Chronic prescribing: building the totality

Knowledge Base · Reference article

Chronic prescribing: building the totality

Purpose

This article supports students and practitioners with a practical, clinic-oriented overview. It is not a substitute for institutional training or national guidelines.

Key concepts

  • Start from observable facts in the consultation room.
  • Use repertory as a memory extender, not a replacement for materia medica.
  • Document decisions so peers can learn from your reasoning.

Step-by-step

  1. Prepare — review intake form and prior notes.
  2. Listen — let the patient finish their narrative.
  3. Clarify — modalities, concomitants, causation, mental state.
  4. Synthesise — build totality before opening software.
  5. Prescribe — one clear remedy with follow-up plan.
  6. Review — schedule follow-up before patient leaves.

Practical tips

Tip Rationale
Use the patient’s words in notes Preserves symptom quality
Photograph skin only with consent Teaching and follow-up
Explain aggravation possibility Improves adherence
Set review date in writing Reduces drop-out

Common mistakes

  • Repertorising before totality is clear
  • Ignoring maintaining causes (diet, sleep, abuse, drugs)
  • Changing remedy every visit without justification

Further reading

  • Organon §84–104 (case observation)
  • Kent’s Lectures on Homeopathic Philosophy
  • Faculty mentors and supervised clinics

Discussion question

What one habit most improved your case-taking in the first year of practice?


Article #5 · Beginner-friendly · ~6 min read

Thank you for this write-up on Chronic prescribing: building the totality.

In my clinic I often wonder: how long do you personally wait before intervening when the main complaint flares briefly but generals improve?

Would you treat a pediatric case differently here?

Curious to hear how others apply this in busy OPD settings.

Clinical opinion (Knowledge Base)

I agree with the emphasis on totality over local labels. In similar situations I document:

  • Sleep and thermal state first
  • Mood/energy before skin or pain scores
  • Any new symptom with timing after the dose

One caution: polypharmacy in elderly fictional cases can mimic remedy failure. Always check maintaining causes.

Well-structured article — sharing with interns.