Remedies
Practitioner-written homoeopathic remedy reference pages.
Each remedy page is written to be a reference, not a prescription — Latin name, traditional indications, modalities, typical potencies, and safety notes, with clear direction to a consultation for individualised guidance.
In short
How does Helpful Homoeopathy approach remedy pages?
Remedy pages are written as practitioner-level reference reading. They explain the remedy's traditional indications, the modalities that most often guide selection, the potencies typically used in practice, and the safety and escalation points every reader should know. Remedy pages are not prescriptions — individual remedy choice is made with practitioner guidance, not from a roundup.
- Traditional homoeopathic indications, not efficacy claims.
- Modalities and potencies explained plainly.
- Safety and clinician escalation stated clearly.
- Both homoeopathy and homeopathy spellings supported.
- Remedy
Thuja occidentalis
Thuja occidentalis is one of the most frequently consulted polychrests in homoeopathy, traditionally associated with warts, skin growths, lingering post-illness states, and certain constitutional pictures.
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Causticum
Causticum is a polychrest traditionally considered for specific skin pictures (including certain warts), urinary pictures, paralytic-type complaints, and long-standing grief.
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Cocculus indicus
Cocculus indicus is one of the better-known polychrests in traditional homoeopathy, particularly associated with motion-related nausea, vertigo, and exhaustion from loss of sleep or caregiving.
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