EuropeSouth AsiaAsia PacificAmericasMiddle EastAfricaBBC HomepageWorld ServiceEducation
News image
News image
News image
News imageNews image
News image
Front Page
News image
World
News image
UK
News image
UK Politics
News image
Business
News image
Sci/Tech
News image
Health
News image
Education
News image
Sport
News image
Entertainment
News image
Talking Point
News image
In Depth
News image
On Air
News image
Archive
News image
News image
News image
Feedback
Low Graphics
Help
News imageNews imageNews image
News imageTuesday, August 24, 1999 Published at 12:59 GMT 13:59 UK
News image
News image
Health
News image
Glasgow's NHS alternative
News image
Evidence on homeopathy is growing
News image
By BBC Radio 5 Live Health Specialist Fiona Plant

Here in Glasgow there's a hospital that has been in existence for almost a century but which is still unusual.

Alternative HealthNews image
It's the Glasgow Homeopathic Hospital, a national centre for integrating complementary and orthodox medicine.

It's headed by Dr David Reilly, who trained as a conventional medical doctor and is still a member of the Royal College of General Practitioners.


News imageNews image
Fiona Plant meets patients at the Glasgow Homeopathic Hospital
He says that while his best teachers were from orthodox medicine he believes that conventional medicine is too limiting in its apparoach.

"You're dealing with multiple organic disease and multiple psychological disability.

"It's a question trying to re-look at the person, their situation, their medical care and seeing what can be done for the individual.

"There'll be a synthesis of orthodox and alternative thinking and approaches, but more than that there'll be a focus on the person and their predicament."

Hospital's new home

The hospital's part of the West Glasgow Hospital University NHS Trust, has 15 beds and deals with 250 patient referrals a month - all of them from the NHS.

It's housed in a building unlike any other hospital you might have come across. It was finished earlier this year and designed as part of an architectural competition, painted a grey-mauve on the outside with lots of natural light inside, pale wood and decking patios for the patients to use.


News imageNews image
GP Dr Peter May and Jayne Goddard, of the Complementary Medicine Association, debate the use of alternative therapies
Sheila, an inpatient, says she has been on every type of anti-depressant for years. She was referred to the Homeopathic Hospital by a locum GP.

She attended first as an outpatient then was admitted as an inpatient - when we spoke to her she'd been there for 2 weeks.

"I had no life for 10 years, I was just waiting to die - I felt so sick all the time on all these pills."

In hospital she was assessed, given acupuncture and ultrasound for osteoarthritis in her neck, feet and fingers - and then she was given a remedy.

"I had such an experience during the day, such healing - but what the healing was was the anger, the anger coming out."

After she leaves hospital Sheila will be put in touch with self help groups and with a counsellor.

She says she feels better - she is still on anti-depressants but doesn't feel like she's dependant on them any more.

Treatments applied together

Another patient, Richard is HIV positive and is being treated by Dr Reilly as an outpatient.

The approach has involved a certain amount of homeopathy for peripheral conditions such as itchy skin, but at the same time he's on the conventional triple therapy drug treatment for HIV.

"It wasn't just about taking pills or having medicine - it was about talking and working out in myself what was going on," he said.

Catherine was bedbound for many years with a chronic fatigue syndrome.

She has been treated with homeopathic medicines for a long period. It's also involved a lot of listening, talking, encouragement and attention to her nutrition.

"I was taken off wheat, I was taken off milk - I felt tonnes better. It's done more for me than mainline medicine," she said.

But Catherine and other patients we spoke to emphasised that because there are so many therapists out there caution should be exercised when using complementary therapies, a warning echoed by Dr Reilly.

"I've found lots of value, but I've found a lot of nonsense, a lot of woolly thinking, and a lot of potential for patients' care to become even more fragmented," he said.

"So the question for me is still how do you provide balanced care and how to you get a balanced health care system."

News image


Advanced options | Search tips


News image
News image
News imageBack to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage |
News image

News imageNews imageNews image
Health Contents
News image
News imageBackground Briefings
News imageMedical notes
News imageNews image
Relevant Stories
News image
23 Aug 99�|�Health
Alternative medicine: Special report
News image
23 Aug 99�|�Health
Britons turning to alternative cures
News image
23 Aug 99�|�Health
The alternative set
News image

News image
News image
News image
News imageInternet Links
News image
News imageNews image
Scientific Review of Alternative Medicine
News image
Research Council for Complementary Medicine
News image
Alternative Medicine Foundation
News image
News imageNews image
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

News image
News image
News image
News imageIn this section
News image
Disability in depth
News image
Spotlight: Bristol inquiry
News image
Antibiotics: A fading wonder
News image
Mental health: An overview
News image
Alternative medicine: A growth industry
News image
The meningitis files
News image
Long-term care: A special report
News image
Aids up close
News image
From cradle to grave
News image
NHS reforms: A guide
News image
NHS Performance 1999
News image
From Special Report
NHS in crisis: Special report
News image
British Medical Association conference '99
News image
Royal College of Nursing conference '99
News image

News image
News image
News image