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Whirlwind Weekend With Friends/CRUMBS/& Cure Thrift Shop

Chicklets @ Cure Thrift

This past weekend I spent a whirlwind, short (as in way to short) visit to NYC.
I arrived Saturday close to 1pm managed to spend 26 hrs visiting one of my oldest friends (and Jr Prom Date) Markie Mark. After a crazy 6 weeks regarding the whole 1 in a million thing ;) I needed a weekend to let off some steam and LAUGH !

And laugh we did- we had a blast! We had lunch ( and more than one of us was incredibly silly) walked around, played catch -up, stopped by CRUMBS Cupcakes and indulged. I highly recommend the Vanilla Coconut cupcake- OUTSTANDING & BOLUS WORTHY! Later that evening, we had dinner and cocktails and laughed until we cried!

Sunday morning (which was way to rainy and cold) I was able to meet up with my niece Cristin and have brunch. She's an adult now, and I consider her my first baby and close friend. Time with her means the world to me!

Mark met us afterwards and we stopped by Cure Thrift Shop , which benefits the Diabetes Research Institute. I'd been trying to visit FOREVER and I finally had my chance to take it all in!

The shop is located at 111 East 12th Street, between 3rd and 4th Ave.

It's an AMAZING thrift shop with fantastical one of a kind items at great prices!

All proceeds go to the DRI (Diabetes Research Institute) whose goal is to find the cure for Diabetes! I attended their 2008 Diabetes 2.0 Conference in NYC and learned first hand about the incredible research they do!

Cure Thrift also hosts Support Groups for those of us with the Big D. The next one is tomorrow night at 7:30, and is sponsored by ACT1Diabetes. An excellent organization for adults with Type 1.For more info about ACT1 & tomorrows meeting,click HERE !

All in all, it was a very short and incredibly packed, wonderful weekend!!

Type 1 University Makes Diabetes School, COOL.

Type 1 U's logo was designed by the fabulous Gina Capone

Attending Diabetes School is cool in theory, but making the time to physically be some where isn't so easy.
Seriously, all of us lack time to do what we should in our lives, diabetes and otherwise.

Living with diabetes is hard, we never get vacation, and diabetes doesn't give a crap regarding our busy schedules.
Now, we have a little control over how and when we can do the learning!

MY friend, Gary (Think Like A Pancreas) Scheiner over at http://www.integrateddiabetes.com/, has begun offering a series of on-line classes called Type 1 University, which features online courses designed to provide "higher education" to people who are using intensive insulin therapy, either pumps or MDI.
Each 40-60 minute course is available live (via webex) or pre-recorded format,can be accessed on any computer system or mobile device with access to the Internet. Audio and video are provided, and special interactive opportunities are made available during the live program.

T1U is currently offering the following classes:
  1. Mastering Pump Therapy
  2. Advanced Carb Counting
  3. Blood Glucose Control During Sports & Exercise
  4. Weight Loss for Insulin Users
  5. Getting the Most from Your Continuous Glucose Monitor
  6. Strike The Spike: After-Meal Glucose Control
  7. Hypoglycemia Prevention and Management
  8. Fine-Tuning Basal Insulin
I've struggled with all of the above and I know I could use more help in these areas. Now that I can attend class via my home computer, I don't have any more valid excuses as to why I can't.

If your interested in learning more, click HERE.

Full Disclosure: Gary offered me a free Type 1 University class in exchange for writing about it. But here's the thing, I've worked with Gary in the past on my diabetes management and he's really helped me. Free or not, my time is precious to me, and I choose how I spend it. I believe in what Gary's doing, and I'd attend even if he hadn't offered me a free class. I'm not perfect, I need to continue my diabetes education, and the fact that I don't have to leave the comfort of my own home to do it.

An Apology – Numbers – Lunch with DOC friend – And History Being Made…

I feel like I’ve been apologizing to dBlogville as of late and I’m doing it again.

Life’s gotten in the way and I’ve been feeling it. My mom’s surgery is on February 17th and I’m scared. I’ve been going to a crazy amount of Docs appointments with her to get pre surgery clearance. The Vascular surgeons, her cardiac Dr’s, even her Dentist, plus a multiple appointments with her Orthopedic surgeon.


My mom is having a complete Knee replacement – a difficult surgery on the body to say the least, but compound it with her being extremely high risk with her defibulator, pacemaker, and family history of strokes - and I’m kept up at night with the dreaded what-ifs. I smile and stay positive in public - telling my mom (and anyone else) “failure is not an option, and that I wouldn’t make a very good orphan so she has no choice but to come through the operation with flying colors.” But I cry in private, fearing her surgery every day as it draws near. She’s in pain with every step and her quality of life is not what it
was. She needs the surgery- but the High Risk term keeps ringing in my brain.

After losing my father 8 years ago, I realized just how fragile parents are. The past 6 months I’ve been reminded of that lesson again and again.

I’ve also been in the road a lot for work – I’m in Sales and have been on the road at least 3 days a week visiting clients. I’m in my car so much that I’ve contemplated (VERY BRIEFLY) buying a Winnebago. I feel as if I live in my car and have a c
ell phone perpetually growing out of my ear.

As far as my Diabetes work – that’s still going strong – there was a lull during the holidays, but the phone has started ringing again and talks are in the works to getting more gigs on the books.

So with all that is life as of late, by the time I get home, my energy is drained and I just want to sleep.
My blog has suffered – postings have been scant this month and I’m trying to rectify that – I’M SO SORRY. I WILL DO BETTER.

As far as my Diabetes, I had my own Endo appt last week. My numbers were good. I’ve lost 9 lbs since the spring, my A1C was 6.9 (Dr. J thought it would have been lower – closer to 6.6, had I not had the $424 sinus infection) and my blood pressure was textbook.

BUT (and there always seems to be a but,) he wants me to go on Cholesterol medication.
My bad Cholesterol was 120. Not terribly high, but since it’s been fluctuating the past year between 96 and 120 and my family history being what it is, (heart attacks, angioplasty, quadruple bypass surgery) he wants to prevent any and all plac from forming.

I was bummed – I’ve worked really hard to these past two quarters to get my health grooving and I didn’t like hearing that I had to go
on another medication.

“I barely eat meat, & I practically drink Olive oil, I don’t know what else to do.” I said somewhat bitch like.

But Doctor J said something that really stuck: “Kelly, don’t stop eating another thing. You’re doing everything right! This is your genetics speaking
and you need to listen. Your doing great – you just need some help in the Cholesterol. Let’s just try a low dose and see how your numbers are for the next year.”

I felt better and agreed I grabbed my RX (I’d say the name of the medication, but I have a call into his office because I can’t read his RX to tell you the name) and said I’d do it.

Before I said goodbye, Dr. J said snagged 8 bottles o
f insulin for me and said: “I’m so happy with your numbers and I’m going to tell Cheryl (my CDE) when I see her today –she’ll be so excited!” So I made my Diabetes Entourage happy - I got that going for me!

Afterwards, I met LeeAnn from The Butter Compartment for lunch at one of my favorite restaurants in South Philly’s Italian Market. We’d been trying to get together for months and we managed to finally get together - be it last minute on my end. I was so happy to have someone who got the whole diabetes rollercoaster with me that I promptly gave her 2 bottles of my insulin booty when she walked in!

"The Mad Hatter Sisters!"
Lee Ann & I with our lunch leftovers
Photo by Lee Ann Thill - The Butter Compartment

We had a great time! We laughed and talked about anything and everything. The food was fantastic – the conversation even better.

After lunch we went to my favorite Italian bakery, and in my eyes, the Holy Grail of all things delicious and sweet – Isgro’s. The place is a like a Disneyland of baked goods – and yes we indulged! Can you say "BOLUS!"


As for this very moment – I’m doing paperwork (the thorn in every Sales Reps side,) putting the finishing touches on this blog post, I’ve just finished listening to “Air and Simple Gifts” being played with such gusto at the Presidential Inauguration.
Like the today’s events, the music inspires me.

John G. Roberts has just given the oath of office to Barrack H. Obama, and President Obama is now the leader of our county. I’m so happy and proud of the people of the U.S. on so many levels.

President Obama’s speech ignites me to meet the challenges in front of me. “To be a risk taker and a doer,” to work even harder, and “to pick myself up, and dust myself off,” and to be positive in the face of what scares me – which has been so difficult as of late.

Suicide. The known links with pharmaceutical drugs,

Suicide. The known links with pharmaceutical drugs,
Suicide is not an illness or a disease, but it is something that is contemplated, or actually happens when an individual’s mental health has reached its nadir. Life has become unbearable, and the person cannot contemplate going on with it.

What causes this level of despair? Of course, there are many social and emotional reasons, all connected with the life of any individual who is contemplating suicide. Suicide has been with us, no doubt, since time began. Likewise, the depression that causes suicidal ideation has been with us from the beginnings of time.


“Over 800,000 people die due to suicide every year and there are many more who attempt suicide. Hence, many millions of people are affected or experience suicide bereavement every year. Suicide occurs throughout the lifespan and was the second leading cause of death among 15-29 year olds globally in 2012”.

WHO go on to explain that in the last 45 years suicide rates have increased by 60% worldwide, and that suicide is now among the three leading causes of death among those aged 15-44 (male and female). They also said that suicide attempts are up to 20 times more frequent than completed suicides, and that mental health disorders (particularly depression and substance abuse) are associated with more than 90% of all cases of suicide.

Yet there is another cause for concern, one which is seldom discussed or thought about, certainly not by the Conventional Medical Establishment. This is that there are a variety of conventional medical drugs are known to cause, and to increase the likelihood of suicidal thoughts, and suicide.

Antidepressant Drugs
If depression is a major cause of suicide, the conventional treatment of depression is known to increase it too! This paradox is common with pharmaceutical drugs, that their D.I.E.s can actually increase the disease they are given to treat!

This association is well recognised in the conventional medical world. For instance, the FDA requires all antidepressant drugs to include strong warnings about risks of suicidal thinking and behaviour, especially in children, adolescents and young adults. Many doctors seek to justify their use of these drugs on the basis that untreated depression can also be linked with suicide. Of course it can! But to give depressed people drugs that increase the likelihood of suicide seems to be an extraordinary policy, although one routinely practised by our conventional doctors!

One group of antidepressant, SSRI’s (Selective Serotonin Re-uptake Inhibitors), including drugs like Prosac, Zoloft, Paxil, Celexa, Lexapro and Luvox, have been particularly associated with an increased risk of suicide, especially in children and young people. Even in the drug tests that preceded their approval and introduction about 4% of patients were found to experience suicidal thinking or behaviour, as well as actual suicide attempts.

Yet prescribing antidepressant drugs has become routine, common practice, and the consumption of these drugs has mirrored the increase in suicide rates over the last 50 to 60 years. It has been estimated that some 164 million prescriptions were written for antidepressants in 2008 alone, and sales of SSRIs alone increased by 32% from 2000 to 2004. It is likely that they have increased significantly since then.

Antidepressants have also been linked to akathisia, which can cause extreme restlessness, an inability to be still. The discomfort of this ‘side effect’ are known to be so great that suicide can become a welcome alternative to such agitation.

Prosac, perhaps the best known SSRI antidepressant, is known to have a stimulant effect, similar to amphetamines, which can in turn lead to suicide. An FDA official, who was responsible for evaluating adverse drug effects during the approval of this drug, repeatedly warned that it could have this effect - without avail!

Drugs for Parkinson’s Disease
Drugs used to treat Parkinson’s disease are also implicated in causing suicide. Friends of Robin Williams have linked the drugs he was taking for Parkinson’s, alongside a plethora of other drugs, with his death. Unfortunately, this may have had an unfortunate consequence, in that it has triggered fierce denials from the conventional medical establishment, angry at this link being made. 

The denials are, as usual, that Parkinson’s disease is a condition that causes depression, and that suicidal ideation might be the result of this depression, and not the drugs.

Yet the prevalence of suicide amongst people with Parkinson’s is well known. And the link with drugs used for Parkinson's is also known, and in some cases is published on inserts in the boxes the drug is dispensed in. This one, for instance, is for the Levodopa drug, Cardidopa monohydrate.

“Depression - you or your carer should seek medical advice if there are changes to your mental state or behaviour, if you are depress or have thoughts of committing suicide”.

Suicide is not always mentioned in websites as a ‘side-effect’ of Levodopa, but it is in others, such as this RxList website. One D.I.E mentioned is “confusion, hallucinations, anxiety, agitation, depressed mood, thoughts of suicide or hurting yourself”.


“Little is known about the prevalence and correlates of suicidal behaviour in Parkinson's disease (PD). In the first part of the study, we followed a cohort of 102 consecutive PD patients for 8 years and found that the suicide-specific mortality was 5.3 times higher than expected. In the second part, we tested 128 PD patients for death and suicidal ideation and administered an extensive neurological, neuropsychological and psychiatric battery. Current death and/or suicidal ideation was registered in 22.7%…… In conclusion, the suicide risk in PD may not be as high as it is expected, but it is certainly not trivial. According to our data almost a quarter of PD patients had death and/or suicidal ideation, that may significantly influence their quality of life”.

As much as the Conventional Medical Establishment might like to attack this study, they are still unable to provide evidence that it is the Parkinson's, and not the drug used for Parkinson's, that is causing the high rates of suicide in Parkinson’s patients! So we just have to trust their denials, and their re-assurances!

But this attitude is also a hostage to fortune! If we follow their logic, that is, if you are depressed you are likely to have suicidal ideation, then any drug that causes depression (and there are plenty of these, and a later blog will point out) should be considered as a likely cause of suicide!

There are other conventional medical drugs known to create suicidal ideation, and I will outline just three here.

Accutane (Isotretinoin)
Accutane is a drug used for severe Acne. It is also marketed under the names Isotretinoin, Amnesteem, Claravis, Sotret, and probably others. The FDA’s has reported that this drug is the fifth most related to depression, and that it is also one of the top 10 drugs linked to an increased risk of suicide. Indeed, Accutane is linked to many serious D.I.E.s, including Crohn’s disease, liver damage, depression, miscarriage, and birth defects if taken during pregnancy.

Many Accutate users have reported depression and suicidal behaviour. From 1982 to 2005, the FDA received reports of 190 suicides by Accutane users.  In 2003 there were so many reports that Accutane was listed as one the top ten drugs associated with depression and suicide attempts.

Chantix
Chantix in the USA, Chanpix in the UK, is a drug prescribed to stop the smoking habit. The FDA thought the risk of suicide from this drug warranted a ‘black box’ warning on its packaging in 2009. Apparently, the symptoms of depression and suicide can appear shortly after taking Chantix, and that it can quickly progress to dangerous levels.

There is a Chantix lawsuit pending in the USA following hundreds of Chantix users reporting incidents following the drug's approval. Apparently, in one 18-month period, over 300 reports of Chantix suicide and depression incidents were reported directly to the FDA.

By 2014, the drug was linked to over 500 suicides. But obviously, the Conventional Medical Establishment still feels it is a suitable drug to continue selling and prescribing to us, as it is still not banned!

Darvocet, Darvan, Co-Proxamol
Darvocet or Darvan in the USA, Co-Proxamol in the UK, is an Opiate painkiller that was long associated with depression and increasing suicidal tendencies. Apparently, deaths occurring within one hour of overdosing with this drug were not uncommon. Over 3,000 reports of serious problems associated with Darvocet / Darvon were received by the FDA, including many suicide reports. The ‘Drug Abuse Warning Network’,  a US government database reporting on emergency room visits, showed 503 Darvon-related deaths just in 2007, with at least 20% of all deaths being reported as suicides.

Co-Proxamol was investigated by Oxford University’s ‘Centre for Suicide Research’, and their study found that “the risk of dying after co-proxamol overdose was 2.3 times that for tricyclic antidepressants and 28.1 times that for paracetamol”, the main ingredients of the drug”

As a result of this, and other findings, it was ‘withdrawn’ by the MHRA in January 2005.

However, the USA took another four years (during which time the drug was presumably still sold to unsuspecting patients) before the FDA finally banned the drug in November 2010. However, because of its addictive qualities, many young people are still taking the drug for ‘recreational’ purposes! 

Perhaps one of the longer lasting legacies of our much lauded pharmaceutical industry!


This is not an exhaustive list of the Big Pharma drugs known to cause suicide, but it is hopefully sufficient to ensure that anyone who is taking, or planning to take ANY pharmaceutical drug to undertake a thorough web search for possible associations. Your doctor won't tell you! And your life might depend upon it!


Autism and Vaccines - yet more evidence

Autism and Vaccines - yet more evidence
The truth about vaccines and autism is gradually emerging. We can expect the medical authorities (and the denialists who write into this blog to deny it, but the truth will emerge in the end - as it has done with so many ConMed treatments and drugs in recent decades.

Banned, withdrawn,restricted drugs

The most recent evidence emerges in the Natural News feature.

http://www.naturalnews.com/031056_autism_vaccines.html

"A January 10Mail Online(UK) article entitled "Scientists fear MMR link to autism." reported a Wake Forest University (USA) medical study that found measles virus in 70 out of 82 autistic children tested. None of them were wild measles strains. They were all vaccine strains, common to MMR shots".

Of course, the ConMed Establishment will deny this further evidence. It would be difficult for them to accept this now, after denying it for so long, and treating Andrew Wakefield so disgracefully. But there is other evidence, perhaps more important for people who still wonder about giving the children MMR and other vaccines.

We have known for many years now that the Amish community in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, USA, is completely free of autism. It was like an oasis in the midst of a desert. And they do not vaccinate their children. So you removed the cause of Autism, and you remove the disease.

Now, there is another community that says there is no autism within it.

"Now if you still have doubts that the media and health officials are honest or know what they are talking about, take a trip to Homefirst Health Services in metropolitan Chicago where thousands of children are being cared for. The doctors there have two things in common with thousands of Amish children in rural Lancaster: They have never been vaccinated. And they don’t have autism.

“We have a fairly large practice. We have about 30,000 or 35,000 children that we’ve taken care of over the years, and I don’t think we have a single case of autism in children delivered by us who never received vaccines,” said Dr. Mayer Eisenstein, Homefirst’s medical director who founded the practice in 1973. Homefirst doctors have delivered more than 15,000 babies at home and most of them have never been vaccinated.

“We do have enough of a sample,” Eisenstein said. “The numbers are too large to not see it. We would absolutely know. We’re all family doctors. If I have a child with autism come in, there’s no communication. It’s frightening. You can’t touch them. It’s not something that anyone would miss.” The few autistic children Homefirst sees were vaccinated before their families became patients.

Or perhaps go to

http://homefirst.com/info-1/current-health-news.html

and listen to Dr Mayer Eisenstein talking about why there is no autism in the area his health centre covers.

There is no reason why the NHS should not set up a similar project, leaving children in certain areas unvaccinated, and comparing the rates of autism within the population. They won't of course. But in a sense, that population already exists with that growing number of parents who are refusing to allow their children to be vaccinated.

All parents should join that growing band.


The flu jab

The flu jab
Thinking of having the flu jab?


Don't!


Just read this instead!


http://www.naturalnews.com/029641_vaccines_junk_science.html


It exposes the myth of 'evidence-based' medicine. And RCTs too.


And this too!


http://www.naturalnews.com/031043_flu_vaccines_quackery.html

Asthma and Homeopathy

Asthma and Homeopathy
This case was told to me by a colleague. It shows the kind of success homeopathy can have treating all kinds of illness that ConMed is not able to cope with.


"I treated a 5 year old boy who had bronchiolitis since the he was 6-8 weeks old. He had many courses of anti biotics and spent most winters in hospital. He also had all the childhood vaccinations.

I only saw him for one appointment over two winters ago and prescribed what I learnt from Hillery Dorrian (a well-known, well respected homeopathy and teacher) on a eczema workshop - protocol for clearing where lots of medication have been used used.

After have the homeopathic remedies, he went through the whole of the following winter with no major asthma attacks and no visits to the hospital - and again last winter. 



His mother (who is a friend of my colleague) keeps promising to bring him back for further treatment but he amazingly seems to have improved so much on this treatment alone".


The homeopathic treatment was to clear the adverse reactions (DIEs) of ConMed drugs and vaccines.....

Mastitis. Why Homeopathy?

Mastitis. Why Homeopathy?
Mastitis is a condition that causes a woman's breast tissue to become painful and inflamed. It is common during breastfeeding, but any can woman can suffer from it, and many do. In Mastitis the breast is usually painful and swollen, sometimes with general feelings of fever, ache and pains, and chilliness.

There are 2 types of mastitis, inflammatory and infectious. Initially it can be caused by an obstruction to a duct which can lead to a small, harm, warm tender lump in the breast. If this is left untreated it can lead to inflammatory mastitis where the whole breast swells, and becomes hard, tender, and hot. If this is untreated or unresponsive can lead to infectious mastitis. 

Infectious mastitis can affect the whole body, with fever, chills, malaise, and general flu like symptoms.

CONVENTIONAL TREATMENT OF MASTITIS

NHS Choices says that most cases of non-infectious mastitis can usually be easily treated and most women will make a full recovery very quickly, through a number of self care techniques such as:
  • making sure you get plenty of rest
  • drinking plenty of fluids
  • using over-the-counter painkillers, such as paracetamol or ibuprofen, to reduce pain and fever; a small amount of paracetamol can enter the breast milk but it is not enough to harm your baby (aspirin is not safe to take while breastfeeding)
  • not wearing tight-fitting clothing or a bra until your symptoms improve
  • placing a warm compress (a cloth soaked with warm water) over your breast to help relieve the pain; a warm shower or bath may also help
Sensible breastfeeding advice, and advice for sore nipples when breastfeeding, is also given.

For infectious mastitis NHS Choices recommends treatment the same self help methods plus antibiotics, to treat bacterial infections, although for breastfeeding women GP advice is required as “a very small amount of the antibiotic may enter your breast milk, and may make your baby irritable and restless, or your baby’s stools looser (runnier) and more frequent”.

It is perhaps surprising that conventional medicine still consider the use of painkillers as a ‘self-help’ measure, and not as a drug treatment, with all its inherent dangers. The NHS Choices webpage does not bother to mention the dangers of either Paracetamol or Ibuprofen (Nurofen), so you will need to click to read what these dangers are. And of course, it is important to realise that painkilling drugs deal solely with the pain, and does not treat the underlying condition itself.

The use of Antibiotics is also becoming increasingly problematical. The problems caused to our health of using antibiotics is now well documented, if still too little known


HOMEOPATHIC TREATMENT OF MASTITIS

Several remedies are known to be particularly helpful in the treatment of Mastitis, although there are many others, and the task of homeopathy in to find the best matching remedy to the individual. The advantage of using them is that they are safe, and free of the side effects of conventional drugs. These descriptions of the principal remedies used were taken from the “Homeopathy for Women” website.

Aconite: sudden onset (like Belladonna), but without the throbbing pain. The onset often follows a sudden change of weather or exposure to cold air or a cold, dry wind. Usually another remedy is required after Aconite, such as Belladonna or Bryonia.

Arnica: for inflammation follows an injury to the breast. Patients feel sore, bruised, and achy. There is fear to have the part touched.

Belladonna: sudden onset with rapidly rising fever. The breast is hot to touch, engorged, swollen, congested - red, hot breast. Throbbing pain in the breasts. The pain is worse from jarring. The right side is more often affected.

Bryonia: begins often with general chills and fever, stitching pains in the breast and headache. The breast feels hard and stony with stitching, needle-like pains. Any movement aggravates the pain. The patient likes a snug bra. Breast feeding is quite painful. The patient will be quite irritable. Very frequently the patient will experience dizziness or faintness on rising from bed. There is strong thirst and not infrequently constipation.

Croton tiglium: excruciating pain in the nipple which extends straight through to the back (at the level of the shoulder blade) with each suck of the baby. The breasts are very inflamed, swollen, and hard. The nipples may crack.

Hepar sulphur: breasts are very prone to abscess. Extreme sensitivity to the least touch; mothers can't stand for the baby to nurse. Complaints are worse from cold and exposure to the least draft, and better from warmth.

Lac-canium: hypersensitivity to even the slightest touch of clothing on the breasts; jarring also aggravates.

Mercurius: fever, chills, and perspiration without relief; a profuse sweat with a drop in fever; but no subsequent improvement; the patient alternates between hot and cold, uncovering and covering.

Phytolacca: the most common remedy (covers about 50% of mastitis cases. Breasts become lumpy, with hard knots or nodules, the nipples cake. Sore, fissured nipples. Intense pain in the breast as soon as the baby takes hold of the nipple. The pain often extends to the underarm or it can radiate over the whole body. Favors the right breast. Damp heat relieves, such as local poultices. Some patients may have flu-like symptoms as well.


RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TESTS

Unfortunately the only RCT conducted on the treatment of mastitis, of which I am aware, was with the udders of cows rather than with human breasts.



The University of Kassel in Germany designed a controlled clinical trial on 136 lactating cows randomly selected from 4 herds with mastitis that had a negative bacterial test result in their pre-treatment milk samples. The research used both antibiotic and placebo treatment approaches, in addition to classical homeopathy. The study is discussed by Dana Ullman - click here to read this. Homeopathy was found to be as effective as antibiotics, but of course, without the side-effects, and the weakened immune system