allopathy

NOUN
  1. the usual method of treating disease with remedies that produce effects differing from those produced by the disease itself
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How To Use allopathy In A Sentence

  • In China acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine coexist equally with allopathy.
  • Prior to the 1900s, the approaches to wellness and healthcare included allopathy, homeopathy, and naturopathy as well as a variety of cultural practices and folk remedies.
  • If the imbalance called illness occurs, they apply self-healing, then resort as needed to such arts as âyurveda, acupuncture, allopathy, prânic healing or massage.
  • The allopath was a distant "ancestor" of my teachers., and to infer - or outright state - that current medicine is actually allopathy is frankly ridiculous. Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
  • Women are awakening to their subordinate position in society, and recognize their historical exclusion from allopathy and the negative effect of conventional medical treatment on women.
  • Dr. Gaboriault is now an apologist of integrative medicine that combines the allopathy system and the traditional systems.
  • Seekers of gentler prevention and cures for disease than offered by allopathy are increasingly turning to effective and affordable natural healing systems.
  • The term allopathy is derived from two Greek words: allo meaning opposite and pathos meaning suffering. Undefined
  • In the present-day world when allopathy calls the shots everywhere, an acupuncturist (one who treats the patient by pricking needles in his body) also operates his clinic here in the city to treat the patients.
  • I am trained in allopathy, but having lived with the adivasis and watched and heard alternative medical practitioners, in all these years. Archive 2007-11-01
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