Use and efficacy of homeopathy in prevention and treatment of bovine mastitis

Type de document
journalArticle
Langue source
Anglais
Titre français
Titre anglais
Use and efficacy of homeopathy in prevention and treatment of bovine mastitis
Auteur(s)
  • ZEISE Johanna
  • FRITZ Jürgen
Editeur(s)
Autre(s)
Id
DV6BQ38I
Version
2626
Date ajout
7 janvier 2021 16:33
Date modification
3 mars 2021 08:41
Résumé anglais

Abstract

Bovine mastitis is an important disease in dairy farming. As alternative therapy to antibiotics, whose use is seen as increasingly critical, farmer try to treat mastitis with homeopathy, for example. The present study examined i) whether homeopathic treatments for bovine mastitis can have positive treatment outcomes, ii) which treatments have been successful and under which conditions, iii) indications for future studies and applications for homeopathy to treat mastitis. 32 studies published to date have been evaluated. Assessment criteria and a rating score of 0 to 5 points were fixed for the appraisal. Healing and prophylaxis of mastitis were the primary focus to highlight the medication success and its framework for suitable mastitis therapy. The top eight studies of this quality ranking were subjected to differentiated evaluation. The selected studies showed a positive treatment outcome of homeopathy. Due to the homeopathic effect and the most used remedies in the selected studies, the medication should be chosen according to the homeopathic drug picture. With homeopathic drugs it was possible to reduce the antibiotic use by up to 75%. Some studies indicated that homeopathy might have a positive long-term effect. Furthermore, the results suggested a high self-healing ability in bovine mastitis.

Note
None
CRAW tags
  • AB - Utile à l'AB
  • FREDO santé animale
  • GEO Allemagne
  • veterinary medicine
  • antibiotic
  • clinical trials
  • dairy cow
  • homeopathy
  • élevage
WEB tags
Titre de la publication
Open Agriculture
Volume
4
Pages
203-212
Date caractères
2019/04/05
Date publication
5 avril 2019
Doi
10.1515/opag-2019-0019 Le DOI est une URL unique de référencement d'une publication. Il est donc plus fiable et permanent qu'une URL classique