A New York midwife who gave nearly 1,500 children homeopathic pellets instead of required vaccinations has been fined $300,000, the state’s health department announced this week.

Jeanette Breen, who operates Baldwin Midwifery on Long Island, administered the pellets as an alternative to vaccinations and then falsified their immunization records, the agency said Wednesday.

The scheme, which goes back least to the 2019-2020 school year, involved families throughout the state, but the majority reside on suburban Long Island. In 2019, New York ended a religious exemption to vaccine requirements for schoolchildren.

The health department said immunization records of the children who received the falsified records have been voided, and their families must now prove the students are up-to-date with their required shots or at least in the process of getting them before they can return to school.

    • mihies@kbin.social
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      10 months ago

      There is placebo effect as well, so it might somehow help. But not the way they think and it shouldn’t be a substitute for proper medicine.

          • stoly@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            I do think that you’re right here. Parents could give a placebo to a child without realizing that it is a placebo, calm down, causing the child to calm down. Children are like dogs and stare directly at the faces of the adults around them to know how they should react to a situation. A calm parent can make a calm child.

        • derpgon
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          10 months ago

          Actually, it does. A friend of mine uses homeopathic anal suppositories for his almost 1 y/o and it almost always calms her down.

          Guess having stuff shoved up your butt doesn’t need natural language to be understood lol.

          • derf82@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            Probably more like “I better shut up, or mom will shove more stuff up my butt.”

          • stoly@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            You forgot the most important rule of humanity: everything is normal to a child. That child thinks that all kids get pills shoved up their asses every night and doesn’t think anything of it.

          • JoBo@feddit.uk
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            10 months ago

            That’s child abuse. But it’s also an example of how strong beliefs in homeopathy can arise. With fluctuating conditions, people often seek a solution when symptoms (or the child’s cries) are at their worst. When they get better soon after, it creates an illusion of effectiveness.

            A similar illusion is at work with the MMR vaccine. Autism becomes diagnosable at around the same age as the first shot is given, creating a powerful impression that the two events are connected.

            It’s why we have randomised controlled trials. With no control arm for comparison, your friend has concluded that abusing their child is somehow useful.

            • derpgon
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              10 months ago

              I myself am note sure whether they are any useful or effective, to each of their own. It’s not like I can talk him out of it. I wouldn’t spend a dime on any homeopathic at all.

      • Empricorn@feddit.nl
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        10 months ago

        Placebo is a real peer-reviewed thing and a powerful tool in the right hands. But it has to be authorized and prescribed by a real doctor who knows what they’re doing…

    • stoly@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      At its roots, it’s like PETA–originally started out by nice people who wanted people to be nice to animals. Over time, the whackadoos took over and now they are a hateful org.

      Homeopathy had its origins in treating the whole person and not just the disease, but was quickly taken over by quacks and placebo salespeople.

      • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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        10 months ago

        Homeopathy had its origins in treating the whole person and not just the disease

        That’s actually holistic medicine, not homeopathy. Homeopathy was invented in the late 1700s as an evolution of the medieval belief in humours.

        Homeopathy’s premise is that ‘like cures like’ (a substance that causes symptoms in healthy people can cure them in sick people), coupled with a belief that water has a spiritual memory that can be unlocked by ritually diluting and shaking until no molecules of the active ingredient remain. Common dilutions are 1:10^60 or higher.

        Here’s a great write-up on what it is and how it began from the National Library of Medicine.

        It’s commonly mistaken for holistic medicine, but it’s a very different (and potentially dangerous) thing.

      • Gumus@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Homeopathy was developed and thriving in an era when “do nothing” was better for the patient than contemporary accepted treatments.