Homeopathy 2024; 113(01): A1-A26
DOI: 10.1055/s-0044-1779784
Presentation Abstracts
Oral Abstracts

A Comparative Randomised Controlled Trial of Homeopathy versus Allopathy in Acute Otitis Media and Its Recurrence in Children

Roja Varanasi
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
,
Rupali Bhalerao
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
,
Paul Sumithran
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
,
Kiranmayee G. R. Rompicherla
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
,
Pramodji Singh
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
,
Sunil S. Ramteke
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
,
D. Karthikeyan
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
,
Dubashi Ramesh
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
,
S. Bhuwaneswari
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
,
Shraddha Chauhan
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
,
V. Jayakrishnan
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
,
Shravani Kampilli
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
,
Ajay Meena
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
,
Arvind Kumar
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
,
V. A. Siddiqui
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
,
Praveen Oberai
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
,
Raj K. Manchanda
1   Central Council for Research in Homeopathy, New Delhi, India
› Author Affiliations
 

Objective: Acute Otitis Media (AOM) is one of the most common acute infections in children and often injudiciously treated by antibiotics. Homeopathy has been found efficacious but requires further comparison with allopathy in terms of efficacy and usage of antibiotics, hence, this study.

Method: This was an open label, randomized, controlled, parallel arm trial conducted on children (aged 0–12 years), suffering from AOM. The primary outcome was changes in Tympanic Membrane Examination scale (TMES) and Acute Otitis Media-Severity of Symptoms (AOM-SOS) scale, time to improvement in pain through Facial Pain Scale-Revised (FPS-R) over 10 days. The need for antibiotics in both groups and the recurrence of subsequent episodes of AOM over 12 months were also compared.

Results: Intention-to-treat analysis was performed on 222 children; Homeopathy (n = 117) (H-group), Allopathy (A-group) (n = 105). There was a statistically significant reduction of scores in H-group compared with A-group at each time point: at day 3 (mean diff. ± sd: 1.71 ± 0.19; 95% CI: 1.34 to 2.07; p = 0.0001), at day 7 (mean diff. ± sd: 1.29 ± 0.24; 95% CI: 0.82 to 1.76; p = 0.0001) and at day 10 (mean diff. ± sd: 1.23 ± 0.25; 95% CI = 0.74 to 1.71; p = 0.0001) favoring homeopathy. Clinical failure by the third day of treatment was observed in 11% and 24% of children in H-group vs A-group (OR: 0.03; 95% CI: 0.001 to 0.52; p = 0.03). None of the children in the H-group required antibiotics, whereas 14 children in the A-group did.

Conclusion: Both therapies seemed to produce comparable effects and appeared safe. The study consolidated the findings observed during a pilot study, i.e., homeopathy is non-inferior to allopathy in managing AOM in children and antibiotics in children can be avoided.

Keywords: Acute otitis media, homeopathy, allopathy, antibiotics



Publication History

Article published online:
30 January 2024

© 2024. Faculty of Homeopathy. This article is published by Thieme.

Georg Thieme Verlag KG
Rüdigerstraße 14, 70469 Stuttgart, Germany