women's Centre
Homeopathy Clinic, London, during one year (October 2006–2007). Most of the users
of the clinic are African women asylum seekers who have fled war and conflict and
are fighting for the right to stay here and be reunited with their families. Despite
some initial scepticism, we found the PC trauma remedies to be very effective and
of great benefit to the women. Out of a total of 18 cases, four had to be excluded
because we were unable to follow up their cases (including one who was deported),
or they didn't take the remedies, and three were difficult to assess due to other
circumstances. In our view there was significant improvement in almost all the women
we were able to follow up (11 out of 14 or 79 %), and strong improvement in half of
them. This is despite potential blocks to treatment such as suppressive allopathic
drugs, and extreme anxiety and worry caused by their uncertain immigration status
and daily struggle for survival.
Key words
Trauma - Genocide - War - Rape - Torture - PC remedies - Asylum - Justice
1 MYMOP (Measure Your Medical Outcome Profile) a patient generated outcome questionnaire
available free online.
2 Performance status to quantify general well-
being on a 0–100 scale.
3 Yarl's Wood Immigration Removal Centre, in Bedfordshire, has 405 bedspaces and is
the main removal centre for women and families. For more information, please see:
“Bleak House” for Our Times: An investigation into Yarl's Wood Removal Centre available from Crossroads Books (http://www.allwomencount.net/Publications/pamphlets.htm).
4 Oakington Immigration Removal Centre, near Cambridge, has a capacity of 408 beds
for male detainees. Women (including many rape survivors) are also detained there.
5 One young woman who had escaped her traffickers, was held in an adult prison, despite
being under 18, and charged with criminal proceedings because the Home Office disbelieved
her age and identification.
6 According to Chappell “… you intelligently combine what is common to a lot of cases
together to find the totality and essence of the miasm or the disease. In other words
there is a genus epidemicus and a genus chronicus, both forms of the Second Simillimum.”
7 Recently the term Genus Traumaticus has been introduced by Harry van der Zee to point
to the effective use of the as-if-one-person approach for collective trauma of which
this article provides proof.
Jennifer Hautman
Crossroads Women's Centre
230 a Kentish Town Rd
London NW5 2AB, UK
eMail: pinafer74@yahoo.co.uk