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DOI: 10.1055/s-0040-1716336
Mercurius solubilis as Genus Epidemicus for the COVID-19 Pandemic
We are writing this letter to propose Mercurius solubilis as genus epidemicus for the current coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.
From mid-June to mid-July 2020, our team of homeopathic doctors treated 104 patients in two COVID treatment centers—Pandit Bhimsen Joshi Hospital and Sheth P.V. Doshi Hospital—on the outskirts of Mumbai, India, with adjuvant homeopathy. It was observed by the patients, hospital staff, and the management that those patients on adjuvant homeopathy were discharged 3 to 7 days earlier than other comparable patients in the same wards, allowing us gradually to accommodate more severely ill patients who required oxygen, continuous positive airway pressure, or a ventilator.
Twenty-five different homeopathic medicines in total were prescribed to the patients, each receiving individualized treatment according to his or her symptoms. After collecting 143 clinical and individualizing (homeopathic) symptoms of 104 patients and converting those symptoms into rubrics, we repertorized the combined data with the help of the software Hompath, with an aim to arrive at a genus epidemicus. We observed that the medicine Merc Sol was at the top of the combined repertorization chart. After reviewing repertory sheets of all 104 patients, we discovered that Merc Sol was at the fourth or fifth place of all individual repertorization charts as well.
To substantiate our deduction, we studied the Materia Medica of Merc Sol from the original provings of Hahnemann[1] and other sourcebooks.[2] [3] [4] We also searched research articles and case studies about toxicological effects of mercury.[5] [6] [7] [8] These showed that acute exposure to mercury produces an acute respiratory distress syndrome-like presentation, a picture similar to the COVID symptomatology. Moreover, anosmia, aphthae, gastrointestinal and ocular manifestations that are seen in patients with COVID-19 were produced also by mercury the toxin and mercury the homeopathy-proved medicine. This finding is in accordance with the homeopathic Law of Similars: a substance producing a symptom in a healthy person is able to cure a similar symptom in a sick person.
To confirm our hypothesis, we identified 13 common symptoms of Merc Sol, such as indented tongue, salivation, perspiration, and night aggravation, which were present in various intensities in the previously treated 104 patients. We created a 13-point questionnaire and, after obtaining suitable Ethics Committee approval and individual informed consent from the patients, we evaluated 68 further patients in the above-mentioned COVID hospitals. People with at least eight confirmed symptoms from the questionnaire were prescribed Merc Sol 200c thrice a day for a week. In our 2-week study at both the locations, we observed a speedy recovery and a hospital stay reduction by 5 to 7 days in all the 68 patients when Merc Sol was used along with the standard Indian Council of Medical Research clinical protocol. Many of them were not newly admitted patients but were those who exceeded the mandatory minimum hospital stay. We are now using Merc Sol as a preventive medicine for over 1,000 people in a COVID hot-spot area in Powai, Mumbai, with the expressed permission of local authorities.
Following the Hahnemannian method of arriving at a genus epidemicus [9] (§ 99–103), and deducing it from the combined data of symptoms of more than 100 patients, we arrived at the conclusion that Merc Sol, “the deceitful malefic mercury” known for various symptomatic presentations and tissue destruction, is genus epidemicus of this pandemic. Our efforts are in accordance with the logic of homeopathy proffered by Dr. Stuart Close[10]: exact observation, correct interpretation, rational explanation, and scientific construction.
We now appeal to the global homeopathy community to test our findings in their respective areas, designing specific research projects to explore the utility of Mercurius solubilis in the COVID-19 pandemic as genus epidemicus.
Publication History
Received: 13 July 2020
Accepted: 27 July 2020
Article published online:
15 September 2020
The Faculty of Homeopathy
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References
- 1 Hahnemann S. Materia Medica Pura Volume 1. Noida, India: B. Jain Publishers; 2003
- 2 Allen H. Therapeutics of Fever. Philadelphia: Boericke; 1884: 172-174
- 3 Boericke W. A Pocket Manual of Homoeopathic Materia Medica and Repertory. 56th ed.. 2016: 426
- 4 Phatak S. Materia Medica of Homoeopathic Medicine. IBPP; 2008: 393
- 5 Lim HE, Shim JJ, Lee SY. et al. Mercury inhalation poisoning and acute lung injury. Korean J Intern Med (Korean Assoc Intern Med) 1998; 13: 127-130
- 6 Smiechowicz J, Skoczynska A, Nieckula-Szwarc A, Kulpa K, Kübler A. Occupational mercury vapour poisoning with a respiratory failure, pneumomediastinum and severe quadriparesis. SAGE Open Med Case Rep 2017; 5: X17695472
- 7 Broussard L, Hammett-Stabler C, Winecker R, Ropero-Miller J. The toxicology of mercury. Lab Med 2002; 33: 614-625
- 8 Bernhoft RA. Mercury toxicity and treatment: a review of the literature. J Environ Public Health 2012; 2012: 460508
- 9 Hahnemann S, Dudgeon R. Organon of Medicine. 6th ed.. B. Jain Publishers; 2019
- 10 Close S. The Genius of Homoeopathy. Noida, India: B. Jain Publishers; 2008: 978-981